like an old indian, for just a little
   rain over this desert.
   Telling the Hour
   if you want to know
   the time you must look
   at a clock, or stare continuously
   into the moon,
   until it grows round like a clock.
   under the moon growing round
   a hunter strolls; he must be saying,
   “i have killed an animal.” however,
   as the evening draws
   close in for a better look, it is
   nine p.m. and the hunter’s arms
   are loaded with air, his belly
   swells with the solitude. he is saying,
   “i think i have killed an animal,
   a barely visible bird,
   at eight p.m., or the dim
   figure of a woman bent over
   her sewing, in a distant house,
   who glanced occasionally
   at the big moon. and i shot
   a telephone pole as it strained
   into the sky, wanting desperately the moon.”
   as he continues among the trees,
   the ticking of the city becomes
   larger, moving the birds and insects
   from the air, rattling
   the moon so that it opens
   and tolls down upon the hunter.
   his hands try to caress the sudden,
   awkward hush, and he wonders more often,
   “have i killed an animal?”
   Retirement
   i would like to be just an old man with my gin,
   retiring even from these leaves into
   my big, gradual silence beyond the wood
   and it will be good,
   wife, because i have pointed to you,
   and you have become real. within
   this darker stillness my eyes grow too wide.
   it must be that seeing you in the trees
   becoming softer than i ever dreamed
   has made it all seem
   a multitude of nonsense, all the seas,
   the planets, all i wrote. i lied,
   i swear to you i lied, becoming old and so
   very drunk, when i did not lie to you.
   The Year’s First Snow
   emptying into
   the freezing, quiet alleys
   there is the voice of a single
   ferreting drunk. if he is singing
   it is lovely, and if he talks on
   strangely, he, at least,
   understands. by the river, noiselessly,
   some lovers have frozen
   in the winter, and they will be taken
   away, with the floods of spring.
   in an upper window
   of the county jail, the sleepless man
   who was framed knows
   that all along, all along,
   this snow that rests
   more heavily over the reach of branches
   has been descending.
   On a Busy Street a Man Walks Behind a Woman
   there is the chance that you will step
   ahead of me into the traffic
   alive, and that there will be
   an accident. always i am walking,
   i am seeing your heels and thinking
   of something else, but always i am
   asking you to remember: if you step carefully
   into the screeching
   of tires and become bloody, i must not
   be the one extending himself awkwardly
   into the confusion to say, my dear
   mrs. hutchins, do
   forgive the way we have arranged
   your body, dead like that
   on the pavement, but surely you
   understand? it must
   not be me who is the one
   fisherman to fish you up drowned among
   all that seaweed. it cannot
   be me looking in all
   directions for help, knowing all
   along that it is just you
   and me, finally, and that i am
   alone to hear the sound of the breakfast
   bell opening as it did
   into the corners of the barnyard, and your
   mother’s voice calling back
   and forth among the animals. am i
   positioned here alone to welcome
   you from such a very distant
   place, and must i now tell you what every
   second in your life, what all the
   breathing and the continual inching
   forward of the body through each and every
   day, when i am so absolutely
   young, when i am so
   unprepared, must i
   tell you what it has all
   at last come to? you are
   dead, mrs. hutchins, amid this
   mob craning to see your own blood,
   which has somehow
   gotten away from you in all
   the excitement—i am so truly sorry,
   of course it isn’t fair, you weren’t
   prepared, but don’t you see it works
   this way for all of us, for instance that
   i am here just isn’t fair, either, because
   of my unpreparedness, because of my lack
   of anything to say except you’re dead,
   you’re dead, i didn’t
   do it, i didn’t do it.
   Checking the Traps
   morning,
   the door opening, changing
   into a doorway. half
   the night i stayed awake and smoked
   and watched the mousetraps.
   the mice were there, nudging
   into cups and plates, one fell
   into the toaster, but escaped.
   they waited until i gave up and slept to die.
   for these mice
   the night will be long, i heard
   the iron snapping
   in my sleep and dreamed my wife was
   closing the door.
   two mice are dead, for my wife.
   mice make her legs
   go watery, as they do sometimes after her climax.
   one mouse’s head is barely
   in the trap, one eye probing
   toward the ceiling where i could tell him
   there is nothing.
   the other mouse is flung willingly under the iron
   bar. i wonder, were they
   married? was she pregnant? they are
   going out together,
   in the garbage this morning. it was
   morning when we were married.
   it has been morning
   for a long time. that mouse, with his
   eye. did he hear the iron snapping,
   and dream it was his
   wife with her stretching, laden tits
   closing the door?
   The Man Among the Seals
   for Ed Schroeder
   at night here in the park it is different:
   the man by the seal pool stalks
   through an acute emptiness, encircled
   by the city. is he
   taking off his clothes?
   by day i have seen
   the seals, enclosed, blundering
   among the spattered rocks. they climb
   like prisoners of a ferris wheel, above
   their pool and above
   the peanuts floating through
   air, high over the sudden, too large
   teeth of the spectators. but at night
   without their land-locked captors moving
   gracefully by, the seals
   seem less inept, even
   on the hostile rocks.
   before dawn they rise
   and dive, becoming masters
   in the water. the figure in
   underwear on the left is not
   a seal. before me and
   an audience of trees he has
   joined the seals. drunk, perhaps,
   and, a staggerer on land,
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; perhaps he hopes to move cleanly,
   like a seal, through water. or,
   sober, perhaps he dives to assume
   the clumsiness now shed by the seals: then
   he will tumble drunk onto
   the ground, and the seals, plunging
   landward, will find
   no awkwardness among the rocks, will
   no longer wonder deep
   within themselves at a dry hardness
   which is not ice. each day
   he will return, wetness
   forever staining through his pants,
   to watch his seals as they rise
   above the rocks to pluck the floating
   bits of food, as they slide through
   the air over the trees, the
   ferris wheel grown
   stationary with shame, the tiny
   unfamiliar bodies jerking
   under balloons through the lighted park.
   Crossing Over the Ice
   i should have brought
   an axe to this white place and seen
   for sure if, far beneath,
   a city is falling irretrievably away.
   as it is i can only guess
   that this spot, warmer
   than the rest, is where the tallest
   steeple was cut loose to unmoor the town.
   i wonder: could i nudge my vision
   over onto the spaces below?
   it has thus far been
   easy to locate myself, somewhere between hands
   warming in pockets and the hands that waken,
   empty, out of the shadows
   of buildings. i know
   what’s going on; the stars
   evade the oceans, thank goodness,
   and just here there are
   the trees fumbling with roots under the earth.
   to chip through to a town
   that will not come back might
   put me anywhere, i might become
   that someone on the farther bank, who is standing
   still within the movement of trees, as if
   one step would lose him gradually
   into the stars. he may be
   the one who has leaned
   his head into the air underneath and seen
   another dawn glowing like a deep fish,
   seen, as here above,
   the citizens in the morning
   growing tinier, weightless
   and lost from their families,
   preparing for beautiful
   supermarkets, for an endlessness
   of downward flight under an expanse of snow.
   Upon Waking
   at the far edge of earth, night
   is going away. another
   poem begins. slumped over
   the typewriter i must get this
   exactly, i want to make it
   clear this morning that your
   face, as it opens
   from its shadow, is more
   perfect than yesterday; and
   that the light, as it
   hesitates over the approach
   of your smile, has given this
   aching bed more than warmth,
   more than poems; someway
   a generous rose, or a very
   delicate arrangement of sounds,
   has come to peace in this new room.
   A Child Is Born in the Midwest
   as i look on your struggle i remember
   i have seen arriving from movie theaters
   the forms of people
   disgraced, slanting heavily out of the cold,
   their coats, the muscles under the skin
   fraying, given up to the air.
   and later, near morning,
   i have seen their figures compelled
   from the panic and emptiness of the town asleep
   into all-night diners, which flounder, exhausted.
   outside the towns the wide plains
   are delirious
   with frozen animals,
   and the sky is rising with moons and moons.
   these faces lifted over the street
   are not moons. even so, they are
   lost somewhere between worlds and home,
   in a town that can’t quite hold onto the earth.
   i listen to your tiny,
   unbelieving anguish,
   and i wonder if i have known
   these faces in another time;
   and i think that you have come here, drifting
   through universes of cold
   because no longer, no longer
   could the womb contain your loneliness.
   To Enter Again
   for the astronauts on the occasion
   of their re-entry
   for the first few instants in
   this jungled machine we were all
   at once human. then
   we became confused monsters,
   and then we were, as before,
   sardines waiting to land hung
   over like sardines.
   for the first few instants
   we had been dragged
   outside of everything. but
   the cracks began to show, each
   of us was too much the
   other, and we were once
   again inside our terribly good
   balloon, revolving and knowing
   far too much.
   the first day we slept
   little, we examined and counted
   the stars. we thought we should. and now
   we sleep most of the time, dreaming
   ourselves away from this haze
   of tubes and gauges. we have learned: we
   have been brought here to
   wait, and to learn
   to live packed
   in forever, waiting to be pried
   out. to live here truly
   washed by the sea, turning end
   over end, waiting to halt,
   and breathe, but never
   halting. waiting to slide at
   last toward the freshly lighted
   earth, there to wait and dive again far
   down into tubes and fantasies.
   the moon lies
   there beyond us, cringing toward the neat
   package of stars, not
   waiting. below, in dreams, the earth scatters
   in all directions way from
   itself, and yearns
   toward us, toward our distant perfection.
   Drunk in the Depot
   for Bob Zimmerman
   drunk here in the railway depot
   i can recall your train budging
   forward in that other depot, that first
   squash of steam making
   your window real and solid. that is
   why i am jumping down onto
   the tracks, or because i am a gazelle.
   i left later, by bus, and now
   the city is gray and vacant, so i
   am bounding out of the depot along
   the tracks though i think
   i am here to see someone
   off. the train moved and you were
   windowed in and everything was
   final. or i might have left
   by plane from the airport. no,
   it was bus. i am supposed to
   wave goodbye to a girl. that
   was the last time i
   saw you, so i will keep
   moving down the tracks because
   i am some kind of zebra, because
   these railway tracks are mashing
   like ridiculous snowshoes into
   the distance. she thinks i am
   cute, in a grubby, nonsexual
   way. it was summer then; now
   it is winter, with all
   the roads stationed outside
   the houses and the snow coming
   to get them. it should have been
   night, and it is.
   The Cabinet Member
   …wake up in the morning:
   a critical edi 
					     					 			torial, or a Herb Block cartoon.
   RICHARD NIXON
   wake up
   in the morning: a critical
   editorial, or a herb block
   cartoon. sometimes, if my wife
   would just leave me alone things
   would be all right. you should see
   this cartoon,
   or the poor sogginess
   of this bacon, you don’t believe this
   country’s going down
   and not up. the sewers
   demand attention. the potomac
   is swallowing up all the love,
   and society is
   killing itself, for love. if i
   had a dog there would be
   more love in it for me. if
   i had something in my hands.
   In a Rented Room
   this is a good dream, even if the falling is
   no less real, and even if my feet will crumble
   on the lurking ground. my throat itches, and i am
   awake in this room which is no less vacant for
   all my presence and there are no aspirin. here
   is the sun with its tired surprise, the morning. there