Monday, December 31, 2018

ON TIME (R)


“time, time,” said old king tut
“is something i ain’t got anything but.”
--archie the cockroach

            I have been reading a book about the Black Death; someone must, or such books will cease being written and the memory of the disaster will fade and fray, until there is only the thought of a grey or yellow death, or perhaps a pale peach death, with stripes, suitable for summer wear. In it, the author mentions a road in Italy where, on certain afternoons, Time can be seen thinking about itself. The image is arresting, and seems to confirm what I have often thought about Time. Not truly an abstraction, we have shaped it and made it a sort of greater cousin of ours, and it shows human tendencies, including a propensity for boredom and self-absorption.

            Consider what generations of observation have taught us. Time is often loath to move; it hangs heavy on the hands. It scorns courtesy; along with the tide, it waits for no man. Ralph Hodgson called it an old gypsy, which seems right enough. Gypsies know time well enough not to be over-awed by it and its pretensions to rule. The bells in a W.H. Auden poem whirr and chime in warning: “Oh, let not Time deceive you! You cannot conquer Time!”

            It has even been known to fly, though no one says whether it flies to or away from something. Perhaps there is a hint in the Latin: Tempus Fugits, wherein Time doesn’t fly but flees, a fugitive (though from what would Time flee? And does it carry us along in simple mercy, so we don’t see the face of what comes after it?) Leigh Hunt called it a thief. John Ford, who wore a melancholy hat, spoke of a man who shook hands with Time. Indeed, Time was very present in great Elizabeth’s day; Walter Raleigh spoke of her as a lady who had been surprised by Time (I doubt she shook Time’s hand, but perhaps she gave it her hand to kiss).

            Shakespeare has little patience with Time, offering in his sonnets to defeat it by the sheer power of his language. Thus, as the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations affirms, he calls it sluttish (Sonnet 17), thievish (Sonnet 77), and possessed of a fell hand (Sonnet 64). It is a cormorant (Love’s Labor Lost), injurious (Troilus and Cressida) and not only envious but prone to calumny (Sonnet 171). It is dangerous to waste it, for it may turn and waste in return (Richard II). Still, Shakespeare’s Time has it’s less fearsome side. It has a wallet (Troilus and Cressida) and a whirligig (Twelfth Night). It sets clocks (King John)  and, though out of joint (Hamlet), is like a fashionable host (Sonnet 165).

            The poets who have sighted Time have given us enough information about its possessions that we could write its will. (Surely it has not long to live? We know that it is twice as old as Petra, that rose-red city half as old as Time). It has horses, a winged chariot, a cave,  a wheel, a river, a trumpet, rags, corridors, whips, a fool, a eunuch, a tooth (and that a sharp one). No wonder Keats saw it aching; the Reverend Richard Jago described Time as having a leaden foot.

            Among the Victorians, Tennyson knew Time for a maniac scattering dust, but Disraeli thought him a good physician, and Gladstone said “Time is on our side.” The important question is, is it the maniac or the physician who is allied with us?

            Time is golden, bald and has a noiseless foot. He is a kind friend, a liar, and (oddly enough) a sandpile. He is a peddler, deals in dust. He will come and take  my love. Though he is said to be money, Shakespeare said he is broke, and he is sometimes threadbare. A detailed index assures me that there is Time to be a saint, to be born, to be happy, to be old, to begin anew, to dance, to die, to hear bird music, to laugh, to mourn, to remember, to weep. There is time to serve and sin, to stand and to stare, to stop a revolution, to wallop and to stigmatize.
           
            Time must have an end.

Friday, December 28, 2018

IN WINTER


Ming the Merciless layers newspaper
Between his shirt and his skin. The bench
He used to sleep on has disappeared.
He wraps himself in shadows and stays awake
Or drowses in a narrow tunnel
Under the 73rd Street overpass

Thursday, December 27, 2018

BODINGS


Of them all only Ming knew for certain
That they were characters in a story
Though Zarkov sometimes dreamed
A talking animal -- a cat, a dog,
A sinister iguana with an Irish brogue --
Warned him to distrust everything.

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

DESCEDENDO


Traditionally, Night's entrance
Is heralded by seven notes
Descending on muted strings.
Lyres do well or lutes or rebecs
Or miniature Spanish guitars
Played by the serious ghosts
Of very small princesses.
But if banjos are what you have
Or ukeleles, twang boldly forth.

Monday, December 24, 2018

SAINTS


St. Mochua has an alias and sometimes
Performs pinchbeck miracles
Under the name of St. Cronan.
Cronan has a pleasant smile
And, between miracles, practices
Tricks with cards and dice. Mochua
Is dour and once drew a line
Hungry lambs couldn't cross
To reach their puzzled dams.
His dark green cloak, at need,
At least once  served as a boat
For thirteen people, two dogs and a cat..

Friday, December 21, 2018

TRANLATED FROM THE UNWRITTEN


This poem you cannot read -- I will read it for you
The absurd beauty of this rough cup -- I will see it
Since you're no longer here suddenly to mark it.
I will appear in the dream you would have had
Startling the other players because even dead
How glad they would have been to see you!

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

STRANGER


The author of a recent book on Covent Garden  thinks
You are a beggar but he has not looked closely
You're cranky, not poor, and you're wearing a shtreiml
A Jew -- a hasid perhaps, or else a Litvak,
Has wandered into Louis Phillipe Boitard's drawing
Of Holbein's Gateway and Jones' Banqueting House.
You've been there, leaning awkwardly against a fence,
Since 1742. Perhaps you hoped my father might see you
And address you in old-fashioned Hebrew, or my mother
Gently ask "Landtsman, vos brengt ir do?" But
There is only me now nor have I the words
To ask what road took you here and why
You’ve put your back to the the Banqueting House,
Your head turned  so sharply from the Gateway.

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

HAVING COME INTO MONEY, MING THE MERCILESS VISITS GOLGOTHA



The narrow toe of his embroidered slipper
Delicately moves between the skulls
That have been allowed -- or even encouraged --
To litter the paths which, he notes approvingly,
Are curved; no demon can safely walk them.
He recognizes Flash Gordon's skull
And lifts it gently out of the way. Who knows
When it might again be needed?

Monday, December 17, 2018

HIRED


We went looking for a god among the z's
But Zeus wasn't there nor Zalmoxis
Only Zorro who was not a god at all.
Still, Don Diego de la Vega,
Who never shrank from  a challenge,
Mounted Tornado and rode furiously
Creating the world in mad haste.
When we meet Him now we pretend
The mask and the broad-brimmed hat
Have deceived us utterly.

Thursday, December 13, 2018

GOING TO BIRD COW WOMAN WHEN WE DIE


If God is not really a man why 
Should Heaven be a place instead, say,
Of being a gigantic bird? According 
To the learned Dr. J. Edward Wright
Some Egyptians thought this plausible.
Others, or the same ones later in the day,
Opted for a great cow or a pleasant woman 
Named Nut. Fond though I am of birds
And notwithstanding the great respect 
I have for cows, I think I'll vote for Nut 
(If there's to be an election and I can vote)
Perhaps Heaven changes and folk in the suburbs 
Never know if they'll see a shining city
Or a cow or a bird on the horizon 
Or Nut looking worried and wondering 
Why it's been so long since they've called.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

IMMATERIALISM


People who did not exist were constantly
Running in and out of Karl Marx' house
If you read  -- not his books; no one
Can now read those heavy books whose ink
Has turned red over the years -- but the letters
His daughters wrote you can still see the traces
Of these nonexistent folk. They are unpredictable,
Turning up at the door with an egg or pretending
To be an old friend or a bill collector or even
An old friend seeking to collect a bill. I would like
To grab one by the arm and, holding him fast,
Demand to know how he and his like
Eluded the law which, back then,
Allowed only real people to enter private houses
Except at on bank holidays and after midnight
On St. John's Eve and Boxing Day.

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

TREE


There's a tree which stands a hundred feet beyond my window
It's twice the height of the house next to it which -- this much I can tell –
It strives to ignore. The people in the house think of it as their tree;
The tree doesn't think of them as its people. Every winter
I see the new pattern the year has made from its branches
I've known men (I am not one of them) who'd see at a glance
Why the branches seem so urgently uplifted and why
They sometimes shiver on windless days.

Monday, December 10, 2018

NOT IN THE BOX



When God dropped by last night he brought with him
A woman who said she was Annie Oakley. I have my doubts;
She was quite tall and had a marked Spanish accent;
Oakley was short and came from Ohio. Still, the woman 
Had a pistol with which she shot off the tip of God's cigar.
God urged me to move for the time being into a box
Designed and built by Joseph Cornell. Ms. Oakley 
 (If that's who she was; I suspect she was a miliciana
Weary of fighting in the Spanish Civil War) shook her head
Very slightly, so I declined though a chance to live
In Cassiopeia II would probably not come again.

Thursday, December 6, 2018

POEMS


I went to sleep late, with two poems reciting themselves
Inside my head. All through the night, whenever I woke up,
I'd hear them, changing words, adding or dropping lines,
Trying to prevent the semicolons from sneaking off.
Once, both poems were trying to audition new endings
And my dream, unable to make itself heard, became a pantomime;
(I have no idea why three owls did a sort of ballet nor why
Franz Kafka insisted on standing drinks for everyone.)
This morning, only one poem remained and it
Glared at me truculently when I wrote it down.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

GATHERING


This year's crimes stroll about the lawn
Some solitary, some with arms linked.
One, beneath a cypress, his wrist 
In a cast, laughs quietly to himself.
They are waiting to be addressed by name
Administered a light stroke upon the chest
And given a few dollars and new shoes.
The year in waiting, soon to come on stage,
Thinks it will have no place for them.

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

DESIRE


This morning
A ghost said look!
That tree
Has flung itself
As high as it can
But wants to go higher still.
Its branches clutch the air;
Its ambition
Knows no limit.

Monday, December 3, 2018

ACQUAINTED


People in my poems apparently know each other 
And may well understand me better than I do them.
There used to be, of course, strict laws about such things;
The characters of different poems could not, officially,
Mix nor make comments about their creators. 
When the ghost of Arthur Henry Hallam
Wanted to visit Mariana in the moated grange 
He had to disguise himself as a beekeeper
Who spoke with a comically thick Suffolk accent
Readers when he was by wondered what this bumpkin
Was doing in the poem -- there seemed to be
No other servants; the grange was extremely dusty
(As a tragic heroine Mariana was, under guild rules,
Forbidden to do any housework.) Most, though,
Were pleased Mariana had someone to listen
To her disquisitions on the dreariness of life.