brown, blue, and gray occur
       upon the chipmunk-colored
   earth’s fur.
   III
   Pine islands in a broken lake.
       Beyond Laconia the hills,
   islanded by shadows, take
   in cooling middle distance
       a motion from above, and lo!
   grave mountains belly dance.
   Ex–Basketball Player
   Pearl Avenue runs past the high-school lot
   Bends with the trolley tracks, and stops, cut off
   Before it has a chance to go two blocks,
   At Colonel McComsky Plaza. Berth’s Garage
   Is on the corner facing west, and there,
   Most days, you’ll find Flick Webb, who helps Berth out.
   Flick stands tall among the idiot pumps—
   Five on a side, the old bubble-head style,
   Their rubber elbows hanging loose and low.
   One’s nostrils are two S’s, and his eyes
   An E and O. And one is squat, without
   A head at all—more of a football type.
   Once Flick played for the high-school team, the Wizards.
   He was good: in fact, the best. In ’46
   He bucketed three hundred ninety points
   A county record still. The ball loved Flick.
   I saw him rack up thirty-eight or forty
   In one home game. His hands were like wild birds.
   He never learned a trade, he just sells gas,
   Checks oil, and changes flats. Once in a while,
   As a gag, he dribbles an inner tube,
   But most of us remember anyway.
   His hands are fine and nervous on the lug wrench.
   It makes no difference to the lug wrench, though.
   Off work, he hangs around Mae’s Luncheonette.
   Grease-gray and kind of coiled, he plays pinball,
   Smokes those thin cigars, nurses lemon phosphates.
   Flick seldom says a word to Mae, just nods
   Beyond her face toward bright applauding tiers
   Of Necco Wafers, Nibs, and Juju Beads.
   A Modest Mound of Bones
   That short-sleeved man, our
       uncle, owns
   the farm next our farm, south
       and west of us, and
   he butchers for a living, hand-to-mouth.
       Once, walking on his land,
   we found a hill, topped by a flower,
       a hill of bones.
   They were rain-scrubbed clean—
       lovely things.
   Depending how the white
       sun struck, chips of color
   (green, yellow, dove-blue, a light
       bay) flew off the sullen
   stilled turning there. To have seen
       those clickless rings,
   those prisonerles
       ribs, complex
   beyond the lathe’s loose jaws,
       convolute compounds
   of knobs, rods, hooks, moons, absurd paws,
       subtle flats and rounds:
   no man could conceive such finesse,
       concave or -vex.
   Some curve like umbrella
       handles, keys
   to mammoth locks. Some bend
       like equations hunting
   infinity, toward which to tend.
       How it sags!—what bunting
   is flesh to be hung from such ele-
       gant balconies?
   Sunflower
   Sunflower, of flowers
   the most lonely,
   yardstick of hours,
   long-term stander
   in empty spaces,
   shunner of bowers,
   indolent bender
   seldom, in only
   the sharpest of showers:
   tell us, why
   is it your face is
   a snarl of jet swirls
   and gold arrows, a burning
   old lion face high
   in a cornflower sky,
   yet by turning
   your head we find
   you wear a girl’s
   bonnet behind?
   March: A Birthday Poem
   My child as yet unborn, the doctors nod,
   Agreeing that your first month shall be March,
   A time of year I know by heart and like
   To talk about—I, too, was born in March.
   March, like November a month largely unloved,
   Parades before April, who steals all shows
   With his harlequinade of things renewed.
   Impatient for that pastel fool’s approach,
   Our fathers taunted March, called him Hlyd-monath,
   Though the month is mild, and a murmurer.
   Indeed, after the Titan’s fall and shatter
   Of February, March seems a silence.
   The Romans, finding February’s ruins
   At the feet of March, heard his wind as boasting
   And hailed his guilt with a war-god’s name.
   As above some street in a cobbled sea-town
   From opposing walls two huge boards thrust
   To advertise two inns, so do the signs
   Of Pisces the Fish and Aries the Ram
   Overhang March. Depending on the day,
   Your fortunate gem shall be the bloodstone
   Or the diamond, your lucky color crimson
   Or silver-gray. You shall prove affable,
   Impulsive, lucky in your friends, or not,
   According to the counterpoint of stars.
   So press your business ventures, wear cravats,
   And swear not by the moon. If planting wheat,
   Do it at dawn. At dusk for barley. Let
   The tide transplant kohlrabi, leeks, and beans.
   Toward the month’s end, sow hardy annuals.
   It was this month when Caesar fell, Stalin died,
   And Beethoven. In this month snowflakes melt—
   Those last dry crusts that huddle by the barn.
   Now kites and crocuses are hoisted up.
   Doors slap open. Dogs snuffle soggy leaves,
   Rehearsing rusty repertoires of smells.
   The color of March is the one that lies
   On the shadow side of young tree trunks.
   March is no land of extremes. Dull as life,
   It offers small flowers and minor holidays.
   Clouds stride sentry and hold our vision down,
   While underfoot the agony of roots
   Is hidden by earth. Much, much is opaque.
   The thunder bluffs, wind cannot be gripped,
   And kites and crocuses are what they are.
   Still, child, it is far from a bad month,
   For all its weight of compromise and hope.
   As modest as a monk, March shall be there
   When on that day without a yesterday
   You, red and blind and blank, gulp the air.
   Burning Trash
   At night—the light turned off, the filament
   Unburdened of its atom-eating charge,
   His wife asleep, her breathing dipping low
   To touch a swampy source—he thought of death.
   Her father’s hilltop home allowed him time
   To sense the nothing standing like a sheet
   Of speckless glass behind his human future.
   He had two comforts he could see, just two.
   One was the cheerful fullness of most things:
   Plump stones and clouds, expectant pods, the soil
   Offering up pressure to his knees and hands.
   The other was burning the trash each day.
   He liked the heat, the imitation danger,
   And the way, as he tossed in used-up news,
   String, napkins, envelopes, and paper cups,
   Hypnotic tongues  
					     					 			of order intervened.
   English Train Compartment
   These faces make a chapel where worship comes easy:
   Homo enim naturaliter est animal sociale.
   The flutter of a Guardian, the riveted image
   of Combe-in-Teignhead, faded by decades of eyes,
   the sting of smoke, the coughs, the whispering
   lend flavor to piety’s honest bone.
   Half-sick, we suck our teeth, consult our thumbs,
   through brown-stained glass confront the barbered hills
   and tailored trees of a tame and castrate land.
   Sheep elegant enough for any eclogue
   browse under Constable clouds. The unnatural
   darkness swells, and passengers stir
   at the sound of tapping fingernails. Rain,
   beginning, hyphenates our racing windows.
   And hands and smiles are freed by the benediction.
   The lights, always on, now tell. One man talks,
   and the water, sluicing sideways, teases our direction.
   Indeed, we are lively, smug, and brave
   as adventurers safe after some great hazard,
   while beside our shoulders the landscape streams
   as across the eye of a bathysphere surfacing.
   Tao in the Yankee Stadium Bleachers
   Distance brings proportion. From here
   the populated tiers
   as much as players seem part of the show:
   a constructed stage beast, three folds of Dante’s rose,
   or a Chinese military hat
   cunningly chased with bodies.
   “Falling from his chariot, a drunk man is unhurt
   because his soul is intact. Not knowing his fall,
   he is unastonished, he is invulnerable.”
   So, too, the “pure man”—“pure”
   in the sense of undisturbed water.
   “It is not necessary to seek out
   a wasteland, swamp, or thicket.”
   The opposing pitcher’s pertinent hesitations,
   the sky, this meadow, Mantle’s thick baked neck,
   the old men who in the changing rosters see
   a personal mutability,
   green slats, wet stone are all to me
   as when an emperor commands
   a performance with a gesture of his eyes.
   “No king on his throne has the joy of the dead,”
   the skull told Chuang-tzu.
   The thought of death is peppermint to you
   when games begin with patriotic song
   and a democratic sun beats broadly down.
   The Inner Journey seems unjudgeably long
   when small boys purchase cups of ice
   and, distant as a paradise,
   experts, passionate and deft,
   hold motionless while Berra flies to left.
   How to Be Uncle Sam
   My father knew
       how to be
                  Uncle Sam.
   Six feet two,
       he led the
                  parade
   the year
       the boys came back
                  from war.
   Splendidly
       spatted, his legs
                  like canes,
   his dandy coat
       like a
                  bluebird’s back,
   he led the parade,
       and then
                  a man
   (I’ve never been sure
       he was honestly
                  canned—
   he might have been
       consciously
                  after a laugh)
   popped
       from the crowd,
                  swinging his hands,
   and screamed,
       “You’re the s.o.b.
                  who takes
   all my money!”
       and took
                  a poke at
   my own father!
       He missed
                  by half
   an inch; he felt
       the wind, my father
                  later said.
   When the cops
       grabbed that one,
                  another man
   shouted from the
       crowd in a
                  voice like brass:
   “I don’t care if
       you take a poke at
                  Updike,
   but keep your
       mitts off
                  Uncle Sam!”
   3 A.M.
   By the brilliant ramp
   of a ceaseless garage
   the eye like a piece of newspaper
   staring from a collage
   records on a yellowing
   gridwork of nerve
   “policemen move on feet of glue,
   sailors stick to the curb.”
   Mobile of Birds
   There is something
   in their planetary weave that is comforting.
   The polycentric orbits, elliptical
   with mutual motion,
   random as nature, and yet, above all,
   calculable, recall
   those old Ptolemaic heavens small
   enough for the Byzantine Trinity,
                  Plato’s Ideals,
                  formal devotion,
   seven levels of bliss, and numberless wheels
   of omen, balanced occultly.
                                           A small bird
   at an arc’s extremity
   adequately weights
   his larger mates’
   compounded mass: absurd
   but actual—there he floats!
   Persisting through a doorway, shadow-casting light
                  dissolves on the wall
                  the mobile’s threads
   and turns its spatial conversation
   dialectical. Silhouettes,
   projections of identities,
   merge and part and reunite
   in shapely syntheses—
                            an illusion,
   for the birds on their perches of fine wire avoid collusion
   and are twirled
   alone in their suspenseful world.
   Shillington
   The vacant lots are occupied, the woods
   Diminish, Slate Hill sinks beneath its crown
   Of solvent homes, and marketable goods
   On all sides crowd the good remembered town.
   Returning, we find our snapshots inexact.
   Perhaps a condition of being alive
   Is that the clothes which, setting out, we packed
   With love no longer fit when we arrive.
   Yet sights that limited our truth were strange
   To older eyes; the town that we have lost
   Is being found by hands that still arrange
   Horse-chestnut heaps and fingerpaint on frost.
   Time shades these alleys; every pavement crack
   Is mapped somewhere. A solemn concrete ball,					     					 			r />
   On the gatepost of a sold house, brings back
   A waist leaning against a buckling wall.
   The gutter-fires smoke, their burning done
   Except for, fanned within, an orange feather;
   We have one home, the first, and leave that one.
   The having and leaving go on together.
   Suburban Madrigal
   Sitting here in my house,
   looking through my windows
   diagonally at my neighbor’s house,
   I see his sun-porch windows;
   they are filled with blue-green,
   the blue-green of my car,
   which I parked in front of my house,
   more or less, up the street,
   where I can’t directly see it.
   How promiscuous is
   the world of appearances!
   How frail are property laws!
   To him his window is filled with his
   things: his lamps, his plants, his radio.
   How annoyed he would be to know
   that my car, legally parked,
   yet violates his windows,
   paints them full
   (to me) of myself, my car,
   my well-insured ’55 Fordor Ford
   a gorgeous green sunset streaking his panes.
   Telephone Poles
   They have been with us a long time.
   They will outlast the elms.
   Our eyes, like the eyes of a savage sieving the trees
   In his search for game,
   Run through them. They blend along small-town streets
   Like a race of giants that have faded into mere mythology.
   Our eyes, washed clean of belief,
   Lift incredulous to their fearsome crowns of bolts, trusses, struts, nuts, insulators, and such
   Barnacles as compose
   These weathered encrustations of electrical debris—
   Each a Gorgon’s head, which, seized right,