The Third Hour of the Night

T
When the eye

When the edgeless screen receiving
light from the edgeless universe

When the eye first

When the edgeless screen facing
outward as if hypnotized by the edgeless universe

When the eye first saw that it

Hungry for more light
resistlessly began to fold back upon itself TWIST

As if a dog sniffing

Ignorant of origins
familiar with hunger

As if a dog sniffing a dead dog

Before nervous like itself but now
weird inert cold nerveless

Twisting in panic had abruptly sniffed itself

When the eye
first saw that it must die When the eye first

Brooding on our origins you
ask When and I say

Then



wound-dresser let us call the creature

driven again and again to dress with fresh
bandages and a pail of disinfectant
suppurations that cannot
heal for the wound that confers existence is mortal

wound-dresser

what wound is dressed the wound of being



Understand that it can drink till it is
sick, but cannot drink till it is satisfied.

It alone knows you. It does not wish you well.

Understand that when your mother, in her only
pregnancy, gave birth to twins

painfully stitched into the flesh, the bone of one child

was the impossible-to-remove cloak that confers
invisibility. The cloak that maimed it gave it power.

Painfully stitched into the flesh, the bone of the other child

was the impossible-to-remove cloak that confers
visibility. The cloak that maimed it gave it power.

Envying the other, of course each twin

tried to punish and become the other.
Understand that when the beast within you

succeeds again in paralyzing into unending

incompletion whatever you again had the temerity to
try to make

its triumph is made sweeter by confirmation of its

rectitude. It knows that it alone
knows you. It alone remembers your mother’s

mother’s grasping immigrant bewildered

stroke-filled slide-to-the-grave
you wiped from your adolescent American feet.

Your hick purer-than-thou overreaching veiling

mediocrity. Understand that you can delude others but
not what you more and more

now call the beast within you. Understand

the cloak that maimed each gave each power.
Understand that there is a beast within you

that can drink till it is

sick, but cannot drink till it is satisfied. Understand
that it will use the conventions of the visible world

to turn your tongue to stone. It alone

knows you. It does
not wish you well. These are instructions for the wrangler.


II

Three Fates. One
fate, with three faces.

Clotho Lachesis Atropos

Thread spun by one
from all those forever unspun.

Thread touched by one and in
touching twisted into something

forever unlike all others spun.

Thread touched by one and in
touching withered to nothing.

Atropos Lachesis Clotho

Three, who gave us in recompense
for death

the first alphabet, to engrave in stone
what is most evanescent,

the mind. According to Hesiod, daughters of Night.



Unless teeth devour it it
rots: now is its season.

My teeth have sunk into firm-skinned
pears so succulent time stopped.

When my wife, dead now

ten years, pulls her dress over her petticoats
and hair, the air crackles, her hair rising

tangles in ecstasy. We are electric ghosts.



You hear the strange cricket in the oven
sing, and ask what it sings.

This is what it sings.

Because Benvenuto in my native tongue
means welcome, write

here lies an artist who did not
recoil from residence on earth — but,
truly named, welcomed it.

But I mis-spoke: not wife. Servant: model: mother
of my child, also now dead.



In prison, immured in the black pit where the Pope
once fed Benedetto da Foiano less and less each day
until God’s will, not the Pope’s own hand, killed him, —

where outside my door each day the castellan
repeated that darkness will teach me I am
a counterfeit bat, and he a real one, —

blackness, silence so unremitted
I knew I had survived another day only by the malignant
welcome singsong of his triumphant voice, —

Benvenuto is a counterfeit bat, and I a real one, —

where god had not found me worthy of seeing the sun
even in a dream, I asked the God of Nature
what unexpiated act the suffocation of my senses, such

suffering, served to expiate.

(This was my first prison.)



For the two murders I had committed, — their just,
free but necessary cause

revenge, however imperfect the justice —

two successive Popes recognized the necessity
and pardoned me. Absolved me.

Because my fame as a maker in gold and silver

preceded me, though I was hardly more
than an apprentice, when Pope Clement came into

possession of the second largest diamond in the world

he summoned me from Florence to Rome — called me
into his presence to serve him. To crown the resplendent

glittering vestment covering his surplice, he wanted

a golden clasp big and round as a small
plate, with God the father in half-relief above the diamond

and cherubs, arms raised, below. Hurry, he said,

finish it quickly, so that I may enjoy its
use a little while.

Pope Clement, unlike the great I now serve, was

an excellent, subtle
connoisseur; he approved my design.

Each week he summoned me into the presence

two or three times, eager to inspect my progress.
Then Cecchino, my brother, two years younger than I

and still beardless, died —

was killed, as he tried to avenge the unjust killing of
a comrade by the ruthless guard of the Bargello.

Thus was stolen from him the chance to incise

his presence into the hard, careless surface of the world.
The fool who killed him

in what justice must call self-defense

later proved his nature by
boasting of it.

His boasting enraged, maddened me. In this

great grief the Pope rebuked me: You act as if
grief can change death.

Sleepless, eatless, by day I worked at the Pope’s

absorbing golden button — and by night, hypnotized
as a jealous lover, I watched and followed

the fatuous creature who murdered my brother.

At last, overcoming my repugnance to an enterprise
not-quite-praiseworthy, I decided

to end my torment. My dagger entered the juncture

of the nape-bone and the neck
so deep into the bone

with all my strength I could not pull it out.

I ran to the palace of Duke Alessandro — for those who
pursued me knew me. The Pope’s natural son,

later he became Duke of Florence, before his murder

by his own cousin Lorenzino, whose too-familiar
intimacies and pretensions to power

he not only indulged but openly mocked.

Alessandro told me to stay indoors
for eight days. For eight days I stayed indoors, working

at the jewel the Pope had set his heart on.

For eight days the Pope failed
to summon me. Then his chamberlain, saying that all was

well if I minded my work and kept silent, ushered me

into the presence. The Pope cast so menacing
a glance toward me I trembled.

Examining my work, his countenance cleared,

saying that I had accomplished a vast amount
in a short time. Then he said, Now that you are

cured, Benvenuto — change your life.

I promised that I would. Soon after this, I opened
a fine shop, my first; and finished the jewel.



As the knife descended (forgive me, O God of
Nature, but thus you have arranged it, —)

to my fevered mind
each moment was infinite, and mine.



Late one night, in farewell, Michelangelo
turning to me said, Benvenuto,

you deliver yourself into their hands.



Here I leapt Here I leapt Here I leapt Here I leapt
the shrilling cricket in the shrilling summer evening

sings; as did my father in the sweet years

he served the pleasure of the lords of Florence
as a piper, in the Consort of Pipers.

Imagine my father, no longer young, married, still

childless, an engineer who designs bridges and
battlements for the Duke, but whose

first love is music — the flute. He joined

the Duke’s Consort of Pipers. Now his nights
often are spent not bending over charts and plans

but dazzled at the court of Lorenzo, called The Magnificent

the same Lorenzo who once plucked Michelangelo, still
a boy, from among the horde of the merely-talented

bending to copy the masters in the ducal palace.

Lorenzo, with his father’s consent, adopted
the boy; fed him at his own table.

Imagine, tonight, the brief concert is over —

the Consort of Pipers (respectable, honorable
amateurs: small merchants, a banker, a scholar)

mingle, slightly awed, with an ambassador, a Cardinal . . .

Suddenly Lorenzo is at my father’s ear: He stood
not six inches from me.

Not six inches from my father’s ear Lorenzo

in a low voice as he begins to move through
the crowd followed by his son Piero

(as now my father must struggle to follow)

tells my father he has painfully and increasingly
remarked that the flute has led my father to neglect

his fine engineering talent and therefore my

father will understand why Piero and the Duke
must dismiss him from the Consort of Pipers.

Lorenzo, entering the private apartments, was gone.

In later years, my father repeated to his
children: He stood not six inches from me.

It is a lie. It is a lie that the Medici and you and I

stand on the same earth. What the sane eye
saw, was a lie: —

two things alone cross the illimitable distance

between the great and the rest of
us, who serve them: —

a knife; and art.



The emblem of Florence is the lion; therefore
lions, caged but restless and living, centuries ago

began to announce to the Piazza della Signoria

this is the fearsome seat of the free
government of the Republic of Florence.

Duke Cosimo, hating the noise and smell, had them

moved behind the palace. For years, I had known
the old man who fed and tended the lions, —

one day he humbly asked me if I could make a ring

unlike all others for his daughter’s wedding.
I said yes, of course; but, as payment for its

rarity, I wanted him to drug the strongest lion

asleep, so that I could
examine, for my art, his body.

He said he knew no art of drugging; such poison

could kill the creature; a week later,
in fury he said yes.

The animal was numbed but not

sleeping; he tried to raise
his great head, as I lay lengthwise against his warm body;

the head fell back. My head

nestling behind his, each arm, outstretched, slowly
descending along each leg, at last with both hands I

pulled back the fur and touched a claw.

This creature whose claw waking could kill me, —
. . . I wore its skin.



After the Medici were returned from eighteen years’
banishment, placed over us again not by the will

of Florentines, but by a Spanish army —

my father, though during the republic he regained
his position as piper, ever loyal to the Medici

wrote a poem celebrating his party’s victory

and prophesying the imminent
advent of a Medici pope. Then Julius II died;

Cardinal de’ Medici, against expectation, was elected;

the new pope wrote my father that he must
come to Rome and serve him.

My father had no will to travel. Then Jacopo

Salviati, in power because married to a Medici,
took from my father his place at the Duke’s new court;

took from him his profit, his hope, his will.

Thus began that slow extinguishment
of hope, the self ’s obsequies for the self

at which effacement I felt not only a helpless

witness, but
cause, author.

He said I was his heart.

I had asked to be his heart
before I knew what I was asking.

Against his mania to make me a musician

at fifteen I put myself to the goldsmith’s trade;
without money

or position, he now could not oppose this.

Help the boy — for his father is poor
rang in my ears as I began to sell

the first trinkets I had made. Later, to escape

the plague then raging, he made me
quickly leave Florence; when I returned,

he, my sister, her husband and child, were dead.

These events, many occurring before my birth, I
see because my father described them

often and with outrage.

To be a child is to see things and not
know them; then you know them.



Despite the malicious
stars, decisive at my birth: despite their

sufficient instrument, the hand within me that moves

against me: in the utter darkness of my first prison
God granted me vision:

surrounded by my stinks, an angel, his beauty

austere, not wanton, graciously
showed me a room in half-light crowded with the dead:

postures blunted as if all promise of change

was lost, the dead
walked up and down and back and forth:

as if the promise of change

fleeing had stolen the light.
Then, on the wall, there was a square of light.

Careless of blindness I turned my eyes

to the full sun. I did not care
to look on anything again but this. The sun

withering and quickening without distinction

then bulged out: the boss
expanded: the calm body of the dead Christ

formed itself from the same

substance as the sun. Still on the cross,
he was the same substance as the sun.



The bait the Duke laid
was Perseus. Perseus

standing before the Piazza della Signoria.

My statue’s audience and theater, Michelangelo’s
David; Donatello’s

Judith With the Head of Holofernes . . .

Here the school of Florence, swaggering, says
to the world: Eat.

Only Bandinelli’s odious Hercules and Cacus

reminds one that when one walks
streets on earth one steps in shit.

Duke Cosimo desired, he said, a statue of Perseus

triumphant, after intricate trials able
at last to raise high

Medusa’s mutilated head — he imagined,

perhaps, decapitation of the fickle
rabble of republican Florence . . .

I conceived the hero’s gesture as more generous: —

Kill the thing that looked
upon makes us stone.

Soon enough, on my great bronze bust of the great

Duke, I placed — staring out from his chest —
Medusa, her head not yet cut, living.



Remember, Benvenuto, you cannot bring your
great gifts to light by your strength alone

You show your greatness only through

the opportunities we give you
Hold your tongue I will drown you in gold



As we stared down at the vast square, at
David, at Judith — then at Hercules and Cacus

approved and placed there by Cosimo himself —

from high on the fortress lookout of the palace,
against whose severe façade so many

human promises had been so cunningly

or indifferently crushed, I told the Duke that I
cannot make his statue. My brief return from France

was designed only to provide for the future of

my sister and six nieces, now without husband
or father. The King of France alone had saved me

from the Pope’s dungeon — not any lord of Italy!

At this, the Duke looked at me
sharply, but said nothing.

All Rome knew that though I had disproved

the theft that was pretext for my arrest, Pope Paul
still kept me imprisoned, out of spite —

vengeance of his malignant son Pier Luigi, now

assassinated by his own retainers.
One night at dinner, the King’s emissary gave the Pope

gossip so delicious that out of merriment, and about to vomit

from indulgence, he agreed
to free me. I owed King Francis

my art, my service. The same stipend he once paid

Leonardo, he now paid me; along with a house in paris.
This house was, in truth, a castle . . .

I omitted, of course, quarrels with the King’s

mistress, demon who taunted me for the slowness
of my work, out of her petty hatred of art itself;

omitted her insistence to the King that I

am insolent and by example teach
insolence to others. Omitted that I overheard the King

joke with her lieutenant: —

Kill him, if you can find me
his equal in art.

Before the school of Florence I had only been able,

young, to show myself as goldsmith
and jeweler; not yet as sculptor.

Duke Cosimo then announced that all the King of France

had given me, he would surpass: boasting,
he beckoned me to follow him past the public

common galleries, into the private apartments . . .

Dutiful abashed puppet, I followed; I knew
I would remain and make his statue.



In the mirror of art, you who are familiar with the rituals of
decorum and bloodshed before which you are

silence and submission

while within stone
the mind writhes

contemplate, as if a refrain were wisdom, the glistening

intrication
of bronze and will and circumstance in the mirror of art.



Bandinelli for months insinuated in the Duke’s ear
Perseus never would be finished: —

I lacked the art, he said, to move from the small

wax model the Duke rightly praised, to lifesize
bronze whose secrets tormented even Donatello.

So eighteen months after work began, Duke Cosimo grew

tired, and withdrew his subsidy. Lattanzo Gorini,
spider-handed and gnat-voiced, refusing to hand over

payment said, Why do you not finish?

Then Bandinelli hissed Sodomite! at
me — after my enumeration, to the court’s

amusement, of the sins against art and sense

committed by his Hercules and Cacus, recital
designed to kill either him or his authority . . .

The Duke, at the ugly word, frowned

and turned away. I replied that the sculptor of
Hercules and Cacus must be a madman to think that I

presumed to understand the art that Jove in heaven

used on Ganymede, art nobly practiced here on earth
by so many emperors and kings. My saucy speech

ended: My poor wick does not dare to burn so high!

Duke and court broke into laughter. Thus was
born my resolve to murder Bandinelli.



I’d hurl the creature to hell. In despair at what must
follow — the Duke’s rage, abandonment of my

never-to-be-born Perseus — I cast

myself away for lost: with a hundred crowns
and a swift horse, I resolved first to bid

farewell to my natural son, put to wet-nurse in Fiesole;

then to descend to San Domenico, where Bandinelli
returned each evening. Then, after blood, France.

Reaching Fiesole, I saw the boy

was in good health; his wet-nurse
was my old familiar, old gossip, now

married to one of my workmen. The boy

clung to me: wonderful in a two-year-old, in
grief he flailed his arms when at last

in the thick half-dusk

I began to disengage myself. Entering the square
of San Domenico on one side, I saw my prey

arriving on the other. Enraged that he still

drew breath, when I reached him
I saw he was unarmed. He rode a small sorry

mule. A wheezing donkey carried a ten-year-old

boy at his side. In my sudden presence, his face
went white. I nodded my head and rode past.



I had a vision of Bandinelli surrounded
by the heaped-up works of his hand.

Not one thing that he had made

did I want to have made.
From somewhere within his body

like a thread

he spun the piles surrounding him. Then he
tried to pull away, to release the thread; I saw

the thread was a leash.

He tried and tried to cut it.
At this, in my vision I said out-loud: —

My art is my revenge.



When I returned to Florence from Fiesole, after
three days news was brought to me that my little boy

was smothered by his wet-nurse

turning over on him as they both slept.
His panic, as I left; his arms raised, in panic.



from the great unchosen narration you will soon
be released

Benvenuto Cellini

dirtied by blood and earth
but now

you have again taught yourself to disappear

moving wax from arm
to thigh

you have again taught yourself to disappear

here where each soul is its
orbit spinning

sweetly around the center of itself

at the edge of its eye the great
design of virtue

here your Medusa and your Perseus are twins

his triumphant body still furious with purpose
but his face abstracted absorbed in

contemplation as she is

abstracted absorbed
though blood still spurts from her neck

defeated by a mirror

as in concentration you move wax
from thigh to arm

under your hand it grows



The idyll began when the Duke reached me a goldsmith’s
hammer, with which I struck the goldsmith’s

chisel he held; and so the little statues were

disengaged from earth and rust. Bronze
antiquities, newly found near Arezzo, they lacked

either head or hands or feet. Impatient for my

presence, the Duke insisted that I join him each evening
at his new pastime, playing artisan — leaving orders

for my free admittance to his rooms, day or night.

His four boys, when the Duke’s eyes were turned,
hovered around me, teasing. One night

I begged them to hold their peace.

The boldest replied, That we can’t do! I said
what one cannot do is required of no one.

So have your will! Faced with their sons’

delight in this new principle, the Duke and Duchess
smiling accused me of a taste for chaos . . .

At last the four figures wrought for the four

facets of the pedestal beneath Perseus
were finished. I brought them one evening to the Duke,

arranging them on his worktable in a row: —

figures, postures from scenes that the eye cannot
entirely decipher, story haunting the eye with its

resonance, unseen ground that explains nothing . . .

The Duke appeared, then immediately
retreated; reappearing, in his right hand

he held a pear slip. This is for your garden, the garden of

your house. I began, Do you mean, but he cut me off
saying, Yes, Benvenuto: garden and house now are yours.

Thus I received what earlier was only lent me.

I thanked him and his Duchess; then both
took seats before my figures.

For two hours talk was of their beauty, —

the Duchess insisted they were too exquisite
to be wasted down there

in the piazza; I must place them in her apartments.

No argument from intention or design
unconvinced her.

So I waited till the next day — entering the private

chambers at the hour the Duke and Duchess
each afternoon went riding, I carried the statues

down and soldered them with lead into their niches.

Returning, how angry the Duchess became! The Duke
abandoned his workshop. I went there no more.



The old inertia of earth that hates the new
(as from a rim I watched)

rose from the ground, legion: —

truceless ministers of the great unerasable
ZERO, eager to annihilate lineament and light,

waited, pent, against the horizon: —

some great force (massive, stubborn, multiform as
earth, fury whose single name is LEGION, — )

wanted my Perseus not to exist: —

and I must
defeat them.

Then my trembling assistants woke me.

They said all my work
was spoiled.

Perseus was spoiled. He lay buried in earth

wreathed in fragile earthenware veins from the furnace
above, veins through which he still

waited to be filled with burning metal.

The metal was curdled. As I slept, sick,
the bronze had been allowed to cake, to curdle.

Feverish, made sick by my exertions for

days, for months, I slept; while those charged
with evenly feeding the furnace that I had so well

prepared, LARKED —

I thought, Unwitting ministers of the gorgon
Medusa herself. The furnace choked with caking, curdling

metal that no art known to man could

uncurdle, must be utterly dismantled — all
who made it agreed this must destroy

the fragile, thirsty mould of Perseus beneath.

But Perseus was not more strong
than Medusa, but more clever: — if he ever

was to exist as idea, he must first exist as matter: —

all my old inborn
daring returned,

furious to reverse

the unjust triumphs of the world’s mere
arrangements of power, that seemingly on earth

cannot be reversed. First, I surveyed my forces: —

seven guilty workmen, timid, sullen,
resentful; a groom; two maids; a cook.

I harassed these skeptical troops into battle: —

two hands were sent to fetch from the butcher
Capretta a load of young oak, —

in bronze furnaces the only woods you use

are slow-burning alder, willow, pine: now I needed
oak and its fierce heat. As the oak

was fed log by log into the fire, how the cake began

to stir, to glow and sparkle. Now
from the increased

combustion of the furnace, a conflagration

shot up from the roof: two windows
burst into flame: I saw the violent storm

filling the sky fan the flames.

All the while with pokers and iron rods
we stirred and stirred the channels—

the metal, bubbling, refused to flow.

I sent for all my pewter plates, dishes, porringers —
the cook and maids brought some two hundred.

Piece by piece, I had them thrown

into the turgid mass. As I watched the metal for
movement, the cap of the furnace

exploded — bronze welling over on all sides.

I had the plugs pulled, the mouths of the mould
opened; in perfect liquefaction

the veins of Perseus filled . . .

Days later, when the bronze had cooled, when the clay
sheath had been with great care removed, I found

what was dead brought to life again.



Now, my second
prison. It began soon after Perseus was unveiled

to acclaim — great acclaim. Perhaps I grew

too glorious. Perseus, whose birth consumed
nine years, found stuck to his pedestal

sonnets celebrating the master’s hand that made him . . .

On the day of unveiling, Duke Cosimo stationed himself
at a window just above the entrance to the palace;

there, half-hidden, he listened for hours to the crowd’s

wonder. He sent his attendant Sforza to say
my reward

soon would astonish me.

Ten days passed. At last Sforza appeared and asked
what price I placed on my statue.

I was indeed astonished: It is not my custom,

I replied, to set a price for my work, as if
he were a merchant and I a mere tradesman.

Then, at risk of the Duke’s severe displeasure, I was

warned I must set a price: infuriated, I said
ten thousand golden crowns.

Cities and great palaces are built with ten thousand

golden crowns, the Duke
two days later flung at me in anger.

Many men can build cities and palaces,

I replied, but not one can make
a second Perseus.

Bandinelli, consulted by the Duke, reluctantly

concluded that the statue was worth
sixteen thousand.

The Duke replied that for two farthings

Perseus could go to the scrap heap; that would
resolve our differences.

At last, the settlement was thirty-five hundred, one

hundred a month. Soon after, charges were brought
against me, for sodomy —

I escaped Florence as far as Scarperia, but there

the Duke’s soldiers caught me and in chains
brought me back.

I confessed. If I had not, I could have been made

to serve as a slave in the Duke’s galleys for life.
The Duke listened behind a screen as I was made

publicly to confess, in full court . . . Punishment

was four years imprisonment. Without the Duke’s
concurrence, of course, no charges could have been

lodged, no public humiliation arranged

to silence the insolent. The first Cosimo, founder of Medici
power, all his life protected Donatello whose

affections and bliss were found in Ganymede.

After imprisonment one month, Cosimo
finally commuted my sentence to house arrest.

There his magnanimity allowed me to complete

my Christ of the whitest marble
set upon a cross of the blackest.

Now, my Christ sits still packed in a crate

in the Duke’s new chapel; my bust of the Duke
is exiled to Elba, there to frighten in open air

slaves peering out from his passing galleys.

Now, after the Duchess and two of their sons
died of fever within two months, Cosimo

grows stranger: he murdered Sforza

by running him through with a spear: —
he does not own

his mind; or will.

When I ask release from his service, he says
that he cannot, that he soon

will have need of me for great projects; no

commissions come. Catherine de’ Medici, regent of
the young French king, petitioned that I be allowed

to enter her service. He said I had no will now to work.

In prison I wrote my sonnet addressed
to Fortune: — Fortune, you sow!

You turned from me because Ganymede

also is my joy . . . O God of Nature, author
of my nature,

where does your son Jesus forbid it?

When I was five, one night my father
woke me. He pulled me to the basement, making me

stare into the oak fire and see what he just had seen.

There a little lizard was sporting
at the core of the intensest flames.

My father boxed me on the ears, then kissed me —

saying that I must remember this night: —
My dear little boy, the lizard you see

is a salamander, a creature that lives

at the heart of fire. You and I are blessed: no other
soul now living has been allowed to see it.



I am too old to fight to leave Florence: —

here, young, this goldsmith and jeweler
began to imagine that

severity, that chastity of style

certain remnants of the ancient world
left my hand hungry to emulate: —

equilibrium of ferocious, contradictory

forces: equilibrium whose balance or poise is their
tension, and does not efface them, —

as if the surface of each thing

arranged within the frame, the surface of each
body the eye must circle

gives up to the eye its vibration, its nature.

Two or three times, perhaps,— you
say where, — I have achieved it.



See, in my great bronze bust of the great
Duke, embedded in the right epaulette like a trophy
an open-mouthed
face part lion part man part goat, with an iron
bar jammed in its lower jaw

rising resistlessly across its mouth.

See, in Vasari’s clumsy portrait of me, as I float
above the right shoulder of the Duke, the same face.”



As if your hand fumbling to reach inside
reached inside

As if light falling on the surface
fell on what made the surface

As if there were no scarcity of sun
on the sun



III

I covered my arm with orchid juice.

With my hatchet I split a mangrove stick
from a tree, and sharpened it.

I covered the killing stick with orchid juice.

We were camping at Marunga Island
looking for oysters. This woman I was about to kill

at last separated herself from the others

to hunt lilies. She walked into the swamp, then
got cold, and lay down on sandy ground.

After I hit her between the eyes with my hatchet

she kicked, but couldn’t
raise up.

With my thumb over the end of the killing stick

I jabbed her Mount of Venus until her skin pushed
back up to her navel. Her large intestine

protruded as though it were red calico.

With my thumb over the end of the killing stick
each time she inhaled

I pushed my arm

in a little. When she exhaled, I stopped. Little by little
I got my hand

inside her. Finally I touched her heart.

Once you reach what is
inside it is outside. I pushed the killing stick

into her heart.

The spirit that belonged to that dead woman
went into my heart then.

I felt it go in.

I pulled my arm
out. I covered my arm with orchid juice.

Next I broke a nest of green ants

off a tree, and watched the live ants
bite her skin until her skin moved by itself

downward from her navel and covered her bones.

Then I took some dry mud and put my sweat
and her blood in the dry mud

and warmed it over a fire. Six or eight times

I put the blood and sweat and mud
inside her uterus until there was no trace of her

wound or what I had done.

I was careful none of her pubic hair was left
inside her vagina for her husband to feel.

Her large intestine stuck out several feet.

When I shook some green ants on it, a little
went in. I shook some more. All of it went in.

When I whirled the killing stick with her heart’s blood

over her head, her head
moved. When I whirled it some more, she moved

more. The third time I whirled the killing stick

she gasped for breath. She blew some breath
out of her mouth, and was all right.

I said, You go eat some lilies. She

got up. I said, You will live
two days. One day you will be happy. The next, sick.

She ate some lilies. She walked around, then

came back and slept. When laughing and talking women
woke her she gathered her lilies and returned to camp.

The next day she walked around and played,

talked and made fun, gathering with others oysters
and lilies. She brought into camp what she

gathered. That night she lay down and died.

Even the gods cannot
end death. In this universe anybody can kill anybody

with a stick. What the gods gave me

is their gift, the power to bury within each
creature the hour it ceases.

Everyone knows I have powers but not such power.

If they knew I would be so famous
they would kill me.

I tell you because your tongue is stone.

If the gods ever give you words, one night in
sleep you will wake to find me above you.



After sex & metaphysics, —
. . . what?

What you have made.



Infinite the forms, finite
tonight as I find again in the mirror the familiar appeaseless

eater’s face

Ignorant of cause or source or end
in silence he repeats

Eater, become food

All life exists at the expense of other life
Because you have eaten and eat as eat you must

Eater, become food

unlike the burning stars
burning merely to be

Then I ask him how to become food

In silence he repeats that others have
other fates, but that I must fashion out of the corruptible

body a new body good to eat a thousand years

Then I tell the eater’s face that within me is no
sustenance, on my famished

plate centuries have been served me and still I am famished

He smirks, and in silence repeats that all life exists
at the expense of other life

You must fashion out of the corruptible
body a new body good to eat a thousand years

Because you have eaten and eat as eat you must
ignorant of cause or source or end



drugged to sleep by repetition of the diurnal
round, the monotonous sorrow of the finite,

within I am awake

repairing in dirt the frayed immaculate thread
forced by being to watch the birth of suns



This is the end of the third hour of the night.
Rating:

Comment form:

*Max text - 1500. Manual moderation.

Similar Poems:

A Terre by Wilfred Owen
Wilfred Owen
(Being the philosophy of many Soldiers.) Sit on the bed; I'm blind, and three parts shell.
Be careful; can't shake hands now; never shall.
Read Poem
0
182
Rating:

Gerontion by T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot
Thou hast nor youth nor age
But as it were an after dinner sleep
Dreaming of both. Here I am, an old man in a dry month,
Read Poem
0
172
Rating:

from The Prelude: Book 1: Childhood and School-time by William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth
—Was it for this
That one, the fairest of all Rivers, lov'd
To blend his murmurs with my Nurse's song,
And from his alder shades and rocky falls,
And from his fords and shallows, sent a voice
That flow'd along my dreams? For this, didst Thou,
O Derwent! travelling over the green Plains
Near my 'sweet Birthplace', didst thou, beauteous Stream
Read Poem
0
146
Rating:

In Memoriam, July 19, 1914 by Anna Akhmatova
Anna Akhmatova
We aged a hundred years and this descended
In just one hour, as at a stroke.
The summer had been brief and now was ended;
The body of the ploughed plains lay in smoke.

The hushed road burst in colors then, a soaring
Lament rose, ringing silver like a bell.
And so I covered up my face, imploring
God to destroy me before battle fell.
Read Poem
0
147
Rating:

Cacoethes Scribendi by Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
If all the trees in all the woods were men;
And each and every blade of grass a pen;
If every leaf on every shrub and tree
Turned to a sheet of foolscap; every sea
Were changed to ink, and all earth's living tribes
Had nothing else to do but act as scribes,
And for ten thousand ages, day and night,
The human race should write, and write, and write,
Till all the pens and paper were used up,
And the huge inkstand was an empty cup,
Still would the scribblers clustered round its brink
Call for more pens, more paper, and more ink.

Read Poem
0
117
Rating:

Ode to a Large Tuna in the Market by Pablo Neruda
Pablo Neruda
Here,
among the market vegetables,
this torpedo
from the ocean
depths,
a missile
that swam,
now
Read Poem
0
139
Rating:

Today We Fly by Curzio Malaparte
Curzio Malaparte
One Sunday morning,
instead of studying The Illiad,
I escaped with Bino to Florence,
to see what miracles the aviator Manissero
would perform.

Whether he would demonstrate the art of Daedalus
or the folly of Icarus.

We found the whole city festooned with banners
Read Poem
0
144
Rating:

The Beasts' Confession by Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift
To the Priest, on Observing how most Men mistake their own Talents When beasts could speak (the learned say,
They still can do so ev'ry day),
It seems, they had religion then,
As much as now we find in men.
Read Poem
0
153
Rating:

Duncan Gray by Robert Burns
Robert Burns
Duncan Gray came here to woo,
Ha, ha, the wooin o't!
On blythe Yule night when we were fou,
Ha, ha, the wooin o't!
Maggie coost her head fu high,
Look'd asklent and unco skeigh,
Gart poor Duncan stand abeigh;
Ha, ha, the wooin o't!

Duncan fleech'd, and Duncan pray'd,
Ha, ha, the wooin o't!
Meg was deaf as Ailsa Craig,
Ha, ha, the wooin o't!
Duncan sigh'd baith out and in,
Grat his een baith bleer't and blin',
Read Poem
0
129
Rating:

The Bear Hunt by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln
A wild-bear chace, didst never see?
Then hast thou lived in vain.
Thy richest bump of glorious glee,
Lies desert in thy brain.

When first my father settled here,
’Twas then the frontier line:
The panther’s scream, filled night with fear
Read Poem
0
156
Rating:

Byzantium by William Butler Yeats
William Butler Yeats
The unpurged images of day recede;
The Emperor's drunken soldiery are abed;
Night resonance recedes, night-walkers' song
After great cathedral gong;
A starlit or a moonlit dome disdains
All that man is,
All mere complexities,
The fury and the mire of human veins.
Read Poem
0
155
Rating:

Blues for Alice by Clark Coolidge
Clark Coolidge
When you get in on a try you never learn it back
umpteen times the tenth part of a featured world
in black and in back it’s roses and fostered nail
bite rhyme sling slang, a song that teaches without
travail of the tale, the one you longing live
and singing burn

It’s insane to remain a trope, of a rinsing out
or a ringing whatever, it’s those bells that . . .
Read Poem
0
129
Rating:

from A Ballad Upon A Wedding by Sir John Suckling
Sir John Suckling
I tell thee, Dick, where I have been,
Where I the rarest things have seen;
Oh, things without compare!
Such sights again cannot be found
In any place on English ground,
Be it at wake, or fair.

At Charing-Cross, hard by the way,
Read Poem
0
137
Rating:

Imitations of Horace by Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope
Ne Rubeam, Pingui donatus Munere
(Horace, Epistles II.i.267)
While you, great patron of mankind, sustain
The balanc'd world, and open all the main;
Your country, chief, in arms abroad defend,
At home, with morals, arts, and laws amend;
Read Poem
0
136
Rating:

The Performance by James L. Dickey
James L. Dickey
The last time I saw Donald Armstrong
He was staggering oddly off into the sun,
Going down, off the Philippine Islands.
I let my shovel fall, and put that hand
Above my eyes, and moved some way to one side
That his body might pass through the sun,

And I saw how well he was not
Standing there on his hands,
Read Poem
0
140
Rating:

Our Willie by Henry Timrod
Henry Timrod
’T was merry Christmas when he came,
Our little boy beneath the sod;
And brighter burned the Christmas flame,
And merrier sped the Christmas game,
Because within the house there lay
A shape as tiny as a fay—
The Christmas gift of God!
In wreaths and garlands on the walls
The holly hung its ruby balls,
The mistletoe its pearls;
And a Christmas tree’s fantastic fruits
Woke laughter like a choir of flutes
From happy boys and girls.
For the mirth, which else had swelled as shrill
As a school let loose to its errant will,
Read Poem
0
144
Rating:

from The Seasons: Spring by James Thomson
James Thomson
As rising from the vegetable World
My Theme ascends, with equal Wing ascend,
My panting Muse; and hark, how loud the Woods
Invite you forth in all your gayest Trim.
Lend me your Song, ye Nightingales! oh pour
The mazy-running Soul of Melody
Into my varied Verse! while I deduce,
From the first Note the hollow Cuckoo sings,
Read Poem
0
164
Rating:

Ondine by Mary Barnard
Mary Barnard
At supper time an ondine’s narrow feet
made dark tracks on the hearth.
Like the heart of a yellow fruit was the fire’s heat,
but they rubbed together quite blue with the cold.
The sandy hem of her skirt dripped on the floor.
She sat there with a silvered cedar knot
for a low stool; and I sat opposite,
my lips and eyelids hot
Read Poem
0
142
Rating:

Amoretti LXXIV: Most Happy Letters by Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser
Most happy letters, fram'd by skilful trade,
With which that happy name was first design'd:
The which three times thrice happy hath me made,
With gifts of body, fortune, and of mind.
The first my being to me gave by kind,
From mother's womb deriv'd by due descent,
The second is my sovereign Queen most kind,
That honour and large richesse to me lent.
Read Poem
0
157
Rating:

Faustine by Algernon Charles Swinburne
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Ave Faustina Imperatrix, morituri te salutant. Lean back, and get some minutes' peace;
Let your head lean
Back to the shoulder with its fleece
Of locks, Faustine.
Read Poem
0
172
Rating: