Authors: Jack Gilbert
It thrashes in the oaks and soughs in the elms,
catches on innocence and soon dismantles that.
Sends children bewildered into life. Childhood
ends and is not buried. The young men ride out
and fall off, the horses wandering away. They get
on boats, are carried downstream, discover maidens.
They marry them without meaning to, meaning no harm,
the language beyond them. So everything ends.
Divorce gets them nowhere. They drift away from
the ruined women without noticing. See birds
high up and follow. “Out of earshot,” they think,
puzzled by
earshot.
History driving them forward,
making a noise like the wind in maples, of women
in their dresses. It stings their hearts finally.
It wakes them up, baffled in the middle of their lives
on a small bare island, the sea blue and empty,
the days stretching all the way to the horizon.
Each farmer on the island conceals
his hive far up on the mountain,
knowing it will otherwise be plundered.
When they die, or can no longer make
the hard climb, the lost combs year
after year grow heavier with honey.
And the sweetness has more and more
acutely the taste of that wilderness.
Flying up, crossing over, going forward.
Passing through, getting deep enough. Breaking
into, finding the way, living at the heart
and going beyond that. Finally realizing
that arriving is not the same as being resident.
That what we do is not what we are doing.
We go into the orchard for apples. But what
we carry back is the day among trees with odor,
coolness, dappled light and time. The season
and geese going over. Always and always
with death to come, and before that the dishonor
of growing old. But meanwhile the trees are
heavy with ripe fruit. We try to visit Greece
and find ourselves instead in the pointless noon
standing among vetch and grapes, disassembling
as night climbs beautifully out of the earth
and God holds His breath. In the distance there is
the faint clatter of a farmer’s bucket as she
gets water up at the well for the animals.
He stands freezing in the dark courtyard looking up
at their bright windows, as he has many nights since
moving away. Because of his promise, he does not
go up. He is thinking of the day she came back
from the hospital. They did not know her then.
He was looking down because of the happiness in her
voice talking to her husband as they went across
the courtyard. She saw him and, grinning, held up
the newborn child. Now it is the last time ever.
He finally knocks. Her eyes widen when she opens
the door. She looks to indicate her husband is home
as she unbuttons her dress. He whispers that his hands
are too cold. It will make me remember better,
she says, and puts them on her nakedness, wincing,
eyes wild with love. It is snowing when he leaves,
the narrow street lit here and there by shop windows.
Tomorrow he will be on the train with his wife, watching
the shadows on the snow. Going south to live silently
with perfect summer skies and the brilliant Aegean.
We think of lifetimes as mostly the exceptional
and sorrows. Marriage we remember as the children,
vacations, and emergencies. The uncommon parts.
But the best is often when nothing is happening.
The way a mother picks up the child almost without
noticing and carries her across Waller Street
while talking with the other woman. What if she
could keep all of that? Our lives happen between
the memorable. I have lost two thousand habitual
breakfasts with Michiko. What I miss most about
her is that commonplace I can no longer remember.
The ship goes down and everybody is lost, or is living
comfortably in Spain. He finds himself at the edge
of emptiness, absence and heat everywhere.
Just shacks along the beach and nobody in them.
He has listened to the song so often that he hears
only the spaces between the notes. He stands there,
remembering peaches. A strange, almost gray kind
that had little taste when he got them home, and that
little not much good. But there had to be a reason
why people bought them. So he decided to make jam.
When he smelled the scorching, they were already tar.
Scraped out the mess and was glad to have it over.
Found himself licking the crust on the spoon. Next day
he had eaten the rest, still not sure whether he liked
it or not. And never able to find any of them since.
We stopped to eat cheese and tomatoes and bread
so good it made me foolish. The woman with me
wanted to go through the palace of the papal
captivity. Hazley and Stern said they were going
to the whorehouse. That surprised me twice
because it was only two in the afternoon.
The woman and I went to the empty palace
and met them later to drive on. They said
how neat and clean it was in the whorehouse,
and how all the men and most of the women had
been in the fourth grade together. I remember
the soft way they said it but not what they told
about going upstairs. It is not the going instead
to a blank palace where history had left no smell
that I regret. It is not even the dream
of a Mediterranean woman pulling off her dress,
the long tousled dark hair, or even the white
teeth in the shuttered room as she smiled
mischievously at the young American. I regret
the fresh coolness when they went inside from
the July heat and everybody talking quietly
as they drank ordinary wine in that promised land.
It was half a palace, half an ancient fort,
and built of mud. The home of a fierce baroness.
The rest were men, mostly elderly, and all German.
When Denise arrived, it woke them from their habits.
Not because she was exciting, since the men were
only interested in boys. But soon they were taking
turns choosing her costumes and displaying her
on low couches, or half asleep in nests of cushions
on the wonderful rugs. They did not want her naked
unless covered with jewelry. Always coaxed
her to sing, to have the awkwardness and the way
she sang off-key mix with the nipples so evident,
the heavy skirts rucked up. It dominated
the evenings. They insisted she tell stories
but did not listen to the rambling accounts
of growing up in Zurich. Two were interested
in the year she modeled for
Vogue.
More responded
to the life in Paris: fancy dinners where
perfectly dressed men and women made love to her
with hands and mouths and delicate silver instruments.
For the Germans, decadence was undistinguished,
but it mattered when they recognized the names
of nobles, the painters, and the young
couturière
who was the sensation of that season.
What Denise remembers most from the nights
is how they ended. She and the man with her
would each choose a lad and go up to the bedroom
with the wild lamentation of the unchosen following
behind them. Most had never seen a beautiful woman.
None had seen a white one. They were desperate
in their loss. When the boys were forced out,
they pounded on the great door, a thunder searching
through the empty corridors. Some went around
to the side where her window was. Swarmed up
each other’s back until there were lines up the wall
six and seven bodies high. When one reached the sill
he fell immediately, because the seeing was so intense.
A long wail and a thud, and then the whimpering
and barking began again. But what she dreams of
is the first time the Germans took her to the river.
Small figures appeared in the distance. Drifted
silently across the desert, slowly through the blur
of the heat. Soon she could see how young they were.
A few riding on horses. All discarding their clothes
as they got closer to the water. Wading, swimming
across. The black horses splashing. Stopping
in a ragged line, waiting to be chosen
for the later choosing. Mostly now she dreams
of those motionless figures in the powerful emptiness.
Wordless, shining, staring at her out of their blank faces.
He manages like somebody carrying a box
that is too heavy, first with his arms
underneath. When their strength gives out,
he moves the hands forward, hooking them
on the corners, pulling the weight against
his chest. He moves his thumbs slightly
when the fingers begin to tire, and it makes
different muscles take over. Afterward,
he carries it on his shoulder, until the blood
drains out of the arm that is stretched up
to steady the box and the arm goes numb. But now
the man can hold underneath again, so that
he can go on without ever putting the box down.
I heard a noise this morning and found two old men
leaning on the wall of my vineyard, looking out
over the fields, silent. Went back to my desk
until somebody raised the trap door of the well.
It was the one with the cane, looking down inside.
But I was annoyed when the locked door rattled where
the grain and wine were. Went to the kitchen window
and stared at him. He said something in Greek.
I spread my arms to ask what he was doing.
He explained about growing up out there long ago.
That now they were making a little walk among
the old places. Telling it with his hands.
He made a final gesture, rubbing the side
of the first finger against that of the other hand.
I think it meant how much he felt about being here
again. We smiled, even though he was half blind.
Later, my bucket banged and I saw the heavy one
pulling up water. He cleaned the mule’s stone basin
carefully with his other hand. Put back a rock
for the doves to stand on and poured in fresh water.
Stayed there, touching the old letters cut in the marble.
I watched them go slowly down the lane and out
of sight. They did not look back. As I typed,
I listened for the dog at each farm to tell me
which house they went to next. But the dogs did not
bark all the way down the long bright valley.
We think the fire eats the wood.
We are wrong. The wood reaches out
to the flame. The fire licks at
what the wood harbors, and the wood
gives itself away to that intimacy,
the manner in which we and the world
meet each new day. Harm and boon
in the meetings. As heart meets what
is not heart, the way the spirit
encounters the flesh and the mouth meets
the foreignness in another mouth. We stand
looking at the ruin of our garden
in the early dark of November, hearing crows
go over while the first snow shines coldly
everywhere. Grief makes the heart
apparent as much as sudden happiness can.
He stands there baffled by pleasure and how little
it counts. The long woman is finally asleep on the bed,
the sweat beautiful on her New England nakedness.
It was while he was walking toward the shuttered window
with sunlight blazing behind it that something
important happened. He looks down through the gap
between the shutters at the Romans and late summer
in the via del Corso, trying to find a name for it,
knowing it is not love. Nor tenderness. He considers
other times just after, the random intensity sliding away,
unrecoverable. It is the sorrow that stays clear.
This specialness inside his spirit is bonded to
a knowing he cannot remember. When he was crushed,
each minor shift of his body traced out the bones
with agony, making his skeleton more and more clear
inside him. As though floodlit. He remembers
the intricate way he would lift his arm from the bed
in the hospital, turning his hand cautiously this way
and that to find the bearable paths through the air,
discovering an inch here and there where the pain
was missing. Or the cold and hunger as he walked
the alleys all night that winter down by the docks
of Genoa until each dawn, when he held the hot bowls
of tripe in his numb hands, the steam rising into his face
as he drank, the tears mixing with happiness. He opens
the shutters, and the shutters of the other window,
so the Mediterranean light can get to her. Desperately
trying to break the code while there is still time.
She told about when the American soldiers
came to the island. How the spirits would cling
to the wire fence and watch their bigness
and blondness, often without shirts, working
in the sunlight. So different from reality.
So innocent and laughing, as though it were
simple to be happy and kind. And their smell!
They had a smell that made the spirits shiver
and yearn to be material. She said that
the spirits would push long thin poles,
ivory in the moonlight, silently through
the fence, trying to touch the whiteness
those sleeping men had around their hearts.