You Are Not HereTHE FAN in memory of Art Porter, Jr. (1961-1996) How long Death labored to kill you so young. In '46 He spun Benny Goodman disks for the new king of Thailand, so in '96 Bhumibol would dig your swinging funk and invite you to his Golden Jubilee Festival-- all so you could drown in Kratha Taek Reservoir when the boat He built nineteen years before began to leak, right on schedule, so far from shore. What patience. What restraint. And we can't forget all the years He spent teaching you to play your alto so soulfully. Imagine how He felt, waiting, doing the arithmetic, and how much He must have loved the music your breath made as it left your body . . . YOU ARE NOT HERE It started as a joke: stuck on the world map behind my desk, a Post-it note with the words You Are Not Here. Each morning I move it someplace--anyplace-- but Little Rock, Arkansas, where I'm writing this. Managua, Katmandu, Beijing, Port-au-Prince, Athens, Jakarta, Gdansk, Ypsilanti--my students laugh when they see where we're not but I stopped laughing years ago. Still, each morning, I move that note again. All these years and still I haven't exhausted all the places I'm not, though I've exhausted myself trying. It's too much like life, all this traveling toward absence. A long slow unraveling of here into there and there into nowhere . . . Osaka, Rio de Janeiro, Seoul, Melbourne, Havana, Cairo, Saskatoon-- each morning I ask myself where I won't be today or ever. The list is almost infinite, but maybe, if I keep practicing the art of not being somewhere, when I die I'll cross that border with joy, like a refugee at long last returning to the old country. From REQUIEM (a 39-section elegy for the poet Lynda Hull, author of Ghost Money, Star Ledger, and The Only World) Your magic words, those alcoholic days, were aria, chiaroscuro, flare, unfurl; & you loved the way lacquer kissed liquor, the click of its red nails on the black bar whose guillotine glint seemed to rise from its mirrored depths to bring you back, night after amnesiac night, from your daily death. Another drink & then another. The words you wanted, those nights, were half kamikaze, half incubus. And later, at the delicate hour before dawn, when the moon grew brittle as the Viaticum, you knew the terror of return. Everything the night had opened about to close. Black world, you prayed, unfurl, flare . . . * A posthumous light tracks you in this resurrected photo: Akhmatovan in sepia, you're a gypsy fortuneteller with turbaned hair & black magic dress. Chicago, 1991, your Slavic profile cast against a brick wall: the jacket of your last book. Each poem an x-ray, the light's deepest descent, revealing the other world in the world you called the only one. And telling the black fortunes of both. Dark seraphim, muse of these Plague Years, you must have known which world was yours. In the photo, your eyes are closed & you're turning, as if to go. * Work done, day burning down to ash, I sit in my backyard, the only sounds the bees laboring in the roses, the finches fighting at the feeder, & try to make the world shrink to the clink of ice in my Scotch. After you died I listened to Coltrane break himself into dark shards until he was light enough to rise. Ascension, the collision of breath & the unspeakable. Now I seek neither music nor words but silence, the inverse of wordlessness, so that I may drift in it, as my face drifts in that slowest of rivers, the mirror, which only dreams it is water, not sand. FOUR WAYS OF LIVING IN THIS WORLD 1 Deep in silt-dark, fins waving, weeds in slow current, trout refuse to rise, wild, into the refracted river of sky, the white clouds and drowning blue air. 2 So heavy the rapids can't sink it the boulder floats, its head forever just barely above the frothing river. 3 On the downriver side of the boulder, touched only by spray and foam: moss growing like grass on a grave. 4 As light as light the water strider skims above what bears it up. 5 Meanwhile, the river ripples in sunlight, muscles on the back of a horse that cannot be broken. |
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