Authors: David O'Meara
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Poetry, #World Literature
‘… you must experiment. You do things in which you eliminate
something which is, perhaps, essential – but to learn how
essential it is, you leave it out.’
–
Henry Moore
She still lolls, propped on the pediment
of the Medici tomb in Florence.
Her right elbow rests on a thick left thigh
that twists from the edge, half-aware
she must stay balanced there.
She’s tired. Is she catching some shut-eye
so she’ll stay fresh and be admired
for the next five hundred years? Stare
at the braided clump of hair that drops
across a breast, the white stomach
like stepped folds of sand left by the tide.
Has flesh ever been more alive
than in this marble? We touch a hand
against her neck; she starts and lifts her eyes.
Its sea-stack
vertical tatter. Dry rills
and dints squirrelled themselves
from worked boulder –
into shoulders, hips, elbows – a shape
hurrying to the surface
only once the mind has turned
and turned to find it.
The loosely
knotted sign for the self
ghosted from a stab
at what he guessed
might show itself, form
or the starving aperture at its centre.
A phone call from my buddy
one night in Southend
about some work
that might be worth a few.
We rolled up to this estate
past midnight, in a stolen
Mercedes flatbed – some kind of museum,
barns in a dark farmyard,
and right there in the field
this blob of bronze
we had to hoist with a fucking crane,
tuck beneath a tarp,
then speed away, not exactly
clean, our labours saved
for Interpol and Scotland Yard
on
CCTV
.
Three of us, unlikely
to sell it intact, drove
out to a lock-up
of this scrap man, and cut
the lot up for easy passage
through Her Majesty’s ports
to Rotterdam. Eight hundred
each, tax free.
A drop of it might be
in your cellphone,
’cause they shipped it on to China
and melted down
all that it’s accrued
from what its
meaning is
and what it
gestures to
for something clearly useful.
Moore liked best
what wasn’t finished, no
‘happy fixed finality.’
He eventually found
Night
’s skin
thick, too leathery and polished.
Instead, he feted the pitted heads
of Michelangelo’s failed, last à,
its original stonework torn
down like an expensive set of drapes
to show thinner, exhausted
shapes inside. Not Renaissance
but Gothic, more solitary
than his greatest forms, Christ’s nose
and mouth chiselled flat,
Mary’s supporting hand
a broken edge of marble
as if the sculptor had run out
of material space to describe their pain
so left them there to rest.
A great question
, Moore claimed
of the Master’s failures:
they taught me what happened
in his mind
, the ideal
and its fracture both
scratching for the light.
Mushin Hasan, head in hands, is tableau
on the cuneiform tablet. He saw it coming. How
could he not, counting off the precedents,
from the Elamite sack of Babylon,
umpteen sacks of Rome – Visigoth,
Saracen, Norman – to all that stuff
carted back for an empire’s
display cases, Lord Elgin
or Napoleon. What’s been left alone?
Like Layard outside Mosul, camped near villages
the locals built on grass mounds,
their houses framed by giant stones
inscribed with script
turned out were the walls of Nineveh.
Clay tablets from the Gilgamesh saga
shipped up the Thames,
the Ishtar Gate to Berlin. Power
on display as the power to take and then curate
into ownership. More subtle than just
charging past the coat check
with axes and iron pipes,
screaming
there is no government or state
,
but the same result.
FOX TV
loops
of looters make us forget how families
were squeezed between a no-win/no-win
of the home regime, overseas’ sanctions
and systematic deployment
of Tomahawk missiles.
Among computers,
AC
and chairs
stripped from storerooms are plates
from the royal tombs
of Ur, and a headless limestone figure
chiselled in Lagash 4,400 years ago.
Nearby, soldiers told to hold
a traffic control point, wait
on a news crew
to get the best side of a tank-round
whacking the statue of Saddam
on horseback. No montage
of Donny George and museum staff
chaining the museum’s front doors, taking shifts with clubs
against gangs organized in supply chains
for the profit of foreign
collectors. Only days
after Baghdad’s invasion, fresh artefacts
surface on the Parisian
black market. The top three
metres of southern Iraq now pockmarked,
ransacked past dark to the clatter
of generators and shovels. What we had
of the unexcavated sites of Adab,
Zabalam, Umma and Shuruppak
are now empty spaces in human narrative.
The stone head of King Sanatruq,
2nd century
CE
,
recovered by luck when an Italian archaeologist
told police he’d spotted it on a mantelpiece
of an Al Jazeera decorating show.
If my family were starving, I’d rifle
through the storerooms.
Coalition forces pour a fresh helipad,
Chinook rotors blast sand and rattle
the remaining walls
of ancient Babylon. The Temple of Ninmah’s
roof collapses, the halls of the Temple of Nabu.
War’s aftermath: no power, no water, no work.
So what good is art?
Near the city’s edge,
a crowd in dishdashas wears stethoscopes,
dragging around
OR
gear
lifted from the hospital.
What is ‘preserving the past’? Bread flour
bakes in dried mud, near corpses from sectarian
killings. One man, a shoe repairman,
digs up an artefact, solid gold,
of a cow, so sells it
for a silver
BMW
. Every day soldiers come
to have their pictures
taken from the top
of the bullet-notched ziggurat, each click
an exhibit of the
I was here
, desert cam
lost in silhouette against the level,
ochre panorama of sand.
(
Albrecht Dürer’s
Rhinoceros
briefly addresses the tiger shark
from Damien Hirst’s
The Physical Impossibility of Death in
the Mind of Someone Living)
I’ve been trying to get you
out of my mind, a rival to the crown
as art’s most iconic
image of an animal.
With a half-millennium
head start, I’ve preened on countless
woodcut prints, a cathedral door in Pisa,
a Medici emblem,
and still am featured on tourist T-shirts,
my splayed, unlikely toes
outside the British Museum.
It’s the same way
you’ve got presence, kid,
loitering in that cabinet,
injected with 5 percent formaldehyde,
your serrated grin
trademark to an appetite so wide
you’re nicknamed
trash can
of the ocean
for gulping tires,
oil-drum lids and licence plates.
Hirst raised such a royal fuss.
Outrage hooked the media as neat
as the gaff that hooked you
off Australia, cultural status landed
by all that commission money.
Dürer never saw a real rhino;
I’m his vision of one they lost
en route to Rome
as a showpiece in the pope’s menagerie.
A storm sucked the ship down,
the trapped beast
shackled to the deck.
The artist played the facts a little
fast and loose, sketched my hide
in absentia
with scales and plates,
mounted a stunted horn
on my riveted nape
like a hairy twist of ice cream.
Hardly accurate, but it shocked the crowd,
half the battle in making a name.
I guess raw profit’s why
the master from Nuremburg
wrought a woodcut,
not a painting, guessing sales
from copies wouldn’t be outcharted
until the advent of Farrah
Fawcett. And to compensate
for investors’ losses
when the carcass washed up
against the Ligurian coast,
they put it on display
‘stuffed with straw.’
I thought I’d see you at one
of the shows this summer. If so,
talk might have gone in a million
directions, and been awkward, as we’d likely
keep it small, complaining of the lineups
at the beer tent, then finding
a break in the crowd to slip away.
Talk was never our problem;
all those late-night think-tanks
after closing the bar, cooking up
subtleties on invented games,
rules to ‘Quick Drinks’
or ‘Etch-a-Sketch Portraits.’
Though most talk was art – what might
be good and where to find it –
while we watched the floor dry,
squashed in the booth
with the lights turned low.
I know you,
so was less and less surprised
when you sidestepped
issues people tried to raise,
and worse, twisted them
into betrayal by your stubborn,
bottled-up imagination. They
were trying to show they cared
even while you bulldozed into rooms,
grim as a defeated army.
Meanwhile, work is work,
late home, five hours sleep,
coffee, then a nap. You’ve missed
a birth or two, the filled and emptied diapers
of friends’ burping offspring,
and I’ve moved, so if you ever
picture me, I don’t know where.
Mostly, when I think of you, I see
you angry and mistaken.
Almost daily, I bike past
your old studio
and the re-rented house,
rooms where our unsuspecting ghosts
still drink and smoke, contra Yeats,
imperfect on every count.
Home-grown for extra income,
they’re warmed in the watts
of a standard light bulb
till the egg forms a worm,
small
like a hair
. Each one feasts
on mulberry, a month-long course
of shiny leaves, chubbing themselves
into a pale, lazy wiggle.
They wish to be a kimono cloud,
ball of fog, white
shrouds spun for their own ghosts
as they nod off to a creaking dream
of legs and wings. They wish
they were metaphor.
To let them stretch would tear
sleek work, so each cocoon
is dropped in a rolling boil, their
lives pinched out like fingers
on a match head.
The strands are reeled on a row
of spools,
and the cocoons jig and iridesce
until the corpse is undressed.
Sixtyish, wrinkled, Ling Quang's hard look
lifts from the gravel where we've stopped,
the Honda's kickstand staked
to the road's thin shoulder,
our helmets laid like eggs on the leather seat.
He points at the place
near the silk factory where
the craters are almost overgrown,
green tangles scanned
through his knock-off Ray-Bans.
On the bike, I forget to lean
through curves, tires
eating the steep grade back to town,
past the bridge again
where a man stands fishing,
nylon net like a smudge of mist
that skims his catch from the creek,
their fins struggling in the killing air.
In the tangled field, our boots catch.
Barns wedged in thick weeds
are beached container ships
wrought in rusted brick, dust, rot whiff
of hay bales. A black stork
rigs straw on a transmission post
that sags with dead wire.
A wolf curls on a park bench,
sneers through cleft lips.
There’s a trace of skew
in the oak leaves’ lost symmetry.
The pond is hummingbird green.
•
The car’s waved through; a triangle
signs the split where we yield
to nothing but silence. On the bridge,
corroded guardrails
fence the phantom view
of burning graphite.
Eleven flagpoles spoke
the drive at the only hotel.
The air rings, metal
lashed by slack chains.
Pine and spruce glut the playground,
split the ball court, sprout roots
in lobbies and rooftop gravel.
School floorboards
warp and rake. The pool
fills with ceiling tiles
and flaking paint.
•
There are many of us here. A whole street.
They went off just as they were, in their shirt sleeves.
Around it, burdock, stinging-nettle, and goose-foot.
I’m not supposed to be talking about this.
Everywhere we used shovels.
Get rid of the topsoil to the depth of one spade.
Changing our masks up to thirty times a shift.
I would see roes and wild boars. They were thin and sleepy,
like they were moving in slow motion.
Something glistened.
It came off in layers – as white film … the colour of his face.
There it was – and there it wasn’t.
Safer than samovars.
What we saw.
The wind blows the dust from one field to the next.
Dresses, boots, chairs, harmonicas, sewing machines. We buried it
in ditches. Houses and trees, we buried everything.
There lie thousands of dogs, cats, horses, that were shot. And not
a single name. What remains of ancient Greece?
The myths of ancient Greece.
On the one hand, it’s disgusting, and on the other hand – why don’t you
all go fuck yourselves?
We heard that something had happened somewhere.
So you can picture it: a lead vest, masks, the wheelbarrows
and insane speed.
The ants are crawling along the tree branch.
‘In several generations’
‘Forever’
‘Nothing’
They brought me the urn. I felt around with my hand,
and there was something tiny, like seashells in the sand,
those were his hip bones.
Everyone became what he really was.
‘Walking ashes.’
When I got here, the birds were in their nests, and when I left
the apples were lying in the snow.
That was the worst. All around, it was just beautiful.
I would never see such people again. Everyone’s faces
just looked crazy. Their faces did, and so did ours.
We buried the forest.
We buried the earth.
We sawed the trees into meter-and-a-half pieces
and packed them in cellophane and threw them into graves.
They stood in the black dust, talking, breathing, wondering at it.
You can imagine how much philosophy there was.
I felt like I was recording the future.
We’re its victims, but also its priests.
When I die, sell the car and the spare tire, and don’t marry Tolik.
You should come into this world on your tiptoes, and stop at the entrance.
This person will be happy just to find one human footprint.
•
There’s a fecund smell,
grenadine sweet,
remnants of mutant hemlock,
chestnut and wildflowers,
or it could be
cotton candy.
The Fun Fair rusts.
Stark as a double helix
of
DNA
, unused scaffolds
of the Tilt-A-Whirl
lean and shriek
in the refrigerated calm.
•
I don’t know what I should talk about –
A ruined building, a field of debris;
I’ll remember everything for you.