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    The Eagle's Mile

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      Fastens onto like clothespins. Lie still, though,

      We're not hanging. You are always covered

      By your smooth forehead and your eyelids;

      You are grazed by no tissued humming

      Of razor wire, or by the shadows that come out

      Framing, scraping, hosing-down sides of glass,

      And leave for a specified time

      The sides of their heads against banks.

      Page 56

      Farmers

      a fragment

      with André Frénaud

      There are not many meteors over the flat country

      Of the old; not one metaphor between the ploughblade

      And the dirt

      not much for the spirit: not enough

      To raise the eyes past the horizon-line

      Even to the Lord, even with neck-muscles like a bull's

      For the up-toss. The modest face has no fear

      Of following a center-split swaying track

      Through grain and straw

      To the grave, or of the honor of work

      With muck and animals, as a man born reconciled

      With his dead kin:

      When love gives him back the rough red of his face he dares

      To true-up the seasons of life with the raggedness of earth,

      With the underground stream as it turns its water

      Into the free stand of the well: a language takes hold

      And keeps on, barely making it, made

      By pain: the pain that's had him ever since school,

      At the same time the indivisible common good

      Being shared among the family

      Came clear to him: he disappears into fog

      He reappears he forces out his voice

      Over the field he extends his figures

      With a dead-right clumsiness,

      And the blazon that changes every year

      Its yellow and green squares, announces at each moment

      Page 57

      What must be said: the justice that the power of man installs

      In exhausted fresh-air coupling with the earth:

      Slogger

      Figure of glory

      Less and more than real, fooled always

      By the unforeseeable: so nailed by your steps

      Into the same steps so marked by wisdom calamitously come by,

      And always uncertain, valiantly balancing,

      So stripped, so hog-poor still, after a long day

      In the immemorial, that I cannot say to you

      Where you will hear me,

      Farmer, there will be no end to your knowing

      The pastures drawn breathless by the furrow,

      The fields, heartsick, unquenchable arid

      avid,

      The forgivable slowness, the whispered prophecies of weather:

      Winter spring, the season that always comes through

      For you, and never enough,

      But only dies, turning out

      In its fragile green, its rich greens,

      To be nothing but the great stain of blankness

      Changing again

      Gravedigger

      On Sunday, you come back Monday to the laying-out

      In squares, of your infinite land

      the furs of snow do not reach us

      When they should

      the moon has troubled the sown seed . . .

      Page 58

      Craters

      with Michel Leiris

      Roots out of the ground and ongoing

      The way we * are, some of them

      Spokes earth-slats a raft made of humped planks

      Slung down and that's right: wired together

      By the horizon: it's what these roads

      Are growing through: fatal roads,

      No encounters, the hacked grass burning with battle-song

      Then when we get our voices together,

      When we mix in that savage way, in the gully of throats

      Where the fog piles up, and we turn our long cadences loose

      Over the grooved pasture, the running fence of song

      Will flap and mount straight up for miles

      Very high, all staring stridulation,

      Softer than beer-hops:

      one of the days when the wind breathes slackly,

      Making the lightest perches tremble

      Like hostile stems interlacing,

      As in the heart a lock of blond hair knots on itself

      Suicidally, insolubly

      someone will plough-out a door,

      A staircase will dig itself down, its haunted spiral

      Will blacken and come out

      Where the ashes of those who were once turned to Pompeian lava

      Will abandon their smouldering silkworks,

      Their velvet slags, and take on the courtliness

      Of ghosts: then, then the sky will be gone from us

      Page 59

      Forever, we wretched ones who can love nothing

      But light.

      Such will the craters tell youany crater

      Will tell you, dry-heaving and crouching:

      will tell us we've stumbled

      Onto one:

      we're in * one, dry-heaving and crouching.

      Page 60

      Attempted Departure

      with André du Bouchet

      I come back

      hoping to leave

      From these planks; for farewell and for lift-off I am lighting

      Four walls of a fire, here. Blank plaster comes alive

      On me in square gold: my shadow goes giddy with dimension, dropping off

      The outflanked pious hunger of the flat;

      The damn thing can come at me now

      Like death, from anywhere

      but while I stand

      No side protected, at home, play-penned

      With holocaust

      the slashes disappear from this flayed back, like

      My step on the rammed road,

      the only thing fleeing.

      Page 61

      Poem

      through a French poet, Roland Bouhéret, and my running father

      For having left the birds that left me

      Better streaks on my eyes than they can make

      On any sky alive:

      for having broken loose new stars

      By opening to the storm a deaf window

      At the moment the summer park closed:

      for having rubbed out,

      From cliffs not dangerous enough, or cold enough

      For you,

      the name of the dead,

      I hear the sound of fresh steps seeding toward me,

      Steps I could take.

      Gene,

      Dead in the full of July

      Ten years ago, I have learned all the tracks

      Of the stars of that month: they give me more body-authority

      Than a beast-birth in straw. Believe me I have kept

      The old river that ran like something from a crock,

      Through the cow-battered weeds: that runs over us

      As baptismal water always;

      I believe I could be walking there

      Like high valleys crossing,

      In the long laconic open-striding fullness

      Of your muscular death. In whole air your form

      Takes up with me best, giving more than it could

      In the hospital's mirror-blanked room

      Where you leaned toward the grim parks under you

      Before they closed,

      and out of the rattling rails

      Page 62

      Of your cocked bed, talked about mowing, nothing

      But mowing, of all weird, unearthly

      Earthly things: like a shower of grassblades

      Talked, tilted and talked,

      and shivered, down past you, the gaunt

      Traffic-islands into green; from that time on, I saw them

      As blocked fields, part of elsewhere.

      But we are advancing

      By steps that grew back to my d
    oor,

      And if I set your long name in the wind

      And it comes back spelling out

      The name of a far port-of-call,

      the place we never got to,

      That is all right.

      And yet, with the ashy river

      Running like a soul where I'm headed,

      Even with the names of harbors that swarmed all over me

      When I hit the open, when I paced myself exactly

      With the currentthese and the birds, the old cows,

      Have stubborned here

      stalled no matter how I increase

      My leg-beat, or stretch and find myself

      Calling out in mid-stride. You are motionless, you are in the middle

      Of elsewhere, breathing the herd-breath

      Of the deadsingled and in-line breathing

      Among so manylooking in the same direction

      As the rest of them, your long legs covered with burrs

      And bent weeds, splinters of grassblades:

      Squared-off, power-bodied, pollen-lidded

      You are: green-leggèd, but nailed there.

      Page 63

      Purgation

      homage, Po Chü-yi

      Before and after the eye, grasses go over the long fields.

      Every season they walk on

      by us, as thoughno; I and you,

      Dear frienddecreed it. One time or another

      They are here. Grass season . . . yet we are no longer the best

      Of us.

      Lie stiller, closer; in the April I love

      For its juices, there is too much green for your grave.

      I feel that the Spring should ignite with what is

      Unnatural as we; ours, but God-suspected. It should come in one furious step, and leave

      Somea littlegreen for us; never quite get every one of the hummocks tremoring vaguely

      Tall in the passed-through air. They'd make the old road be

      The road for old men, where you and I used to wander toward

      The beetle-eaten city gate, as the year leaned into us.

      Oh fire, come on! I trust you!

      My ancient human friend, you are dead, as we both know.

      But I remember, and I call for something serious, uncalled-for

      By anyone else, to sweep, to use

      the dryness we've caused to become us! Like the grasshopper

      I speak, nearly covered with dust, from the footprint and ask

      Not for the line-squall lightning:

      the cloud's faking veinsYes! I catch myself:

      No; not the ripped cloud's open touch the fireball hay

      Of August

      but for flame too old to live

      Or die, to travel like a wide wild contrary

      Single-minded brow over the year's right growing

      In April

      over us for us as we sway stubbornly near death

      From both sides age-gazing

      Both sighing like grass and fire.

      Page 64

      Basics

      I

      Level

      Who has told you what discoveries

      There are, along the stressed blank

      Of a median line? From it, nothing

      Can finally fall. Like a spellbinder's pass

      A tense placid principle continues

      Over it, and when you follow you have the drift,

      The balance of many compass needles

      Verging to the pole. Bring down your arms, voyager,

      And the soul goes out

      Surrounding, humming

      standing by means

      Of the match-up in long arm-bones

      Dropped:

      held out and drawn back back in *

      Out of the open

      compass-quivering and verging

      At your sides, as median movement

      Lays itself bare: a closed vein of bisected marble, where

      Along the hairline stem

      Of the continuum, you progress, trembling

      With the plumb-bob quiver of mid-earth,

      with others in joy

      Moving also, in line,

      Equalling, armlessing.

      Page 65

      II

      Simplex

      Comes a single thread

      monofilament coming

      Strengthening engrossing and slitting

      Into the fine-spun life

      To come, foretold in whatever

      Ecstasy there's been, but never suspected, never included

      In what was believed. The balance of the spiral

      Had been waiting, and could take

      What was given it: the single upthrust through

      The hanging acid, the helix spun and spellbound

      By the God-set of chemistry, the twine much deeper

      Than any two bodies imagined

      They could die for: insinuate, woven

      Single strand, third serpent

      Of the medical wood, circling the staff of life

      Into the very body

      Of the future, deadly

      But family, having known from the beginning

      Of the sun, what will take it on.

      Page 66

      III

      Word

      Heat makes this, heat makes any

      Word: human lungs,

      Human lips. Not like eternity, which, naked, every time

      Will call on lightning

      To say it all: No after

      Or before. We try for that

      And fail. Our voice

      Fails, but for an instant

      Is like the other; breath alone

      That came as though humanly panting

      From far back, in unspeakably beautiful

      Empty space

      And struck: at just this moment

      Found the word ''golden."

     


     

      James Dickey, The Eagle's Mile

     


     

     
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