Walt Whitman in Hell
Walt Whitman in Hell
Walt Whitman in Hell
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Poems
Contents
Zeitgeist Lightning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Mechanics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Compound Light . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Neighborhood Watch: Habeas Corpus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Scrutiny . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
The Heavenly Eunuchs of Rochester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Blue Alexandrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Ohio Abstract: Hart Crane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Somebody’s Childhood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Gypsum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Caucasian Male, 42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
St. Augustine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28
First Assembly of God . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29
Friendly Fire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31
Philadelphia Sentimental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32
Made-for-TV Movie, in Which a Couple Throws a Copy
of Frederic Jameson’s Postmodernism; or,
The Logic of Late Capitalism off a Bridge
and into a River . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33
Plate Glass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36
Under the Sign of the Color of Smoke or Stars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38
My Funny Valentine in Spanish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39
The Antichrist in Arkansas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
Confusion in the Drought Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42
The Heavenly Doctor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43
December 1909 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45
Greek . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46
Apocatastasis Foretold in the Shape
of a Canvas of Smoke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47
Worldly Beauty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49
Two Angels Torturing a Soul . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51
Walt Whitman in Hell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52
Acknowledgments
Walt Whitman in Hell was first published by Louisiana State University Press (as part
of their Southern Messenger Series, edited by Dave Smith) in 1996. After two
printings sold out, the Press elected, in 2002, to let it go out of print, at which time
copyright reverted to the author.
The following poems first appeared in various journals, and are reprinted here with
thanks:
Agni Review: “Two Angels Torturing a Soul”
Georgia Review: “First Assembly of God”; “St. Augustine”
Kenyon Review: “Confusion in the Drought Years”; “Greek”; “Philadalphia
Sentimental”; “Walt Whitman in Hell”
Paris Review: “Friendly Fire”; “My Funny Valentine in Spanish”; “Scrutiny”
Ploughshares: “Worldly Beauty”
Quarterly West: “Mechanics”; “Ohio Abstract: Hart Crane”; “Under the Sign of the
Color of Smoke or Stars”
Sewanee Theological Review: “Apocatastasis Foretold in the Shape of a Canvas of
Smoke”
Southern Review: “The Antichrist in Arkansas”; “The Heavenly Doctor”; “Plate
Glass”
Western Humanities Review: “December 1909”
The author gratefully acknowledges the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation for a
fellowship in poetry that greatly facilitated the completion of this book.
Zeitgeist Lightning
Will someday rip itself out of the ocean once and for all—
As if forgetting were the most transparent thing in the world,
As if to live meant anything more than to stumble in the radiance.
Maybe she hears again that voice on the radio drone the chorus
(stanza break)
I am constant in my recitation
of the silences. I hear lipstick
Inscribing the snifters, courtesy staining the plates,
whole cliffs of sleet discharging
i.
ii.
(stanza break)
iii.
(stanza break)
Slam the sidewalk, subjectless, intense,
One quantum in the ancient turbulence
Of conscience. Arc-welder acetylene,
iv.
(stanza break)
v.
(stanza break)
In some upstairs bedroom where the humbled
Pane surrenders its clarity to spiderweb
And precipitates of marl. While she waits,
vi.
Wrong sex. Wrong sense. Wrong city. Wrong bridge. Wrong life.
But who needs another elegy? No one ever dies here either.
It just goes on and on, gold foil on an assembly line, two tons
Of hearts for New York City. Metaphor, riffs the streetcar,
(stanza break)
I was looking for the return of the body’s story, a radical sunrise,
Starbursts over the estuary where fishing boats chafed the yachts –
But I only saw the city’s brilliant towers, refinery lights wasting
Silver in the predawn essences. None of us had understood.
In the brain, there is a sensitive blister of images we call the lesion of light.
If I close my eyes on a morning in Florida, I can focus the bed
With its abstract tracery of sheets, the fanatical hotel paintings, the lovers
Still in coitus, the woman superior, both of them magisterially lonely.
What I remember is memory itself, breath, the tongue on the skin
Of the thigh, a shadow surrounding the furniture, something that is not
Precisely darkness, but an absence more pure, colorless,
The echo of the blind spot. Confession never happens in the dark.
There is always the naked blinding bulb dangled from the black cliché
Of the cord, the fist and its afterglow. I was talking about my life
In the metropolis of assassins, I was tied to the bed with golden ropes,
And the questions never stopped, the tying and untying of knots.
In the parking lot 27 floors below my hotel balcony, in the middle of the night,
A man beat a woman senseless and stole her empty purse.
When morning finally blew in, there were primitive herons mixed up in it,
Astonishing birds the stormy color of ocean, with wingspans wide
As a nine-year-old is tall: real birds, but the sort of image I could believe
Rises out of the deepest caves of memory when a blackjack cracks the skull.
Who knows what happens after the brain shuts down?
If you’re lucky a thumbprint will glow on the plate glass door
In sunlight, the color of ectoplasm. If you aren’t, that song you danced to
In the bar last night will turn up on the elevator’s tape loop.
Over the water now, in a sky like the side of a mackerel,
A quarter-moon offers one of its half-lives to the bodiless sunrise,
A celestial residue smeared on the city morning. Seven Stars of David
Painted graffiti yellow on the firmament of asphalt liquefy
In the criminal atmospherics of sidewalks’ corruption and acidic dew.
A cruiser circles the pavement, its blue strobe corrosive and clean.
But what did the saints have left when their eyes dissolved in holy light?
Nobody’s left to testify. The evidence washes away.
Take everything, somebody whispers. I’ll give you anything.
First Assembly of God
What was it, crosstown, where the bluesman blew riff after riff
And rattled his cup on the curbing, moaning, that made you
Snatch off your cap and look up there, mouth open, breath in the steel
Air of Chicago childhood rising like a Sunday School image of prayer?
You were the one I loved then, the way I wanted to love
Wanting heat, wanting work. That year there was sweat in the factories,
Sweat in the dark of the slaughterhouse and the groins of the fathers.
And there we were, whatever our names, useless and broke on the street.
What were we, ten? In some other life, I tell you how much I want you
To lower your hand and turn to me. But you pointed up,
The inevitable genitalia broken down and packed in excelsior and silk,
All bearing for the first assembly. My god, there’s work for a man,
You said, your face with its wind-chapped skin alight with the living blood,
And I thought of the only Jesus I loved, the icon on my Russian uncle’s wall,
How the holes in his hands wanted grommeting and the port in his side wanted seals:
I looked down the street where the first of the marchers lifted
Under the hammer and sickle their Workers of the World, Unite.
I wanted to kneel in front of you, I reached for your arm, but you were gone
Into the crowd on the sidewalk where the bluesman’s “Love in Vain” was lost
In the noise of boots on concrete, sirens, horses and drums, O brother,
From here, I can see the past write itself on their skin in scars.
Made-for-TV Movie, in Which a Couple Throws
A Copy of Frederic Jameson’s Postmodernism:
Or, the Logic of Late Capitalism off a Bridge
And Into a River
i.
ii.
iii.
It is like a suicide pact, or a symbolic revolution.
They throw the book off together. It does not flutter in the air—
It drops like an anvil, sinks instantly out of sight.
This appears to be New England, where rivers are small but intense.
Likely the town had a mill once. Twenty yards downstream
There’s a ten-foot drop-off, an artificial spillway.
iv.
The book lies on the table. In the mountains above the courthouse,
At the heart of the rotting snowpack, the structure of ice
Is giving way, hydrogen bonds collapsing.
Granite contracts. Quartzite crystals splinter.
The roots of herbs break down: angelica, belladonna, death canna.
All morning they stayed in bed, a Sony camcorder
Set up on a tripod by the bureau. they were taping themselves
An alternate Kama Sutra, a sort of homemade Bible.
v.
The book is dense, but you’d think it might float, like so much
Fouled in the current: Styrofoam, drowned squirrels, condoms,
The bole of an ancient maple washed down in the April flood.
You’d think there might be a visible difference when it vanishes,
Or some special sound when it slips from the lip of the dam.
One of them has read it, one of them refused. They’ve been lovers
For a year. They have their own dialectic. In the bedroom, they kissed
Each others’ breasts while the camera whirred and clicked.
They’ve talked it over. They’ve studied the illustrations: Van Gogh’s
vi.
vii.
The one about the deer hunt, the one about the Spanish blond.
To them, his life is predictable and sad. That is one category,
Like the lives of farmers: pastoral. And the lives of shopkeepers: bourgeois.
(no stanza break)
viii.
ix.
Of daffodils lifting themselves over and over out of the bankrupt soil
On the opposite shore, caught in their perpetual visionary dreariness.
The river rumbles familiarly. One of the women frames
A false photograph with her fingers. If she only had her Nikon,
The light meter, the polarizing filter, she could fix
x.
Her lover with this pre-Raphaelite aura of April sunlight in her hair—
And the book, just before it vanishes in the current, might make
A statement if you could see it
In high-contrast black-and-white, in a Plexiglas frame.
Plate Glass
Of a biplane’s engine stalling out of sight, she thinks she reads the fading
Signature of God etched backward in Art Deco gold leaf
Against the nose-marked storefront of the planet.
Someone is skywriting there, but she can’t make out
What she has every right to believe is hers, something about love
And the world’s being made and remade in the shape of her desire—
The content of rhetoric being purity, she being one of the chosen.
All along, there was thirst shaping up in the uterine rot of fence posts
Everywhere the sunlight touched. All along, the fieldhands’ sweat
Was ominous with salt. Sister, the preacher told me,
I believe there is brilliance coming.
Sister, he said, we will lay all our burdens down.
I went into the dooryard where the columbines were wasting their blooms.
I could hear the haybalers beyond the horizon wind and unwind their hymn.
Some claim visions, the prayer books say, but I see what I see,
I believe what all believers remember: the past and the time to come.
Preacher, a clay road spools this prairie where invisible combines lift
Astral bodies of wheatdust against the sulfate glaze of the morning sky.
Hardwoods sawtooth the horizon: oaks, old worthless elms, all ash
Now, all consumed in the mind, like carcasses of crows
The brothers shot in the orchard—what else to do but burn them?—or down
The old woman plucked in the barnyard, bloodying dead breasts
Of numbness into heartwood, and the son on the tractor turns the color
Of oil on steel, and the sister in the dooryard remembers how years from now
She will stitch the ticking by candlelight, kneading feathers
Into the body-shape of our oldest desire: To leave a mark on everything clean
We can find, perversity, the deep-etched signature.
The Heavenly Doctor
By a stream of hot air at white heat, for about $3 cost – nothing left
But a little heap of snow-white ashes: As when the meteor passed
In the early morning, and, fading, threw
A sudden glaring into my room like a flash from a hunter’s firepan.
In this world, saws and the fever – in the next, gauze and morphine.
Against gangrene: amputation. As on the day
The Wadesborough Bridge was cut down and the Spencer Tucker Bridge
Was burnt by order of Colonel Miller, the military commandant,
And twelve white herons made the astrologer’s wheel in the air overhead.
Against beauty. Against all that beauty portends.
Against any fool who believes in free will or an afterlife.
Against Mysticism, hedonism, Stoicism, Episcopalianism.
(stanza break)
Which leads to nothing but this: The soul is flesh. Do as little as you can.
Vis cogitativa, the power of sense: Watch cloud formations change.
Vis rememoritiva, the power of memory: Don’t turn your back on your brother.
Brimstone fumes kill every species of fungus in plant, beast, and man.
As the metal of her bucket, and the water the bucket holds,
And the vapor that rises off the frost-etched stone of the wall.
Her old dress bunches at her belly in an intaglio like stretch marks.
She had children, and those children died. She had children,
And those children had children. Where is the nostalgia
For humanity? Where are all the stories we have learned
So when the latch clicks and the lid of her body swings open,
Another rises luminous and whole into the expanse of unconcealment.
It comes to almost nothing. Winter is here, and the half-starved
A blue racer looped and left in Möbius coils under the gate,
Immaculate in the clarity of this life’s illumination?
You ought to have seen the mind is the half-life of punishment,
Its cancerous image. You ought to have understood fluorescent light
Deep in the cardiac mind, and the Nöos says to the Psyche,
Watch where you go once you have entered here,
Which way and to whom you return,
Who lived sixty years beyond the day of her lover’s desertion
By fuel-air bomb in the wreckage of Panama City,
Comes forward to comfort me with bandages and morphine,
Each going down into the hell of its own one-track mind.
Here is the ruptured anarchist soul
Of Arturo Giovanetti in prison, the one true confession
The body, air and æther and light – and to which I long
To return. Thrown into being out of the center of being.
But what am I – an insulated ghost, appearance, apparition,
I, I, I, I, I.