Authors: J.D. McClatchy
He takes another head by the ear and dips
It
—eight, nine, ten—
into the kettle,
Then quickly starts to shave it
With a bone-handled wartime Gillette.
The black matted shag falls in
Patches to the floor and floats toward the clogged drain.
One after another, the heads are stacked up
Behind, like odd-lot, disassembled
Plastic replicas of goats.
Though their lips are hardened now, the teeth
Of some can be seen—perfect!
But Muhammad hacks the jaws off anyway,
And the skulls with their nubbly horns and ears.
What’s left is meant for his faithful poor,
For their daily meager stew.
He lines up six on a shelf out front.
(As if all turned inside out,
The heads, no longer heads exactly, strangely
Bring to mind relief maps of the “occupied
Territories.” Born on the wrong side
Of a new border, he’s made
To carry his alien’s ID,
Its sullen headshot labeled
In the two warring tongues.) Goat heads feel them all,
The refugee, the single man, and his dog—
Their delicacy. Cartilage knobs.
Fat sacs. The small cache of flesh.
The eyeballs staring out at nothing
In all directions. The tongue
Lolling up, as if with something more to say.
Jerusalem, November 1987
Friendship is love without wings.
—
FRENCH PROVERB
Cloud swells. Ocean chop. Exhaustion’s
Black-and-white. The drone at last picked up
By floodlights a mile above Le Bourget.
Bravado touches down. And surging past
Police toward their hero’s spitfire engine,
His cockpit now become the moment’s mirror,
The crowd from inside dissolves to flashbulbs.
Goggles, then gloves, impatiently pulled off,
He climbs down out of his boy’s-own myth.
His sudden shyness protests the plane deserves
The credit. But his eyes are searching for a reason.
Then, to anyone who’d listen: “She’s not here?
But … but I flew the Atlantic because of her.”
At which broadcast remark, she walks across
Her dressing room to turn the radio off.
Remember how it always begins? The film,
That is.
The Rules of the Game,
Renoir’s tragi-
Comedy of manners even then
Outdated, one suspects, that night before
The world woke up at war and all-for-love
Heroes posed a sudden risk, no longer
A curiosity like the silly marquis’s
Mechanical toys, time’s fools, his stuffed
Warbler or the wind-up blackamoor.
Besides, she prefers Octave who shared those years,
From twelve until last week, before and after
The men who let her make the mistakes she would
The morning after endlessly analyze—
This puzzle of a heart in flight from limits—
With her pudgy, devoted, witty, earthbound friend.
—A friend who, after all, was her director,
Who’d written her lines and figured out the angles,
Soulful
auteur
and comic relief in one,
His roles confused as he stepped center-stage
(Albeit costumed as a performing bear)
From behind the camera—or rather, out
Of character. Renoir later told her
The question “how to belong, how to meet”
Was the film’s only moral preoccupation,
A problem the hero, the Jew, and the woman share
With the rest of us whose impulsive sympathies
For the admirable success or loveable failure
Keep from realizing the one terrible thing
Is that everyone has his own good reasons.
The husband wants the logic of the harem—
I.e., no one is thrown out, no one hurt—,
His electric organ with its gaudy trim and come-on,
Stenciled nudes. His wife, who’s had too much
To drink, stumbles into the château’s library
And searches for a lover on the shelf just out
Of reach, the one she learned by heart at school.
The lover, meanwhile (our aviator in tails)
Because love is the rule that breaks the rules,
Dutifully submits to the enchantment of type.
If each person has just one story to tell,
The self a Scheherazade postponing The End,
It’s the friend alone who, night after night, listens,
His back to the camera, his expression now quizzical,
Now encouraging even though, because he has
A story himself, he’s heard it all before.
Is there such a thing as unrequited
Friendship? I doubt it. Even what’s about
The house, as ordinary, as humble as habit—
The mutt, the TV, the rusted window tray
Of African violets in their tinfoil ruffs—
Returns our affection with a loyalty
Two parts pluck and the third a bright instinct
To please. (Our habits too are friends, of course.
The sloppy and aggressive ones as well
Seem pleas for attention from puberty’s
Imaginary comrade or the Job’s comforters
Of middle age.) Office mates or children
Don’t form bonds but are merely busy together,
And acquaintances—that pen pal from Porlock is one—
Slip between the hours. But those we eagerly
Pursue bedevil the clock’s idle hands,
And years later, by then the best of friends,
You’ll settle into a sort of comfy marriage,
The two of you familiar as an old pair of socks,
Each darning the other with faint praise.
More easily mapped than kept to, friendships
Can stray, and who has not taken a wrong turn?
(Nor later put that misstep to good use.)
Ex-friends, dead friends, friends never made but missed,
How they resemble those shrouded chandeliers
Still hanging, embarrassed, noble, in the old palace
Now a state-run district conference center.
One peevish delegate is sitting there
Tapping his earphones because he’s picking up
Static that sounds almost like trembling crystal.
Most friendships in New York are telephonic,
The actual meetings—the brunch or gallery hop
Or, best, a double-feature of French classics—
Less important than the daily schmooze.
Flopped on the sofa in my drip-dry kimono,
I kick off the morning’s dance of hours with you,
Natalie, doyenne of the daily calls,
Master-mistress of crisis and charm.
Contentedly we chew the cud of yesterday’s
Running feud with what part of the self
Had been mistaken—yes?—for someone else.
And grunt. Or laugh. Or leave to stir the stew.
Then talk behind the world’s back—how, say,
Those friends of friends simply Will Not Do,
While gingerly stepping back (as we never would
With lover or stranger) from any disappointment
In each other. Grooming like baboons? Perhaps.
Or taking on a ballast of gossip to steady
Nerves already bobbing in the wake of that grand
Liner, the SS
Domesticity,
With its ghost crew and endless fire drills.
But isn’t the point to get a few things
Clear at last, some uncommon sense to rely
Upon in all this slow-motion vertigo
That lumbers from dream to real-life drama?
You alone, dear heart, remember what it’s like
To be me; remember too the dollop of truth,
Cheating on that regime of artificially
Sweetened, salt-free fictions the dangerous
Years concoct for tonight’s floating island.
Different friends sound different registers.
The morning impromptu, when replayed this afternoon
For you, Jimmy, will have been transcribed
For downtown argot, oltrano, and Irish harp,
And the novelist in you draw out as anecdote
What news from nowhere had earlier surfaced as whim.
On your end of the line (I picture a fire laid
And high-tech teapot under a gingham cozy),
Patience humors my warmed-over grievance or gush.
Each adds the lover’s past to his own, experience
Greedily annexed, heartland by buffer state,
While the friend lends his field glasses to survey
The ransacked loot and spot the weak defenses.
Though it believes all things, it’s not love
That bears and hopes and endures, but the comrade-in-arms.
How often you’ve found me abandoned on your doormat,
Pleading to be taken in and plied
With seltzer and Chinese take-out, while you bandaged
My psyche’s melodramatically slashed wrists
(In any case two superficial wounds),
The razor’s edge of romance having fallen
Onto the bathroom tiles next to a lurid
Pool of self-regard. “
Basta!
Love
Would bake its bread of you, then butter it.
The braver remedy for sorrow is to stand up
Under fire, or lie low on a therapist’s couch,
Whistling an old barcarole into the dark.
Get a grip. Buckle on your parachute.
Now, out the door with you, and just remember:
A friend in need is fortune’s darling indeed.”
Subtle Plato, patron saint of friendship,
Scolded those nurslings of the myrtle-bed
Whose tender souls, first seized by love’s madness,
Then stirred to rapturous frenzies, overnight
Turn sour, their eyes narrowed with suspicions,
Sleepless, feverishly refusing company.
The soul, in constant motion because immortal,
Again and again is “deeply moved” and flies
To a new favorite, patrolling the upper air
To settle briefly on this or that heart-
Stopping beauty, or flutters vainly around
The flame of its own image, light of its life.
Better the friend to whom we’re drawn by choice
And not instinct or the glass threads of passion.
Better the friend with whom we fall in step
Behind our proper god, or sit beside
At the riverbend, idly running a finger
Along his forearm when the conversation turns
To whether everything craves its opposite,
As cold its warmth and bitter its honeydrop,
Or whether like desires like—agreed?—
Its object akin to the good, recognizing
In another what is necessary for the self,
As one may be a friend without knowing how
To define friendship, which itself so often slips
Through our hands because … but he’s asleep
On your shoulder by now and probably dreaming
Of a face he’d glimpsed on the street yesterday,
The stranger he has no idea will grow irreplaceable
And with whom he hasn’t yet exchanged a word.
Late one night, alone in bed, the book
Having slipped from my hands while I stared at the phrase
The lover’s plaintive “Can’t we just be friends?”
I must have dreamt you’d come back, and sat down
Beside my pillow. (I could also see myself
Asleep but in a different room by now—
A motel room to judge by the landscape I’d become,
Framed on the cinder-block wall behind.)
To start over, you were saying, requires too much,
And friendship in the aftermath is a dull
Affair, a rendezvous with second guesses,
Dining out on memories you can’t send back
Because they’ve spoiled. And from where I sat,
Slumped like a cloud over the moon’s tabletop,
Its wrinkled linen trailing across a lake,
I was worried. Another storm was brewing.
I ran a willowy hand over the lake to calm
The moonlight—or your feelings. Then woke
On the bed’s empty side, the sheets as cool
As silence to my touch. The speechlessness
Of sex, or the fumble afterwards for something
To say about love, amount to the same. Words
Are what friends, not lovers, have between them,
Old saws and eloquent squawkings. We deceive
Our lovers by falling for someone we cannot love,
Then murmur sweet nothings we do not mean,
Half-fearing they’ll turn out true. But to go back—
Come dawn, exhausted by the quiet dark,
I longed for the paper boy’s shuffle on the stair,
The traffic report, the voices out there, out there.
Friends are fables of our loneliness.
If love would live for hope, friendship thrives
On memory, the friends we “make” made up
Of old desires for surprise without danger,
For support without a parent’s smarting ruler,
For a brother’s sweaty hand and a trail of crumbs.