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    Saving Daylight

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      fell across my not-so-sunken chest. The smallest

      gods ask me what there is beyond consciousness,

      the moment by moment enclosure the mind

      builds to capture the rudiments of time.

      Two nights ago I heard a woman from across

      the creek, a voice I hadn’t heard since childhood.

      I didn’t answer. Red was red this dawn

      after a night of the swirling milk of stars

      that came too close. I felt lucky not to die.

      My brother died at high noon one day in Arkansas.

      Divide your death by your life and you get

      a circle, though I’m not so good at math.

      This morning I sat in the dirt playing

      with five cow dogs, giving out a full pail of biscuits.

      Young Love

      In my “Memoir of an Unsuccessful Prostitute”

      I questioned what was it like to be nineteen

      in New York City in 1957, fresh from northern

      Michigan farmland, looking for sex and food.

      First of all the edges of buildings were sharp

      and if you walked around a corner too close

      to them you could cut yourself. Even though it

      was summer the daylight was short and when it

      was hot you sweated inward. You walked the streets

      as a shy elephant who within the cruelty

      of his neurons had conceived a love of women.

      A black woman said you were too white

      and a white woman said you were too brown.

      Another said you were a red Indian (“How

      exciting”). You became very thin and fell asleep

      beside fountains, on park benches, in the library

      where they roused you with a shake. Pigeons

      avoided you as a breadless monster. The circus women

      paid in used popcorn, their secret currency.

      The beatnik girl paid with crabs who tugged

      at the roots of your eyebrows, your tiny friends.

      Late one night the moon split in pieces

      and you could see two yellow shards at the ends

      of Forty-second Street where a herring sandwich

      was a quarter, Italian sausage fifty cents.

      The drug of choice was a Benzedrine inhaler

      plus three beers, after which you jumped over the hood

      of an approaching taxi with your invisible pogo stick.

      You hitchhiked the trail of a letter from a girl back home

      and New York City became more beautiful

      with each mile west.

      The Movie

      I’m making a movie about my life

      which never ends. The plot thickens

      and thickens like an overcooked soup.

      The movie features tens of thousands

      of characters including those who passed

      me on the street without knowing

      that I was a star. The film includes

      my long horizontal dives above fields

      of corpses. I’ve become proud that I’m part

      dog favoring perceptions over conclusions.

      I’m not sexy enough at my age

      to carry a movie so I’m filming my mind

      at play, with the rudiments of Eros

      backing into the camera with the force

      of a drop forge. Ultimately the poet, filmmaker,

      is the girl who didn’t have a date for the prom.

      She takes a walk and hears the music

      from the gymnasium, imagining the crepe

      paper and wilting corsages vibrating

      with the wretched music. She walks past

      the graveyard with its heavy weight

      of dirt nappers and climbs a hill steep

      as a cow’s face. From the top of the hill

      she sees the world she never made

      but has changed with words into the arena

      of the sacred. The sky becomes

      dumbfounded with her presence. If she decides

      to shoot herself it’s only to come to life again.

      The thin slip of the moon speaks French

      but the voice is compressed by trees and translated

      by fireflies. This girl is far more interesting

      than I am and that’s why I’m filming

      her rather than my trip to the mailbox

      avoiding the usual rattlesnakes in the tallgrass.

      It’s not truth that keeps us alive

      but invention, no actual past but the stories

      we’ve devised to cover our disappearing

      asses. Near a pond she hears the millions of

      tree frogs, peepers, and thinks this noise is sex.

      For a split second she wonders what it would

      be like to make love to that older poet she heard

      read in Grand Rapids, the way he grasped

      her hand when he gave her a free book. My god,

      now we’re nearly together in my movie though

      the camera is the unwilling POV and when it

      comes CLOSE she pushes down her jeans

      near the thicket where I’ve been waiting.

      In the faintest moonlight I see her pelvic curls.

      Now it is time to back away from heaven’s mouth.

      I don’t film dreams that lack narrative drive,

      and besides I have no legs to leave the thicket,

      only an imagination whose camera has chosen

      to BACK AWAY far above the crucified dogs

      and the soldiers writhing in alien courtyards,

      above the swirling cumuli where those who we

      thought were dead watch us while sitting on plastic

      lounge chairs, up where the finest music still rises,

      up there out of harm’s way where I store my life film

      in microversion around the neck of a hawk who has

      never landed since birth.

      Livingston Suite

      in memory of T.J. Huth

      Shorn of nature,

      here but in small supply,

      townspeople adore their dogs.

      Our dogs have never lived

      in a town. Neither have I

      since 1967. I adore

      the puzzlement of our dogs.

      Each morning I walk four blocks

      to this immense river,

      surprised that it’s still there,

      that it won’t simply disappear

      into the ground like the rest of us.

      In the burnt July air

      the strange cool odor

      of sprinkler water

      creating its own little breeze

      in the Livingston Park

      where there are twelve rings for playing

      horseshoes built before the fathers of lies

      built the clouds above our heads.

      A lovely girl passes on her bicycle

      with a fat cat

      on her shoulder who watches me

      disappear through heavy lids,

      then a lovely soiled girl on her knees

      in a garden looks up at me

      to say hello. A Christian urge tries

      to make me ignore her pretty butt

      cocked upward like a she-cat’s.

      Four churches within a block,

      Methodist, Lutheran, Episcopal, Congregational,

      surrounding me with maudlin holiness,

      Sunday’s hymns a droning hum

      against the ceilings. Crows and magpies think,

      Oh it’s that day again.

      Christ in the New World like Milne’s Eeyore,

      a lumpen donkey sweating with our greed,

      trying to make us shepherd his billions of birds.

      Under the streets are the remnants

      of an older town with caches

      of Indian skulls, also wizened

      white scalps from those who jumped

      the gun on the westward movement

      that is still ending in
    Santa Monica

      where a girl I knew who, after taking three

      California speedballs, had her brain hurled into eternity

      like a jellied softball. Oh Cynthia.

      I walk my dog Rose in the alleys

      throughout town. Maybe it’s where poets belong,

      these substreets where the contents of human life

      can be seen more clearly, our shabby backsides

      disappearing into the future at the precise rate

      of the moon’s phases. Rose turns, hearing

      an upstairs toilet flush, the dead cows,

      pigs and chickens turning semiliquid

      in the guts of strangers, the pretty tomato

      changing shape, the potatoes that once held leaves

      and blossoms in their spindly green arms. Holy days

      of early summer with lilacs drooping laden

      under the weight of their moist art. From a kitchen

      a woman laughs a barking laugh over

      something I’ll never know. A ninety-year-old

      couple emerges from the Methodist church smiling,

      masters of a superior secret. Back in the alley

      a dirty yellow cat emerges from a garbage can

      with trout remains, a sure sign of feline victory.

      She holds the carcass tightly as if I might take it.

      Our newspaper, The Enterprise, said,

      “Grizzlies feasting on storm-killed cattle.”

      An early June blizzard dropped four feet

      of snow, killing a thousand cows and calves,

      a few foals, and the grizzlies hungry and fresh

      from hibernation are feasting. “The bears

      are just thick. It’s really kind of dangerous

      up here right now,” said Gus V., a rancher.

      Interesting news on the summer solstice.

      The cow protrudes from the snowbank with ravens

      perched around the eyes & udders watching for a coyote

      or bear to open the hidebound meat, nearly

      a million pounds of meat spread around the

      countryside. What pleasure in this natural terrorism.

      On a twilight walk a violent storm moved swiftly

      toward the east and south of me with the starkest

      lightning striking against the slate-colored

      Absaroka mountains. Closer, on a green mountainside

      white trucks passed on Interstate 90,

      then closer yet Watson’s Black Angus cattle

      sprinkled like peppercorns against shiny

      wet pale green grass. Closer, a tormented

      cottonwood thicket in the rising wind, maybe

      60 knots, branches flailing, closer the broad

      and turbulent brown river. And finally

      only me on which all things depend, standing

      on the riverbank, bent to the wind, the solitary

      twilight watcher wondering who is

      keeping the gods alive this evening or whether

      they have given up on us and our tiny forked tongues,

      our bleating fears and greed, our pastel anxieties.

      In 1968 when I was first here

      there was a cool scent of pines

      and melting snow from the mountains

      carried by a southwind through the river’s

      canyon. The scent is still here,

      the sure fresh odor of the West.

      At the oars of the drift boat

      in the thrash and churn of a rapid

      I have no more control over the boat,

      or my life, than I had in 1968.

      Swept away. And not quite understanding

      that this water is heading toward

      the Caribbean. A grizzly bear pisses

      in a creek in the Absarokas and traces end up

      nonchalantly passing New Orleans

      into the Gulf of Mexico. This fuzzy air

      above is from dust storms in China.

      The underground river far below me

      started in the Arctic and heads toward

      the equator. During the Bush colonoscopy

      narwhals were jousting over lady narwhals

      and an immense Venezuelan anaconda gave birth

      to a hundred miniatures of her kind, all quickly

      eaten by waiting caimans and large wading birds.

      Trapped in the compartment of a sunken ship

      a man writes a letter in the dark to his wife

      and children in Missouri which will never be read.

      I watch a blind sheep who loves to roll in the grass.

      At the rodeo the bucking horse

      leaps then buckles to its knees,

      recovers, then bucks up. And up.

      The rider thrown, eating a face-

      ful of dirt while behind the announcer’s

      shack and across the river,

      up a cliff and a broad green slope,

      trucks pass east and west on 1-90

      unmindful of the cowboy spitting dirt.

      Around here they’re still voting

      for Eisenhower as a write-in candidate.

      Around here people still have memories

      and honor their war dead. In the park

      to each road guardrail a flag and white cross

      are attached, and a name that is gone

      but not forgotten. An old man carrying

      a portable oxygen unit breathes deeply

      with moist eyes looking at his brother’s name,

      lost in Iwo Jima. We bow slightly

      to each other, and my memory repeats the prayer

      I offered at age five for my uncles Art and Walter

      off in the South Pacific on warships fighting

      the Japanese and the satanic Tojo. At church

      we sang “Fairest Lord Jesus” and the minister

      announced that a deacon’s son was lost

      in what I heard as “yurp.”

      Some of the men and women sobbed loudly.

      I remembered him playing baseball and driving

      around town in his old Ford coupe with an actual

      squirrel tail attached to the aerial, and just out

      of kindergarten I had it all wrong thinking who will

      drive Fred’s car now? Our mothers and fathers embraced.

      From different upstairs windows I see four different

      mountain ranges not there to accompany the four churches:

      the Absarokas, the Gallatins, the Bridgers, the Crazies.

      You naturally love a mountain range called Crazies.

      Of course naked women, Native and white,

      run through the Crazies on moonlit nights

      howling for husbands and lovers

      lost to our wars. I’ve followed their red footprints

      while hunting in these mountains, the small toes.

      A community can drown in itself,

      then come to life again. Every yard seems

      to have flowers, every street its resident magpies.

      In the outfield of the baseball diamond

      there are lovely small white flowers that a gardener

      told me are the “insidious bindweed.” All my life

      I’ve liked weeds. Weeds are botanical

      poets, largely unwanted. You can’t make a dollar

      off them. People destroy the obnoxious dandelion

      that I’ve considered a beautiful flower since early

      childhood, blowing off the fuzzy seeds when they died,

      sending the babies off into the grim universe,

      but then I’m also fond of cowbirds and crows,

      cowbirds and poets laying their eggs for others

      to raise then drifting away for no reason.

      Search & Rescue is “combing” the river

      this morning for a drowned boy. If it were me

      I’d rather float east through the night toward the rising

      sun. But it’s not me. The boy probably

      wasn’t literary and the pa
    rents want the body

      to bury, the fourth body in the river this summer.

      Currents can hold a body tight to the bottom.

      A vet friend found residual gills in the head

      of a dog but at our best we’re ungainly in water

      compared to the clumsiest of fishes. Against the song,

      we won’t fly away. Or float. We sink into earth.

      In this prolonged heat wave the snow

      is shrinking upward to the mountain tip-tops

      to a few crevasses and ravines. On Mount Wallace

      ancient peoples, likely the Crow, the Absarokas,

      carved out of flat stone the imprint of a man

      so you could lie there in a grizzly-claw necklace

      and see only sky for three days and nights,

      a very long session in your own private church.

      It’s ninety-five degrees at four PM

      and two girls in their early teens step

      from the cooler cement sidewalk onto the street’s hot

      asphalt in their bare feet, beginning to dance,

      jump, prance, one in shorts and the other

      in a short summer dress. It is good enough

      so that only Mozart would contribute to this pure

      dance that is simply what it is, beyond passing

      lust, sheer physical beauty, the grace of being

      on a nearly insufferable hot day in Montana.

      The girls skidded their feet on sprinkler-wet grass

      under a maple tree, then went indoors out of my life.

      Everyone seems to have loved the drowned boy.

      Destiny is unacceptable. This grand river

      he’d seen thousands of times didn’t wait for him.

      Nobody seems to have a clue. He died two days ago

      and they’re still searching the river. Some men

      carry ominous long poles with a hook in the end.

      This morning walking Rose I looked at the wide

      eddy with a slow but inexorable whirlpool coiling

      in upon itself that no human could swim against.

      You might survive by giving up the struggle

      and hope that the water would cast you aside

     

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