those who fell asleep and never woke
   who never slept and so dropped dead
   those who attacked the casual eyes of children and were led away
   and those who faced corners for ever
   those who exposed themselves and were led away
   those who pretended broken limbs, epilepsy,
   who managed to electrocute themselves on wire
   those who felt their skin was on fire and screamed
                                           and were led away
   There are ways of going
   physically mad, physically
   mad when you perfect the mind
   where you sacrifice yourself for the race
   when you are the representative when you allow
   yourself to be paraded in the cages
   celebrity a razor in the body
   These small birds so precise
   frail as morning neon
   they are royalty melted down
   they are the glass core at the heart of kings
   yet 15-year-old boys could enter the cage
   and break them in minutes
   as easily as a long fingernail
   RAT JELLY
   See the rat in the jelly
   steaming dirty hair
   frozen, bring it out on a glass tray
   split the pie four ways and eat
   I took great care cooking this treat for you
   and tho it looks good
   and tho it smells of the Westinghouse still
   and tastes of exotic fish or
   maybe the expensive arse of a cow
   I want you to know it’s rat
   steaming dirty hair and still alive
   (caught him last Sunday
   thinking of the fridge, thinking of you.)
   KING KONG MEETS WALLACE STEVENS
   Take two photographs—
   Wallace Stevens and King Kong
   (Is it significant that I eat bananas as I write this?)
   Stevens is portly, benign, a white brush cut
   striped tie. Businessman but
   for the dark thick hands, the naked brain
   the thought in him.
   Kong is staggering
   lost in New York streets again
   a spawn of annoyed cars at his toes.
   The mind is nowhere.
   Fingers are plastic, electric under the skin.
   He’s at the call of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
   Meanwhile W. S. in his suit
   is thinking chaos is thinking fences.
   In his head – the seeds of fresh pain
   his exorcising,
   the bellow of locked blood.
   The hands drain from his jacket,
   pose in the murderer’s shadow.
   ‘THE GATE IN HIS HEAD’
   for Victor Coleman
   Victor, the shy mind
   revealing the faint scars
   coloured strata of the brain,
   not clarity but the sense of shift
   a few lines, the tracks of thought
   Landscape of busted trees
   the melted tires in the sun
   Stan’s fishbowl
   with a book inside
   turning its pages
   like some sea animal
   camouflaging itself
   the typeface clarity
   going slow blonde in the sun full water
   My mind is pouring chaos
   in nets onto the page.
   A blind lover, dont know
   what I love till I write it out.
   And then from Gibson’s your letter
   with a blurred photograph of a gull.
   Caught vision. The stunning white bird
   an unclear stir.
   And that is all this writing should be then.
   The beautiful formed things caught at the wrong moment
   so they are shapeless, awkward
   moving to the clear.
   TAKING
   It is the formal need
   to suck blossoms out of the flesh
   in those we admire
   planting them private in the brain
   and cause fruit in lonely gardens.
   To learn to pour the exact arc
   of steel still soft and crazy
   before it hits the page.
   I have stroked the mood and tone
   of hundred year dead men and women
   Emily Dickinson’s large dog, Conrad’s beard
   and, for myself,
   removed them from historical traffic.
   Having tasted their brain. Or heard
   the wet sound of a death cough.
   Their idea of the immaculate moment is now.
   The rumours pass on
   the rumours pass on
   are planted
   till they become a spine.
   BURNING HILLS
   for Kris and Fred
   So he came to write again
   in the burnt hill region
   north of Kingston. A cabin
   with mildew spreading down walls.
   Bullfrogs on either side of him.
   Hanging his lantern of Shell Vapona Strip
   on a hook in the centre of the room
   he waited a long time. Opened
   the Hilroy writing pad, yellow Bic pen.
   Every summer he believed would be his last.
   This schizophrenic season change, June to September,
   when he deviously thought out plots
   across the character of his friends.
   Sometimes barren as fear going nowhere
   or in habit meaningless as tapwater.
   One year maybe he would come and sit
   for four months and not write a word down
   would sit and investigate colours, the
   insects in the room with him.
   What he brought: a typewriter
   tins of ginger ale, cigarettes. A copy of Strangelove,
   of The Intervals, a postcard of Rousseau’s The Dream.
   His friends’ words were strict as lightning
   unclothing the bark of a tree, a shaved hook.
   The postcard was a test pattern by the window
   through which he saw growing scenery.
   Eventually the room was a time machine for him.
   He closed the rotting door, sat down
   thought pieces of history. The first girl
   who in a park near his school
   put a warm hand into his trousers
   unbuttoning and finally catching the spill
   across her wrist, he in the maze of her skirt.
   She later played the piano
   when he had tea with the parents.
   He remembered that surprised—
   he had forgotten for so long.
   Under raincoats in the park on hot days.
   The summers were layers of civilization in his memory
   they were old photographs he didn’t look at anymore
   for girls in them were chubby not as perfect as in his mind
   and his ungovernable hair was shaved to the edge of skin.
   His friends leaned on bicycles
   were 16 and tried to look 21
   the cigarettes too big for their faces.
   He could read those characters easily
   undisguised as wedding pictures.
   He could hardly remember their names
   though they had talked all day, exchanged styles
   and like dogs on a lawn hung around the houses of girls.
   Sex a game of targets, of throwing firecrackers
   at a couple in a field locked in hand-made orgasms,
   singing dramatically in someone’s ear along with the record
   ‘How do you think I feel / you know our love’s not real
   The one you’re made about / Is just a gad-about
   How do you think I feel’.
   He saw all that complex tension the way his childr 
					     					 			en would.
   There is one picture that fuses the five summers.
   Eight of them are leaning against a wall
   arms around each other
   looking into the camera and the sun
   trying to smile at the unseen adult photographer
   trying against the glare to look 21 and confident.
   The summer and friendship will last forever.
   Except one who was eating an apple. That was him
   oblivious to the significance of the moment.
   Now he hungers to have that arm around the next shoulder.
   The wretched apple is fresh and white.
   Since he began burning hills
   the Shell strip has taken effect.
   A wasp is crawling on the floor
   tumbling over, its motor fanatic.
   He has smoked 5 cigarettes.
   He has written slowly and carefully
   with great love and great coldness.
   When he finishes he will go back
   hunting for the lies that are obvious.
   CHARLES DARWIN PAYS A VISIT,
   DECEMBER 1971
   View of the coast of Brazil.
   A man stood up to shout
   at the image of a sailing ship
   which was a vast white bird from over the sea
   now ripping its claws into the ocean.
   Faded hills of March
   painted during the cold morning.
   On board ship Charles Darwin sketched clouds.
   One of these days the Prime Mover will
   paint the Prime Mover out of his sky.
   I want a … centuries being displaced
    … faith
                            23rd of June, 1832.
                            He caught sixty-eight species
                            of a particularly minute beetle.
   The blue thick leaves who greeted him
   animals unconscious of celebration
   moved slowly into law.
   Adam with a watch.
   Look past and future, (I want a …),
   ease our way out of the structures
   this smell of the cogs
   and diamonds we live in.
   I am waiting for a new ship, so new
   we will think the lush machine
   an animal of God.
   Weary from travelling over the air and the water
   it will sink to its feet at our door.
   THE VAULT
   Having to put forward candidates for God
   I nominate Henri Rousseau and Dr Bucke,
   tired of the lizard paradise
   whose image banks renew off the flesh of others
   – those stories that hate, which are remnants and insults.
   Refresh where plants breed to the edge of dream.
   I have woken to find myself covered in white sheets
   walls and doors, food.
   There was no food in the world I left
   where I ate the rich air. The bodies of small birds
   who died while flying fell into my mouth.
   Fruit dripped through our thirst to the earth.
   All night the traffic of apes floats across the sky
   a worm walks through the gaze of a lion
   some birds live all their evenings on one branch.
   They are held by the celebration of God’s wife.
   In Rousseau’s The Dream she is the naked lady
   who has been animal and tree
   her breast a suckled orange.
   The fibres and fluids of their moral nature
   have seeped within her frame.
   The hand is outstretched
   her fingers move out in
   mutual transfusion to the place.
   Our low speaking last night
   was barely audible among the grunt
   of mongrel meditation.
   She looks to the left
   for that is the direction we leave in
   when we fall from her room of flowers.
   WHITE DWARFS
   This is for people who disappear
   for those who descend into the code
   and make their room a fridge for Superman
   – who exhaust costume and bones that could perform flight,
   who shave their moral so raw
   they can tear themselves through the eye of a needle
   this is for those people
   that hover and hover
   and die in the ether peripheries
   There is my fear
   of no words of
   falling without words
   over and over of
   mouthing the silence
   Why do I love most
   among my heroes those
   who sail to that perfect edge
   where there is no social fuel
   Release of sandbags
   to understand their altitude—
                  that silence of the third cross
                  3rd man hung so high and lonely
                  we don’t hear him say
                  say his pain, say his unbrotherhood
                  What has he to do with the smell of ladies,
                  can they eat off his skeleton of pain?
   The Gurkhas in Malaya
   cut the tongues of mules
   so they were silent beasts of burden
   in enemy territories
   after such cruelty what could they speak of anyway
   And Dashiell Hammett in success
   suffered conversation and moved
   to the perfect white between the words
   This white that can grow
   is fridge, bed,
   is an egg – most beautiful
   when unbroken, where
   what we cannot see is growing
   in all the colours we cannot see
   there are those burned out stars
   who implode into silence
   after parading in the sky
   after such choreography what would they wish to speak of anyway
   ‘Newly arrived and totally ignorant of the Levantine languages, Marco Polo could express himself only with gestures, leaps, cries of wonder and of horror, animal barkings or hootings, or with objects he took from his knapsacks – ostrich plumes, pea-shooters, quartzes – which he arranged in front of him …’
   ITALO CALVINO
   THE AGATHA CHRISTIE BOOKS
   BY THE WINDOW
   In the long open Vancouver Island room
   sitting by the indoor avocados
   where indoor spring light
   falls on the half covered bulbs
   and down the long room light falling
   onto the dwarf orange tree
   vines from south america
   the agatha christie books by the window
   Nameless morning
   solution of grain and colour
   There is this light,
   colourless, which falls on the warm
   stretching brain of the bulb
   that is dreaming avocado
   COUNTRY NIGHT
   The bathroom light burns over the mirror
   In the blackness of the house
   beds groan from the day’s exhaustion
   hold the tired shoulders bruised
   and cut legs the unexpected
   3 a.m. erections. Someone’s dream
   involves a saw someone’s
   dream involves a woman.
   We have all dreamed of finding the lost dog.
   The last light on upstairs
   throws a circular pattern
   through the decorated iron vent
   to become a living room’s moon.
   
					     					 			 The sofa calls the dog, the cat
   in perfect blackness walks over the stove.
   In the room of permanent light
   cockroaches march on enamel.
   The spider with jewel coloured thighs the brown moth
   with corporal stripes
                            ascend pipes
   and look into mirrors.
   All night the truth happens.
   MOVING FRED’S OUTHOUSE/
   GERIATRICS OF PINE
   All afternoon (while the empty drive-in
   screen in the distance promises)
   we are moving the two-seater
   100 yards across his garden
   We turn it over on its top
   and over, and as it slowly
   falls on its side
   the children cheer
   60 years old and a change in career—
   from these pale yellow flowers emerging
   out of damp wood in the roof
   to become a room thorough with flight, noise,
   and pregnant with the morning’s eggs,
   a perch for chickens.
   Two of us. The sweat.
   Our hands under the bottom
   then the top as it goes
   over, through twin holes the
   flowers, running to move the roller, shove,
   and everybody screaming to keep the dog away.
   Fred the pragmatist – dragging the ancient comic
   out of retirement and into a television series
   among the charging democracy of rhode island reds
   Head over heels across the back lawn
   old wood collapsing in our hands
   All afternoon the silent space is turned
   BUCK LAKE STORE AUCTION
   Scrub lawn.
                  A chained
   dog tense and smelling.
   50 cents for a mattress. 50 cents