They rise, their limbs ponderous
   With richness, hair heavier
   Than sculpted marble. They sing
   Of a world more full and clear
   Than can be. Sisters, your song
   Bears a burden too weighty
   For the whorled ear’s listening
   Here, in a well-steered country,
   Under a balanced ruler.
   Deranging by harmony
   Beyond the mundane order,
   Your voices lay siege. You lodge
   On the pitched reefs of nightmare,
   Promising sure harborage;
   By day, descant from borders
   Of hebetude, from the ledge
   Also of high windows. Worse
   Even than your maddening
   Song, your silence. At the source
   Of your ice-hearted calling—
   Drunkenness of the great depths.
   O river, I see drifting
   Deep in your flux of silver
   Those great goddesses of peace.
   Stone, stone, ferry me down there.
   Point Shirley
   From Water-Tower Hill to the brick prison
   The shingle booms, bickering under
   The sea’s collapse.
   Snowcakes break and welter. This year
   The gritted wave leaps
   The seawall and drops onto a bier
   Of quahog chips,
   Leaving a salty mash of ice to whiten
   In my grandmother’s sand yard. She is dead,
   Whose laundry snapped and froze here, who
   Kept house against
   What the sluttish, rutted sea could do.
   Squall waves once danced
   Ship timbers in through the cellar window;
   A thresh-tailed, lanced
   Shark littered in the geranium bed—
   Such collusion of mulish elements
   She wore her broom straws to the nub.
   Twenty years out
   Of her hand, the house still hugs in each drab
   Stucco socket
   The purple egg-stones: from Great Head’s knob
   To the filled-in Gut
   The sea in its cold gizzard ground those rounds.
   Nobody wintering now behind
   The planked-up windows where she set
   Her wheat loaves
   And apple cakes to cool. What is it
   Survives, grieves
   So, over this battered, obstinate spit
   Of gravel? The waves’
   Spewed relics clicker masses in the wind,
   Grey waves the stub-necked eiders ride.
   A labor of love, and that labor lost.
   Steadily the sea
   Eats at Point Shirley. She died blessed,
   And I come by
   Bones, bones only, pawed and tossed,
   A dog-faced sea.
   The sun sinks under Boston, bloody red.
   I would get from these dry-papped stones
   The milk your love instilled in them.
   The black ducks dive.
   And though your graciousness might stream,
   And I contrive,
   Grandmother, stones are nothing of home
   To that spumiest dove.
   Against both bar and tower the black sea runs.
   The Bull of Bendylaw
   The black bull bellowed before the sea.
   The sea, till that day orderly,
   Hove up against Bendylaw.
   The queen in the mulberry arbor stared
   Stiff as a queen on a playing card.
   The king fingered his beard.
   A blue sea, four horny bull-feet,
   A bull-snouted sea that wouldn’t stay put,
   Bucked at the garden gate.
   Along box-lined walks in the florid sun
   Toward the rowdy bellow and back again
   The lords and ladies ran.
   The great bronze gate began to crack,
   The sea broke in at every crack,
   Pellmell, blueblack.
   The bull surged up, the bull surged down,
   Not to be stayed by a daisy chain
   Nor by any learned man.
   O the king’s tidy acre is under the sea,
   And the royal rose in the bull’s belly,
   And the bull on the king’s highway.
   All the Dead Dears
   In the Archæological Museum in Cambridge is a stone coffin of the fourth century A.D. containing the skeletons of a woman, a mouse and a shrew. The ankle-bone of the woman has been slightly gnawn.
   Rigged poker-stiff on her back
   With a granite grin
   This antique museum-cased lady
   Lies, companioned by the gimcrack
   Relics of a mouse and a shrew
   That battened for a day on her ankle-bone.
   These three, unmasked now, bear
   Dry witness
   To the gross eating game
   We’d wink at if we didn’t hear
   Stars grinding, crumb by crumb,
   Our own grist down to its bony face.
   How they grip us through thin and thick,
   These barnacle dead!
   This lady here’s no kin
   Of mine, yet kin she is: she’ll suck
   Blood and whistle my marrow clean
   To prove it. As I think now of her head,
   From the mercury-backed glass
   Mother, grandmother, greatgrandmother
   Reach hag hands to haul me in,
   And an image looms under the fishpond surface
   Where the daft father went down
   With orange duck-feet winnowing his hair—
   All the long gone darlings: they
   Get back, though, soon,
   Soon: be it by wakes, weddings,
   Childbirths or a family barbecue:
   Any touch, taste, tang’s
   Fit for those outlaws to ride home on,
   And to sanctuary: usurping the armchair
   Between tick
   And tack of the clock, until we go,
   Each skulled-and-crossboned Gulliver
   Riddled with ghosts, to lie
   Deadlocked with them, taking root as cradles rock.
   Aftermath
   Compelled by calamity’s magnet
   They loiter and stare as if the house
   Burnt-out were theirs, or as if they thought
   Some scandal might any minute ooze
   From a smoke-choked closet into light;
   No deaths, no prodigious injuries
   Glut these hunters after an old meat,
   Blood-spoor of the austere tragedies.
   Mother Medea in a green smock
   Moves humbly as any housewife through
   Her ruined apartments, taking stock
   Of charred shoes, the sodden upholstery:
   Cheated of the pyre and the rack,
   The crowd sucks her last tear and turns away.
   The Thin People
   They are always with us, the thin people
   Meager of dimension as the grey people
   On a movie-screen. They
   Are unreal, we say:
   It was only in a movie, it was only
   In a war making evil headlines when we
   Were small that they famished and
   Grew so lean and would not round
   Out their stalky limbs again though peace
   Plumped the bellies of the mice
   Under the meanest table.
   It was during the long hunger-battle
   They found their talent to persevere
   In thinness, to come, later,
   Into our bad dreams, their menace
   Not guns, not abuses,
   But a thin silence.
   Wrapped in flea-ridden donkey skins,
   Empty of complaint, forever
   Drinking vinegar from tin cups: they wore
   The insufferable nimbus of the lot-drawn
   Scapegoat. But so thin,
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; So weedy a race could not remain in dreams,
   Could not remain outlandish victims
   In the contracted country of the head
   Any more than the old woman in her mud hut could
   Keep from cutting fat meat
   Out of the side of the generous moon when it
   Set foot nightly in her yard
   Until her knife had pared
   The moon to a rind of little light.
   Now the thin people do not obliterate
   Themselves as the dawn
   Greyness blues, reddens, and the outline
   Of the world comes clear and fills with color.
   They persist in the sunlit room: the wallpaper
   Frieze of cabbage-roses and cornflowers pales
   Under their thin-lipped smiles,
   Their withering kingship.
   How they prop each other up!
   We own no wildernesses rich and deep enough
   For stronghold against their stiff
   Battalions. See, how the tree boles flatten
   And lose their good browns
   If the thin people simply stand in the forest,
   Making the world go thin as a wasp’s nest
   And greyer; not even moving their bones.
   Suicide Off Egg Rock
   Behind him the hotdogs split and drizzled
   On the public grills, and the ochreous salt flats,
   Gas tanks, factory stacks—that landscape
   Of imperfections his bowels were part of—
   Rippled and pulsed in the glassy updraft.
   Sun struck the water like a damnation.
   No pit of shadow to crawl into,
   And his blood beating the old tattoo
   I am, I am, I am. Children
   Were squealing where combers broke and the spindrift
   Raveled wind-ripped from the crest of the wave.
   A mongrel working his legs to a gallop
   Hustled a gull flock to flap off the sandspit.
   He smoldered, as if stone-deaf, blindfold,
   His body beached with the sea’s garbage,
   A machine to breathe and beat forever.
   Flies filing in through a dead skate’s eyehole
   Buzzed and assailed the vaulted brainchamber.
   The words in his book wormed off the pages.
   Everything glittered like blank paper.
   Everything shrank in the sun’s corrosive
   Ray but Egg Rock on the blue wastage.
   He heard when he walked into the water
   The forgetful surf creaming on those ledges.
   Mushrooms
   Overnight, very
   Whitely, discreetly,
   Very quietly
   Our toes, our noses
   Take hold on the loam,
   Acquire the air.
   Nobody sees us,
   Stops us, betrays us;
   The small grains make room.
   Soft fists insist on
   Heaving the needles,
   The leafy bedding,
   Even the paving.
   Our hammers, our rams,
   Earless and eyeless,
   Perfectly voiceless,
   Widen the crannies,
   Shoulder through holes. We
   Diet on water,
   On crumbs of shadow,
   Bland-mannered, asking
   Little or nothing.
   So many of us!
   So many of us!
   We are shelves, we are
   Tables, we are meek,
   We are edible,
   Nudgers and shovers
   In spite of ourselves.
   Our kind multiplies:
   We shall by morning
   Inherit the earth.
   Our foot’s in the door.
   I Want, I Want
   Open-mouthed, the baby god
   Immense, bald, though baby-headed,
   Cried out for the mother’s dug.
   The dry volcanoes cracked and spit,
   Sand abraded the milkless lip.
   Cried then for the father’s blood
   Who set wasp, wolf and shark to work,
   Engineered the gannet’s beak.
   Dry-eyed, the inveterate patriarch
   Raised his men of skin and bone,
   Barbs on the crown of gilded wire,
   Thorns on the bloody rose-stem.
   Watercolor of Grantchester Meadows
   There, spring lambs jam the sheepfold. In air
   Stilled, silvered as water in a glass
   Nothing is big or far.
   The small shrew chitters from its wilderness
   Of grassheads and is heard.
   Each thumb-size bird
   Flits nimble-winged in thickets, and of good color.
   Cloudrack and owl-hollowed willows slanting over
   The bland Granta double their white and green
   World under the sheer water
   And ride that flux at anchor, upside down.
   The punter sinks his pole.
   In Byron’s pool
   Cattails part where the tame cygnets steer.
   It is a country on a nursery plate.
   Spotted cows revolve their jaws and crop
   Red clover or gnaw beetroot
   Bellied on a nimbus of sun-glazed buttercup.
   Hedging meadows of benign
   Arcadian green
   The blood-berried hawthorn hides its spines with white.
   Droll, vegetarian, the water rat
   Saws down a reed and swims from his limber grove,
   While the students stroll or sit,
   Hands laced, in a moony indolence of love—
   Black-gowned, but unaware
   How in such mild air
   The owl shall stoop from his turret, the rat cry out.
   The Ghost’s Leavetaking
   Enter the chilly no-man’s land of about
   Five o’clock in the morning, the no-color void
   Where the waking head rubbishes out the draggled lot
   Of sulfurous dreamscapes and obscure lunar conundrums
   Which seemed, when dreamed, to mean so profoundly much,
   Gets ready to face the ready-made creation
   Of chairs and bureaus and sleep-twisted sheets.
   This is the kingdom of the fading apparition,
   The oracular ghost who dwindles on pin-legs
   To a knot of laundry, with a classic bunch of sheets
   Upraised, as a hand, emblematic of farewell.
   At this joint between two worlds and two entirely
   Incompatible modes of time, the raw material
   Of our meat-and-potato thoughts assumes the nimbus
   Of ambrosial revelation. And so departs.
   Chair and bureau are the hieroglyphs
   Of some godly utterance wakened heads ignore:
   So these posed sheets, before they thin to nothing,
   Speak in sign language of a lost otherworld,
   A world we lose by merely waking up.
   Trailing its telltale tatters only at the outermost
   Fringe of mundane vision, this ghost goes
   Hand aloft, goodbye, goodbye, not down
   Into the rocky gizzard of the earth,
   But toward a region where our thick atmosphere
   Diminishes, and God knows what is there.
   A point of exclamation marks that sky
   In ringing orange like a stellar carrot.
   Its round period, displaced and green,
   Suspends beside it the first point, the starting
   Point of Eden, next the new moon’s curve.
   Go, ghost of our mother and father, ghost of us,
   And ghost of our dreams’ children, in those sheets
   Which signify our origin and end,
   To the cloud-cuckoo land of color wheels
   And pristine alphabets and cows that moo
   And moo as they jump over moons as new
   As that crisp cusp toward which you voyage now.
   Hail  
					     					 			and farewell. Hello, goodbye. O keeper
   Of the profane grail, the dreaming skull.
   A Winter Ship
   At this wharf there are no grand landings to speak of.
   Red and orange barges list and blister
   Shackled to the dock, outmoded, gaudy,