Authors: Devin Johnston
to sea once more, old sloop.
What can you do but lie ahull
or run off under bare poles
while trailing lines astern?
Don't you feel your steering fail
and hear your cracked mast groan
in another gust of spindrift,
the night sea full of foam,
and wonder how your hull
could ever survive the coming wave?
You have no seam unsplit, nor God
to call upon in such misfortune.
Though you were built from live oak
and longleaf Georgia pine,
and proudly christened
A-OK,
the frightened sailor finds
no comfort in a name.
Take care, or you'll become
the laughingstock of wind.
Source of all my drudgery
and now my deep concern:
stay well clear of the hidden reef
from which no ships return.
I am the warper
caught in a weir
like a muscular tongue
against the teeth
or stuck with a spear
or reeled from the dark
to writhe on a hook
and make no sound
though sometimes heard
to whistle off-key
in a ruffled sound
or estuary
I am the warper
sniffing the air
and sliding across
rough wood and root
en route to pools
of Ira-waru
or branching streams
of Batasuna
though never at home
in the Pyrenees
preferring the deep
and rolling seas
I am the warper
pickled in brine
a cable wrapped
in gutta-percha
walloping north
as a spring unwinds
its subtle ribbon
beneath the keel
in a warp of murky
light and water
here and gone
a silver eel
A whipbird calls through fog
Its whistle sustains and clarifies
until a crack
taut and metallic
punctuates the morning
Across the estuary
an inlet of the Tasman Sea
bellbirds swing their heads
to ventriloquize
a lip of glass
By channels of coolness
the echoes are calling
each call a drop of water
or tap on glazed ceramic
or
tink
of sonar
to sound the empty space
and test how long
how far
tink tink-ting
tink tink-ting
Think of Ming brushwork
and how each island
has its
ting
open to all weather
a pavilion in which to pause
among eroded rocks
and cataracts of moss
along a river
still unscrolling
Just so the
tink
of bellbirds
unchanging yet arrhythmic
cool yet intimate
gathers fog around it
to sound the hush
and make it ring
A rail, buff-banded rail,
weaves among the legs
of picnickers who loll at ease
on the buttress roots of fig trees.
It queries fallen fruit
with manners so refined
as to be indeterminate,
its herringbone immaculate.
Aloof though underfoot,
the rail extracts a crust
of pie from picnic residueâ
no seediness, no trace
of table-scrap solicitude
for any human hand or face.
Devout in your compulsion,
you weave a bower of endless night
from something old and something new,
collecting bits of broken glass
from a bottle of Bombay Sapphire gin,
a single curl of dyed wool,
parrot feathers, and filaments
from your own electric eye.
Behind a palisade of twigs,
you squeeze cobalt straight from the tube
and smear it with a palette knife:
blue teapot with two white cups attending.
Your feathers brush the night sky
with ultramarine straight from the tube,
or else, mixed with a medium
of charcoal, spit, and masticated pulp.
Ratcheting left and right,
you strike a Blue Tip match on chert
and fulminateâ
burnt, flagrant, phlegm.
Alert in your devotion,
unseen by any human eye,
you weave a bower of endless night
and pause within, head cocked
to nudge one azure bead
until magnetically aligned,
fussing over vestiges of sky.
These poems have previously appeared in
The Australian, Australian Poetry Journal, Grey, Jubilat, Literary Imagination, The New Republic, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Plume, Poetry, Poetry Northwest,
and
Stolen Island,
and on
www.poets.org
. “Saturday Morning” was published as a broadside by All Along Press. An earlier version of “Owl-Eyed” appeared in
Telepathy
(Paper Bark Press, 2001).
Â
A few echoes may warrant attribution: “A Fly from the Early Anglers” draws on Gervase Markham and Izaak Walton, among others. “Bright Thorn” quotes
excrucior
from poem 85 of Catullus. “Night and Day” borrows some phrases from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's
Theory of Colors.
“Ting” quotes a line from Henry Kendall's poem “Bell-Birds”: “By channels of coolness the echoes are calling.” “Satin Bowerbird” adapts a line from William Blake's “Auguries of Innocence”: “Weaves a Bower in endless Night.”
POETRY
Traveler
Sources
Aversions
Telepathy
PROSE
Creaturely and Other Essays
Precipitations: Contemporary American
Poetry as Occult Practice
Â
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
18 West 18th Street, New York 10011
Copyright © 2015 by Devin Johnston
All rights reserved
First edition, 2015
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eISBN 9780374714086
First eBook edition: February 2015