Another deep night
   with the National Enquirer
   silence
   like the unseen
   arms of a bat
   the book
   falls open
   to sadness
   – dead flowers, dead
   horses who carried
   lovers to a meeting
   On my last walk
   through the kitchen
   I see it
                  I lift
   huge arms of a cobweb
   out of the air
   and carry its Y
   slowly to the porch
   as if alive
   as if it was a wounded bird
   or some terrible camouflaged insect
   that could damage children
            *
   The distance between us
   and then this small map
   of stars
                  a concentrated
   ocean of the night
   when lovers worship heavens
   they are worshipping
   a lack of distance
   my brother the moon
   the lofty mattress
   of nebula,
   rash and spray of love
                            It is all
   as close as my palm
   on your body
                                           so you
   among pillows and moonlight
   look up, search
   for the jewellery
   bathing in darkness
   satellite hunger, remote control,
   ‘the royal we’
                            and find
   your own dark hand
            *
   What were the names of the towns
   we drove into and through
                  stunned lost
   having drunk our way
   up vineyards
   and then Hot Springs
   boiling out the drunkenness
   What were the names
   I slept through
                  my head
   on your thigh
   hundreds of miles
   of blackness entering the car
                            All this
                            darkness and stars
   but now
   under the Napa Valley night
   a star arch of dashboard
   the ripe grape moon
   we are together
   and I love this muscle
   I love this muscle
   that tenses
                  and joins
   the accelerator
   to my cheek
   *
   (The linguistic war between men and women)
   And sometimes
   I think
   women in novels are too
   controlled by the adverb.
   As they depart
   a perfume of description
   ‘She rose from the table
   and left her shoe
   behind, casually’
   ‘Let’s keep our minds
   clear, she said drunkenly,’
   the print hardly dry
   on words like that
   My problem tonight
   is this landscape.
   Like the Sanskrit lover
   who sees breasts in the high clouds,
   testicles on the riverbed
   (‘The soldiers left their balls
   behind, crossing into Bangalore
   she said, mournfully’)
   Every leaf bends
   I can put my hand
   into various hollows, the dogs
   lick their way up the ditch
   swallow the scent
   of whatever they eat
   Always wanted to own
   a movie theatre
   called ‘The Moonlight’
   What’s playing at The Moonlight
   she asked
   leafily
   Men never trail away.
   They sweat adjective.
   ‘She fell into
   his unexpected arms.’
   He mixes a ‘devious’ drink.
   He spills his maddened seed
   onto the lettuce—
   *
   (Real life)
   In real life
   men talk about art
   women judge men
   In the Queen Street tavern
   3 p.m. the only one busy
   is the waitress
   who reads a book a day
   Hour of the afternoon soaps
   Accusations
   which hide the trap
   door of tomorrow’s guilt.
   Men bursting into bedrooms
   out of restaurants.
   Everyone talks on phones
   to the lover’s brother
   or the husband’s mistress
   My second beer
   my fifth cigarette
   the only thing more
   confusing venomous
   than real life
   is this hour of the soaps
   where nobody smokes
   and nobody talks about art
   I’ve woken in thick
   households
   all my life
   but can nightmare myself
   into this future—
   last spring I sat here
   Sunday Morning
   as bachelor drunks
   came in, eyes
   in prayer to the Billy Graham Show
   The pastel bar
   grey colours of the tv
   this is where people come
   after the second failure of redemption
   Ramon Fernandez,
                            tell me
   what port you
   bought that tattoo
            *
   Midnight dinner at the Vesta Lunch
   Here there is nothing
   I have taken from you
   so I begin with memory
   as old songs do
                            in this café
   against the night
   in this villa refrain
   where we collect the fragment
   no longer near us
   to make ourselves whole
                            your bright eyes
   in a greek bar, the way
   you wear your hat
            *
   I have always
   been afflicted
   by angular
   small breasted
   women
   from the mid-west,
   knew this was true
   the minute I met you
            *
   Repetition of midnight
   Every creature doth sleep
   But us
   and the fanatics
                  I want
   the roulette of the lightning bolt
   to decide all
   On this suburban street
   the skate-boarder rolls
   surrounded by the seeming
   hiss of electricity
                            unlit
   I see him through the trees
   up Ptarmigan
                  a thick sweater
   for the late September night
   I am unable to make anything of this
   who are  
					     					 			these words for
   Even the dog
   curls away
   into himself
   the only one to know your name
            *
   I write about you
   as if I own you
   which I do not.
   As you can say of nothing
   this is mine.
   When we rise
   the last hug
   no longer belongs,
   is your fiction
   or my story.
   Mulch for the future.
   Whether we pass
   through each other
   like pure arrows
   or fade into rumour
   I write down now
   a fiction of your arm
   or of that afternoon
   in Union Station
   when we both were lost
   pain falling free
   the speed of tears
   under the Grand Rotunda
   as we disappeared
   rose from each other
   you and your arrow
   taking just
   what you fled through
   *
   (‘I want to be lifted up by some great white bird unknown to the police…’)
   I will never let a chicken
   into my life
   but I have let you
   though you squeezed in
   through a screen door
   the way some chickens do
   I would never let chickens
   influence my character
   but like them good sense
   scatters at your entrance
   – ‘poetic skill,’ ‘duty,’
   under the fence
   Your lean shoulders
   studied with greyhounds.
   Such ball and socket joints
   I’ve seen only in diagrams
   on the cover of Scientific American.
   I’ve let greyhounds
   into my vicinity
   – noses, paws, ribcages
   against my arm, I admit
   a weakness
   for reluctant modesty.
   I could spend days lying on the ground
   seeing the world with the perspective of snails
   stumbling the small territory of obsessions
   this leaf and grain of you,
   could attempt the epic
   journey over your shoulder.
   When you were a hotel gypsy
   delirious by windows
   waving your arms
   and singing over the parking lots
   I learned from the foolish oyster
   and stepped out.
   So here I am
   saying see this
   look what I found
   when I opened myself up
   before death before the world,
   look at this blue eye
   this socket in her waving arm
   these wonders.
   In the night busy as snails
   in wet chlorophyll apartments
   we enter each other’s shells
   the way humans at such times
   wish to enter mouths of lovers,
   sleeping like the rumour of pearl
   in the embrace of oyster.
   I have never let spectacles into my life
   and now I am walking past
   where I could see.
   Here,
                  where the horizon was
   *
   (The desire under the Elms Motel)
   how I attempted seduction
   with a select and
   careful playing of
   The McGarrigle Sisters
   how you seduced me
   stereophonically      the laugh
   the nose     ankle     nature
                  repartee     the knee
   your sad determination     letters
   the earring
                  that falls
                  ‘hey love—
                  you forgot your glove’
            *
   Speaking to you
   this hour
   these days when
   I have lost the feather of poetry
   and the rains
   of separation
   surround us tock
   tock like Go tablets
   Everyone has learned
   to move carefully
   ‘Dancing’ ‘laughing’ ‘bad taste’
   is a memory
   a tableau behind trees of law
   In the midst of love for you
   my wife’s suffering
   anger in every direction
   and the children wise
   as tough shrubs
   but they are not tough
   – so I fear
   how anything can grow from this
   all the wise blood
   poured from little cuts
   down into the sink
   this hour it is not
   your body I want
   but your quiet company
            *
   Dentists disguise their own bad teeth
   barbers go bald, foolish birds
   travel to one particular tree.
   They pride themselves
   on focus.
   Poets cannot spell.
   Everyone claims abstinence.
   Reading Neruda to a class
   reading his lovely old
   curiosity about all things
   I am told this is the first time
   in months I seem happy.
   Jealous of his slide
   through complexity.
   All afternoon I keep
   stepping into his pocket
                  whispering
   instruct and delight me
   *
   (These back alleys)
   for Daphne
   In ’64 you moved
   and where was I?
   – somewhere and married.
   (In ’64 everybody got married)
   Whatever we are now we were then.
   Some days those maps collide
   falling into future land.
   It seems for hours
   we have sat in your car,
   almost valentine’s day,
   I’ve got a plane to meet and I
   hold your rose for you.
   This talking
   like a slow dance,
   the sharing of earphones.
   Since I got separated
   I cannot hold
   my brain in my arms anymore.
   Sitting in the back alley
   this new mapping, hello
   to the terra nova.
   Now we watch each other
   in our slow walks towards
   and out of everything
   we wanted to know in ’64
            *
   And for George moonlight
   became her. Curious. After years of wit
   he saw it enter her and believed,
   singing love songs in the back seat.
   Three of us drive downtown
   in our confusions
   goodbye to the hills of the 30’s
   Sinned, torn apart, how do each of us
   share our hearts
   and George still ‘hearty,’ bad jokes
   scattering to the group,
   does not converse, but he sings the heartbreakers
   badly and precisely in the back seat
   so we moon, we tough
            *
   Kissing the stomach
   kissing your scarred
   skin boat. History
   is what you’ve travelled on
   and take with you
   We’ve each had our stomachs
   kissed by strangers
   to the othe 
					     					 			r
   and as for me
   I bless everyone
   who kissed you here
   *
   (Ends of the Earth)
                  For you I have slept
   like an arrow in the hall
   pointing towards your wakefulness
   in other time zones
                  And wary
   piece by piece
   we put each other together
                            your past
   that of one who has walked
   through fifteen strange houses
   in order to be here
   the charm of Wichita
   gunmen in your bones
                  the 19th century
   strolling like a storm
   through your long body
   that history I read in comic books
   and on the flickering screen
   when I was thirteen
   Now we are cats-cradled
   in the Pacific
   how does one avoid this?
   Go to the ends of the earth?
   The loose moon follows