or believable sham.
   I paid him to remain strange
   to my threshold and table,
   to permit me to forget him—
   knowing I won’t. He’s the guest
   of my knowing, though not asked.
   THE THIEF
   I think of us lying asleep,
   eyes and hands filled with the dark,
   when the arm of the night
   entered, reaching into the pockets
   of our empty clothes. We slept
   in the element of that power,
   innocent of it, preserved from it
   not even by our wish.
   As though not born, we were carried
   beyond an imminence we did not
   waken to, as passively as stars
   are carried beyond their spent
   shining—our eyes granted to the light
   again, by what chance or price
   we do not even know.
   THE BROKEN GROUND
   The opening out and out,
   body yielding body:
   the breaking
   through which the new
   comes, perching
   above its shadow
   on the piling up
   darkened broken old
   husks of itself:
   bud opening to flower
   opening to fruit opening
   to the sweet marrow
   of the seed—
   taken
   from what was, from
   what could have been.
   What is left
   is what is.
   FINDINGS
   (1969)
   THE DESIGN OF THE HOUSE:
   IDEAL AND HARD TIME
   1.
   Except in idea, perfection is as wild
   as light; there is no hand laid on it.
   But the house is a shambles
   unless the vision of its perfection
   upholds it like stone.
   More probable: the ideal
   of its destruction:
   cloud of fire prefiguring
   its disappearance.
   What value there is
   is assumed;
   like a god, the house elects its omens;
   because it is, I desire it should be
   —white, its life intact in it,
   among trees.
   Love has conceived a house,
   and out of its labor
   brought forth its likeness
   —the emblem of desire, continuing
   though the flesh falls away.
   2.
   We’ve come round again
   to short days and long nights;
   time goes;
   the clocks barely keep up;
   a spare dream of summer
   is kept
   alive in the house:
   the Queen Anne’s lace
   —gobletted,
   green beginning to bloom,
   tufted, upfurling—
   unfolding
   whiteness:
   in this winter’s memory
   more clear than ever in summer,
   cold paring away excess:
   the single blooming random
   in the summer’s abundance
   of its kind, in high relief
   above the clover and grass
   of the field, unstill
   an instant,
   the day having come upon it,
   green and white
   in as much light as ever was.
   Opened, white, at the solstice
   of its becoming, then the flower
   forgets its growing;
   is still;
   dirt is its paradigm—
   and this memory’s seeing,
   a cold wind keening the outline.
   3.
   Winter nights the house sleeps,
   a dry seedhead in the snow
   falling and fallen, the white
   and dark and depth of it, continuing
   slow impact of silence.
   The dark
   rooms hold our heads on pillows, waiting
   day, through the snow falling and fallen
   in the darkness between inconsecutive
   dreams. The brain burrows in its earth
   and sleeps,
   trusting dawn, though the sun’s
   light is a light without precedent, never
   proved ahead of its coming, waited for
   by the law that hope has made it.
   4.
   What do you intend?
   Drink blood
   and speak, old ghosts. I don’t
   hear you. What has it amounted to
   —the unnegotiable accumulation
   of your tears? Your expenditure
   has purchased no reprieve. Your
   failed wisdom shards among the
   down-going atoms of the moment.
   History goes blind and in darkness;
   neither sees nor is seen, nor is
   known except as a carrion
   marked with unintelligible wounds:
   dragging its dead body, living,
   yet to be born, it moves heavily
   to its glories. It tramples
   the little towns, forgets their names.
   5.
   If reason was all, reason
   would not exist—the will
   to reason accounts for it;
   it’s not reason that chooses
   to live; the seed doesn’t swell
   in its husk by reason, but loves
   itself, obeys light which is
   its own thought and argues the leaf
   in secret; love articulates
   the choice of life in fact; life
   chooses life because it is
   alive; what lives didn’t begin dead,
   nor sun’s fire commence in ember.
   Love foresees a jointure
   composing a house, a marriage
   of contraries, compendium
   of opposites in equilibrium.
   This morning the sun
   came up before the moon set;
   shadows were stripped from the house
   like burnt rags, the sky turning
   blue behind the clear moon,
   day and night moving to day.
   Let severances be as dividing
   budleaves around the flower
   —woman and child enfolded, chosen.
   It’s a dying begun, not lightly,
   the taking up of this love
   whose legacy is its death.
   6.
   This is a love poem for you, Tanya—
   among wars, among the brutal forfeitures
   of time, in this house, among its latent fires,
   among all that honesty must see, I accept
   your dying, and love you: nothing mitigates
   —and for our Mary, chosen by the blind
   hungering of our blood, precious and periled
   in her happy mornings; whose tears are mine.
   7.
   There’s still a degree of sleep
   recalls
   the vast empty dream I slept in
   as a child
   sometimes contained a chaos, tangled
   like fishline snarled in hooks—
   sometimes a hook, whetted, severe,
   drawing
   the barbed darkness to a point;
   sometimes I seemed merely to be falling.
   The house, also, has taken shape in it.
   8.
   And I have dreamed
   of the morning coming in
   like a bird through the window
   not burdened by a thought,
   the light a singing
   as I hoped.
   It comes in and sings
   on the corner of the white washstand,
   among coleus stems and roots
   in a clear green bottle
   on the black tabletop
   beneath the window,
   under the purple coleus leaves,
   among 
					     					 			 spearing
   green philodendron leaves,
   on the white washstand:
   a small yellow bird with black wings,
   darting in and out.
   9.
   To imagine the thoughtlessness
   of a thoughtless thing
   is useless.
   The mind must sing
   of itself to keep awake.
   Love has visualized a house,
   and out of its expenditure
   fleshed the design
   at this cross ways
   of consciousness and time:
   its form is growth
   come to light in it;
   croplands, gardens,
   are of its architecture,
   labor its realization;
   solstice is the height
   of its consciousness,
   thicket a figuration
   of its waking;
   plants and stars are made convergent
   in its windows;
   cities we have gone to and come back
   are the prospect of its doorways.
   And there’s a city it dreams of:
   salt-white beside the water.
   10.
   Waking comes into sleep like a dream:
   violet dawn over the snow, the black trees.
   Snow and the house’s white make a white
   the black swifts may come back to.
   THE HANDING DOWN
   1. The light
   The mind is the continuity
   of its objects, and the coherence
   of its objects—the
   understanding of each
   one thing by the
   intelligence of an assemblage.
   It is the effort of design
   to triumph over the imperfections
   of the parts—
   the old man’s gathering of memories
   toward this morning’s windows
   and pipe and talk, the road
   and housefronts all his years
   have come by, the squash blooms
   of this summer’s garden.
   The mind falsifies its objects
   by inattention. Indirection
   is its debasement of what it loves.
   It is not given proof
   that it is true. It is blind
   at the beginning and at the end.
   It is the illumination of a passage,
   no more.
   2. The conversation
   Speaker and hearer, words
   making a passage between them,
   begin a community.
   Two minds
   in succession, grandfather
   and grandson, they sit and talk
   on the enclosed porch,
   looking out at the town, which
   recalls itself in their talk
   and is carried forward.
   Their conversation has
   no pattern of its own,
   but alludes casually
   to a shaped knowledge
   in the minds of the two men
   who love each other.
   The quietness of knowing in common
   is half of it. Silences come into it
   easily, and break it
   while the old man thinks
   or concentrates on his pipe
   and the strong smoke
   climbs over the brim of his hat.
   He has lived a long time.
   He has seen the changes of times
   and grown used to the world
   again. Having been wakeful so long,
   the loser of so many years,
   his mind moves back and forth,
   sorting and counting,
   among all he knows.
   His memory has become huge,
   and surrounds him,
   and fills his silences.
   He lifts his head
   and speaks of an old day
   that amuses him or grieves him
   or both.
   Under the windows opposite them
   there’s a long table loaded
   with potted plants, the foliage
   staining and shadowing the daylight
   as it comes in.
   3. The old man is older in history than in time
   “I’ve lived in two countries
   in my life
   and never moved.”
   He has spoken of the steamboats
   of his boyhood, the whistles
   still clear to him
   in the upriver bends,
   coming down to the landings
   now disappeared, their names
   less spoken every year.
   He has remembered the open days
   of that first country
   —“It was free here
   when I was a boy”—and the old
   brutalities and sorrows.
   And now they talk of power
   and politics and war, agonies
   now, and to come,
   deaths never imagined
   by the old man’s generation.
   The mistakes of the old
   become the terrors of the young.
   In the face of his grandson he sees
   something of himself, going on.
   Moved by the near suffering
   of other men, he has taken them
   into the body of his thought.
   “If I died now, I wouldn’t lose
   much. It’s you young ones
   I worry about.”
   4. He looks out the window at the town
   Beyond the windows, past the fern
   and the pot rims and the patterned
   vine leaves, and the trees
   in the yard, are the white housefronts
   and storefronts of the little town,
   facing the road. There are only
   the two directions: coming in
   and going out. And all
   who take one take both.
   The town, “port of entry
   and departure for the bodies
   as well as the souls of men,”
   aspires to the greatness of the greatest
   city of the mind—with its dead
   for baggage. It suffers its dead beside it
   under the particular grass, the summary stone.
   Their hill keeps a silence into which
   the live town speaks a little.
   They are the town’s shut record, all
   their complexity perished—victims
   of epidemics, meanness, foolishness,
   heredity, war, recklessness, chance,
   pride, time. None ever escaped.
   That is the history of the place.
   The town, its white walls
   gleaming among black
   shadows and green leaves,
   stands on the surface of the eye.
   And the town’s history is the eye’s
   depth and recognition—is the mind’s
   discovery of itself in its place
   in a new morning.
   5. He has lived through another night
   He begins the knowledge
   of the sun’s absence.
   He’s likely to wake up
   any hour of the night
   out of his light sleep
   to know—with clarity like
   the touch of hands in the dark—
   the stillness of the room.
   The silence
   stretches over the town
   like a black tent, whose hem
   the headstones weight.
   Into it come, now
   and again, hard footsteps
   on the road, remote
   sudden voices, and then
   a car coming in, or
   going out, the headlights
   levering the window’s
   image around the walls.
   And he considers the size
   of his life, lying in it there,
   looking up out of it
   into the darkness,
   the transparence of all
   his old yea 
					     					 			rs between him
   and the darkness.
   Before it’s light
   the birds waken, and begin
   singing in the dark trees
   around the house, among the leaves
   over the dampened roofs
   of the still town
   and in the country thickets
   for miles. Their voices
   reach to the end of the dark.
   6. The new house
   At the foot of his long shadow
   he walked across the town
   early in the morning
   to watch the carpenters at work
   on a new house. The saws released
   the warm pine-smell into the air
   —the scent of time to come, freshly
   opened. He was comforted by that,
   and by the new unblemished wood.
   That time goes, making
   the jointures of households, for better
   or worse, is no comfort.
   That, for the men and women
   still to be born, time is coming
   is a comfort of sorts.
   That there’s a little of the good
   left over from a few lives
   is a comfort of sorts.
   He has grown eager
   in his love for the good dead
   and all the unborn.
   That failed hope
   doesn’t prove the failure of hope
   is a comfort of sorts.
   Grown old and wise, he takes
   what comfort he can get, as gladly as once
   he’d have taken the comfort he wished for.
   For a man knowing evil—how surely
   it grows up in any ground and makes seed—
   the building of a house is a craft indeed.
   7. The heaviness of his wisdom
   The incredible happens, he knows.
   The worst possibilities are real.
   The terrible justifies
   his dread of it. He knows winter
   despondences, the mind inundated
   by its excrement, hope gone
   and not remembered.
   And he knows vernal transfigurations,
   the sentence in the stems of trees
   noisy with old memory made new,
   troubled with the seed
   of the being of what has not been.
   He trusts the changes of the sun and air:
   dung and carrion made earth,
   richness that forgets what it was.
   He knows, if he can hold out
   long enough, the good
   is given its chance.