Authors: Frederick Seidel
Of vaginismus, Pauliâ
Except for the one bridge
To the next island. I'm freeâ
Dayley's first once Jewish,
Nonpracticing analyst:
Old, but she has no helper;
Station wagon, but
She's not a tourist; poor for
An island Venus or matron.
The man who sells me fish
Says he fought my Nazis,
The captured ones talked
Just like meâI'm somebody.
Last weekâMarch-cold
In the middle of August,
Snow-blue, high, thin skiesâ
I drove the hour to Brunswick
To drop my suits at
Maine's Only Chinese Laundry,
A down-easter's,
With a Negro presser.
The man was just then off
For Hagard to shoot rabbits
For the reward,
Three miles off Dayley's east shore.
Years before,
A mainlander
Had loosed two white rabbits
There; now it was theirs.
Frail, pink-veined, pale ears,
And pink as perfect gums,
Pink eyes, rose noses, as if
DiseasedâI'd been there.
The lead-gray Yankee owner,
After the shotgun blast,
Strode forward, gathered the bunch,
And one by one, grabbed each
By its hind legs while it sobbed,
And swinging it against
The bare lawn, slapped it dead,
And swung it to the shrubs.
I left the cleaners wanting
So to tell you. The sun's
Well up now. Our blue carpet's
Fading evergreen, Pauli.
Â
I was the only child,
And a first boyfriend's brother,
Deadâin a shell-shocked truck
Crash, I thinkâin Sweden,
Couldn't make the war matter.
We wore parachute
Synthetic silk ball gowns
That year, at the Assemblies,
Which, looking back, all seem
A shifting, newsreel gray.
All I remember is, no one
Liked Truman, that there was
No gas for cars to speak of,
That the good things, my mother
Said, were rare-red and rationed.
The boy who would be my husband
Lived six blocks away,
And I didn't know him. Where
I lived, and where he lived,
And where we live now, you
Can see the bay apartments
And the crumbling prewar pier
And wharvesâthere, unused,
Before we could see that far.
One year, a new police
Patrol boat docked there, later
A small yawl. But the red iron
Pier understructure, resoldered
And buttressed, rusted and fell through
That year, and no one walks there.
There's a small park near the wharves,
And a playgroundâ
But no lovers, never children.
A few old folks sunned there.
Some see the gangs, some hear.
On summer vacations from Ann Arbor
We used to walk there.
The one water fountain
Was a lush affair
Between two angels, fat as Paradise,
Nubile, and male and female,
Holding winged hands around
A base of rose stone,
While from heaven above, an aquiline
Brass bird, a green dove,
Gargled up, it seemed,
All the city's water,
Year after year.
It was never turned off,
And stood a foot deep
In pond-green watery refuse,
And was never used.
We'd thought of getting married there.
The warped, smutted kitchen window
Ripples the blue fume of November
Over the shore apartments and the wharves.
The window wavers in the oven's heat.
The street flows like lava, and the playground.
My baby stirs. Time to eat for it.
Cuddled in meâlovely! It will
Die in me, I know it will.
My child is breathing in my life,
Its heart is pressing on my heart.
You won't be here if you die on me
Before I have your child.
It's why I'm here.
To spoon the drugs up to your lips,
Be near your sleep,
Make you live an extra week.
What we have to bear
Will take two months, no more.
It can't feel you at all:
It rots the stitches and the lymph strings,
And gums you ⦠dressing;
You go down rich, changed, sea-green
As tomalley. Cancer.
Balls of your groin, heart of your heart.
I feel you. The oven bell
Dings, and you callâthe front door bell;
And in the hall, Papa and your mother
Gabble about our unborn daughter or son.
A perfect bird. Fatty sweat
Gleams on its bursting goosepimpled breast.
Â
(In A.D. 9 Q. Varus marched three legions into an ambush in Teutoburg Forest. “From ancient times onward the circumstances surrounding the end of Roman rule in Germany have been an occasion for prejudice and rhetoric. Varus was made the scapegoat for the miscalculations of Roman policy; the contrast between the inertia or benevolence of Varus and the energy or perfidy of Arminius, between the Roman governor and the native prince, was drawn in vivid colours, and artfully employed to personify the opposition between civilization and freedom.”)
Holding his breath, he watched the whole wing flex
And flex and saw the bouncing jet pods stream
With condensation as they plowed through clouds.
He saw the stewardess back down the aisle
Smiling at seat belts. His lap was headlinesânow
Another Electra had burst in two and still
No planes were grounded. Down there somewhere crowds
Hushed in the bars: the un-trust-busted Yankees
Were squeezing a World Series in the tillâ
Millions puffed and stared, the beer suds spilled.
The diplomatic pilot dipped a wing,
Lufthansa's bow to the United States â¦
His Volkswagen was waiting. If he drove
On through the night, by dawn he could salute
The Arch of Titus with his German plates.
Cologne he knewâJew-baiting mothers who
Just couldn't get enough and chewed their hair.
Roman Agrippina had been born there.
Nineteen and weeping for perfection, he'd
Been lost each morning. He would wake with a start
Pacing along a lot that faced the Dom.
Powdered bricks had made the ground lip-red,
Electric bells bonged in the shaved-off belfry.
He'd watch the pigeons rise and settle, rise
And settle, gobbling, then he'd go buy bread.
Cologne to Wolfsburg for the People's Car,
Through Lippe,
Saltus Teutoburgiensis
.
Though it was Varus who when Herod died
Crunched up Judaea, from Teutoburg Forest he
Would bear the Eagles of Varus back to Rome:
History's straight-man, ambushed by his aide,
His trusted German, into suicide,
Bald, civilized, deliciousânever praised,
But chosen by Augustus. Rome gawked, amazed â¦
The NATO general salutes the prizes.
His Holiness stops at
et credo
, and rises
To touch the braid and tatters. Washington
And Bonn have flown the long-lost Eagles home.
The place is crushed! the packed, cowed faces hushed,
Underdeveloped stomachs aching to cheer.
He heard the engines screaming for more air.
He pushed and driftedâwaking smelled like steam.
Below him were the blank and linked-up roofs
Of suburbs ⦠showers, crematoria â¦
The john tiles where his father's soft eyes worked
The crossword puzzle jackpots, poetry
Of Jews, ten thousand dollars for first prize.
Red bullets to the brain, the Seconal â¦
The world was turning into dawn, just as
The jet plane's sixteen landing wheels set down.
Â
Waving
News of the World
, the other customer
Whines in his bib with laughter:
“âThe Nazi bombers still
Drop stink-bombs through the window,
But lobotomized now, she doesn't mind the smell!'”
The barber grabs me by the nose;
The blade flashes around my lips.
Leaving the Ritz, I watch the sun
Volley between the windows of the place Vendôme;
The column points the hour. My
Le Monde
Is covered with bombs
Stuck like gum to café chairs and station lockers
Exploding in Paris, Oran, Le Havre.
I sit down in the Tuileries.
Kennedy banquet at Versailles.
A Russian, Gagarin, in space.
No one is hereâa day
As bleak as Boston, despite the sun. I remember
My father saying, “What should we do?”
I was fifteen, my mother forty-three.
“This will be our decision.”
Tumbling gold whorls of hair shaved back for the incision;
The skin, as always, Madonna-smooth,
Without a care, below the bandages;
Greener than ever, her eyes are openâ
“How are you?” she asks, “how
are
you?”
And starts to smile, and is wheeled past.
My father's grief-stunned eyes clung to his face like starfish.
I recross the street: the zoot-suited Arab
Flashes his butter-blond Rubenses,
In black and white, sold by the pack,
As two more Black Marias
Bray through the rue de Rivoli
Toward place de la Concorde.
The column's shadow points the hour.
The plans for the place Vendôme
Called for a statue less than half its height.
Twelve hundred cannons seized at Austerlitz
Napoleon melted and wrapped around the stone
In a spiral of bronze. On the top he sits,
Surveying the City of Light,
Weighing the American flags brought out,
Those enormous banners, with outsize stars,
Stripes brighter than life, worth thousands of dollars.
They wave magnificence! Guarding the president,
There'll be the horsemen of the Garde républicaine!
Golden helmets afire, on chestnut stallions!
The West has bombed and bombed. Absinthe
Is now on Thorazine, the breaker of obsessions.
Â
Itching from Kotex pads, from green, polluted perch,
The Seine scratches itself lovingly along the quaisâ
Itching from the new spring!
Hot prickly yellow wool covers the evening.
The Eiffel Tower is full of hot air, full to bursting
Hearing the countdown
Start and stop again, then again.
Brains, thoughts swell,
Like bulls snorting out
Passionate red roses from black nostrils.
While passersby's eyes lock with theirs in various grips,
Young Americans
Are swigging French beer on benches by the river.
He is there. This is Lucifer's palace
For his angels' vices. At midnight, when Paris
Looks at her face in the mirror, she sees a buttocks,
And straps on a device. Green
Is rumbling. Like a cat's sharpening claws,
The cracks in the sidewalks
Stretch out and dig in.
All startling legs and eventful spiritâ
Corsaged handlebar, spring straw hatâ
Bicycling on the flat through the snow
To Sever Hall, to recite her Sappho.
On hair like Hera's, black swansdown,
She wore white ribbons freshly ironed.
Unmarriageable Minoan eyes,
All intuition, delicately lidded.
The way she walked,
You'd have thought her body talked.
Those Harvard years
His ego hovered like a hummingbird,
Wingless, songlessâhalfway
Between his knees and shoulders.
Perhaps it wanted to embrace the universe.
Closing his eyes to caress
This girl or that, he saw stars.
Time the leukotome!
Softly slicing
The frontal lobes. That girl,
Bashed in by his love,
Happily married now ⦠?
He tries to remember what was happening:
The taste of zincâthe sight, without the sound,
Of thousands of hands clapping.
The empty beer bottle slaps the water
And sinks, hiccuping whitecaps.
Along the row of square, snow-white igloos
The white chestnut tree blossom clusters
Sift through each other
In the damp light and few breaths of air
Like the slow shuffling of a tambourine.
Even ugly new buildings here are rare.
Compared to French windows, these are loopholes.
The tight, washed rooms are small enough for nunsâ
Small for maid's rooms! There are no closets.
Room after room is stained and pervaded
By traditionally ugly, self-absorbed,
Talmudic-brown armoires.
One shelf of each supports one kepi, at leastâ
A son's or father'sâa beaked pillbox
Banded with gold or silver, police or army,
To keep the armoire company
With the nineteenth, the last French century.
There are no shutters. Everywhere,
Even just across the street,
Faded shutters are drawn.
Orange rungs climb the Persian carpets,
Scale
sujets religieux
and mount the sideboards.
The family, if it's home, is in the bedrooms.
The maid has turned the kitchen light out, it is so hot.
She cuts up cucumbers with the butcher knife
In thick, crude slices, a folded soaked zero
Under each arm, her neck shining.
Her old buttocks and vagina contract.
She has a vicious, weakly mindâ