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Mar 29, 2011 22:23

Self-Portrait at 33: Peachtree St.

1.

Big Dad is dead.

Papa T is dead.

Grandma is dead.

Buster, my father “is dead is dead.” [FN1]

[FN1] some Jack Kerouac poem whose name I cannot remember or probably never knew.

I have done everything I settled for doing

and now there is nothing that I want to do.

I want to stop

doing anything.

Ridiculous man. Ridiculous condition.

An illness, a fault, that dare not speak its name,

because good people

have no right name for it:

this is a poem

about the names of things.

2.

Fine.

Fine.

Summer evening and new friends and old friends:

it had been so very hot, July in Georgia as you imagine it

out in the lawns of the suburbs with the frogs screaming in the steam.

Then evening, back to the city, and such an evening:

crystalline, also porous, with a dark breeze cut

through it as from the mouth of a cave:

reassuring and dark.

Drinking and eating outdoors after that absurd party,

a new friend and an old friend. [FN 2]

[FN 2] Arthur. With whom I was once so in love that the love burnt itself up and burnt the feeling out of me and when I try to remember it I cannot feel that feeling again. So we were able to begin from scratch. Scratching, black birds in the yard. Thus, in truth, perhaps, two new friends?

3.

This new friend is a poet

and we begin discussing what we like:

he likes complicated poems that I do not understand,

not complicated like Pound or T.S. Elliot, whose complexities

can be unwound through deduction and multiple readings, but

a level of complexity that requires the poet to leave no breadcrumbs

for the reader, a level of complexity I suspect may be antagonistic. [FN 3]

[FN 3] Further reading: “Language Poetry.”

I, on the other hand, I like

man-ish art.

Simple and Solid. Athletic. Graceful and brutal. [FN 4]

[FN 4] Further reading: Auden and Bly and Kerouac, Merrill and Mary Oliver.

This new friend indulges me in a discussion of James Wright:

Their sons grow suicidally beautiful

At the beginning of October,

And gallop terribly against each other's bodies.

And

We discuss another of Wright’s Poems. In case you have not read it, this is a poem that I cannot discuss without giving you the entire thing. For all its power is in the whole of it, and once you have read it, you have read it, and it cannot be undone:

Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy's Farm

in Pine Island, Minnesota

by James Wright

Over my head, I see the bronze butterfly,
Asleep on the black trunk,
blowing like a leaf in green shadow.
Down the ravine behind the empty house,
The cowbells follow one another
Into the distances of the afternoon.
To my right,
In a field of sunlight between two pines,
The droppings of last year's horses
Blaze up into golden stones.
I lean back, as the evening darkens and comes on.
A chicken hawk floats over, looking for home.
I have wasted my life.

4.

[FN 5]

[FN 5] I understand the mistake I am making by setting a masterpiece in the middle of my amateur hour, but now that we are post-post-everything, what does it matter? Call it sampling. Call it found art. Just call it.

5.

I do not remember reading “Lying in an Hammock”

for the first time.

But it has become the great beast and Buddha

and governor of my life.

The way some people say a prayer,

I say: “I have wasted my life.” [FN 6]

[FN 6] Where there are long and numbered days of my life already used up in a thousand marvelous and mundane ways that I already cannot, and even then never could, remember: Gone. And pressed into a diamond under the thousand layers of nonsense, singing to me in those frozen moments when the universe is still for a nanosecond:

“I have wasted my life.”

6.

More than a decade ago, I wrote a poem that said something like:

I want to be a writer like my father, but my kung fu is bullshit, and when I say ‘kung fu’ what I really mean is songs, and when I say ‘songs’ what I really mean is poems.

This was the first poem I had published in a real little magazine. [FN 7]

[FN 7] The Blue Sofa Review, 1999?, 2000?

Having it published meant so much to me, but the poem

itself is not very good: written by a 21 year old, it was, and is, a work too saturated:

desire at the beginning of adulthood: garish.

But I am certainly not sorry for it. I would write it all over again if I had it in me.

7.

And at the running edge of the wave of

these merging days it turns out I am too selfish to have much regret.

For my regret is instant, and burns itself out within the context of its creation:

only just lately I have realized, after all this time, when I find myself, so many days, chanting to my self of selves:

“I have wasted my life,”

what I really mean is:

“I am wasting my life.”

8.

[FN 8]

[FN8] See there. Spun sugar. Go find the sugar, my sweet. Dark days. Dark days of process. Get the honey. Bring the honey. Drink the honey and remember, if we can, what it was the needles of our hearts ever pointed out toward. For, never does the sun shine on my face and light me up into stones across the sky, throwing me out like black birds across the sky: spreading my most secret self out thin across the sky like translucent winter clouds high above the avenue, and never do the walls peel back and let in muons from the beginning of time to flow through me and give me nothing and take me nothing away on their way to the end of time.

9.

I have wasted my life. “I have wasted my life.”

I am wasting my life:

My self-portrait at 33,

the only thing I have done all year.

So here is not just Adulthood in some abstract way,

but here is my adulthood:

home, office, de facto marriage, Atlanta, the train, and paper and paper and paper, and screens and screens and screens, night, whiskey, strangers, familiar strangers, and Saturday afternoons swallowed by hangovers and the internet, crystallized in the vacillating silence and sirens of two rooms that could be any rooms anywhere at all.

There is no right word for it.

Summer, 2010 - Spring, 2011. Atlanta.
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