When I Was a Poet
For Phillip and for Marwa
Featuring Robert Frost, William Cullen Bryant, and Alice Notley
Now darkness was not upon but was
 the deep’s complete face
 and then was roof on the valley that
 that which is not valley knocks.
 In darkness, mine was not a linear condition.
 Mine was the express mission of uncountable spirits
 reaching in ceaselessly to relink their fingers.
 I was architected like a multidimensional radial hemorrhage.
 I dilated on all axes like a dahlia
 and was a field of this.
 And then fell the fallacy that the dirt
 I worked and from which I ate
 and into which I was delivered
 to be devoured could not possibly
 vibrate the notes of my brute living;
 so spoke the beast out of the void
 in its god costume. In its compass
 there was hematite. In my ears
 the blood murmured.
 The protracted aftermath
 expanded as the universe expands—
 from all coordinates, from the atomic core.
 Among what I abandoned: the belief
 that there would ever again be
 postwar poetry, or a poet born other
 -wise than in the time of war, or an alibi
 for where I was if not brutally living
 in and off of war. I was impelled
 to create in an era of adept destruction.
 I had to begin by deconstructing
 my creation. I saw the waiting peaks.
 I knew what the snow was: overblown,
 footloose, excessive, feckless,
 not white but a predilection for reflecting
 —absolutely—all light,
 obsessed with possessing spectrum
 but impervious to access, and pitifully janused;
 occupation was its solitary ache.
 I was a poet then. I lamented the lyric’s
 optimism for a sympathetic ear.
 I tried to puzzle the ear, to jigsaw apart
 for the snow the sound of snow, its one tenor
 of wind and its monuments to static—
 but the ear merely clotted its wax.
 Darkness dampened there in the valley bottom.
 I had to maculate the gleam in my eye.
 On either slope, sheer and utter eroded under
 meters of endless nonce determined to condense
 a form even blue giants must derive from
 but cut it out. I cut a cut of ear and ate of my form
 which was not mine but a fashion called humanity.
 The poem’s pursuit was apparently to humanize
 and the poet’s to petition this universal experience.
 I saw the universe. It was black and unbothered.
 I smudged the blue from the snow
 and the blues from my beautiful jaw,
 their need to coax a cheek left to turn.
                              Cut it out.
 Eventide was over. I had chosen
 lunar glamour’s ruptured pantoum
 as occasion to observe the world
 sleeping in the dust of its birth.
 Its angsts and clattered growths combing
 the trillion distant distant happenings
 that spilled into this bone-quiet basin in unison
 hummed. One tongue slid along another.
 The glimpse of galaxy between the rocky shelves
 was the scintilla of a velvet pocket pleasuring itself.
 I came to place my voyeurism under black gaze.
 How could I stand the pastoral, standing
 on stolen land, propped like a rifle?
 The idyll was a metropole of violence. Verses from
 the vantage point of frost were purely blank, not free.
 Suddenly the valley was disaster, every chasm
 unconsenting. I could not recover a peace to rest in.
 When I was delivered into the dirt from which I ate
 I did not lie down with kings nor wise nor good of ages past.
 I went down like the quarry-slave at night
 and got up like the quarry-slave at night
 and, curved as the birch a boy swings,
 raided the patriarchs’ rooms for tongues
 to put in my head, which was all jaw and beautiful.
 When I was the snake I spake in subterfuge.
 I rolled out the higher register. It had a trapdoor.
 I lined the stanzas of sestinas in trip wire and slippage
 but lying fanged on the break
 and in the envoi bore no fruit:
 I was “a black” “snake. I had” “black sibilance.”
 “I was” “built” “like a loco” “motive of” “blackackackackack.”
 As long as I shed a legible treasure trail of sufferings
 my camouflaged linear contortions were of no concern.
 I returned to the valley on my belly, earless,
 darkness divining the paper-slit chutes of my pupils
 on its way to stake me in the ground.
 I coiled around it, asclepic. Ill with trusting
 nothing—neither what I had inherited nor
 what I had imposed—I inhaled my tail
 and devolved into a helix of volta, a Möbius
 beast, holding my inertia by the throat.
 It was easy to see from there how madness
 could afflict the unwitting witnesses of jazz.
 What could pause emptily in the core
 of this pressing omnipresence and resist
 and not be pulverized? Once,
 when I was human, I hovered
 my pinhead eardrum within tipping range
 of a speaker the breadth of two silverback gorillas
 and have listened to the will-less
 rustle of dead leaves ever since.
 I felt it getting in, frenzied as the tremolo
 sinuating Coltrane Quartet’s “Inch Worm.”
 So receptive was this life and that
 of a mite on the back of a rat in an alley
 while the planet barreled down
 its cosmic corridor, its futured birth canal
 —though because theirs simply were not
 I had thought mine could not be.
 I hissed. I lifted the lock in the neck
 to speak the name of my only in and of,
 to be named myself:
 low highness of sky,
 wholly night,
 palette Polydectes,
 have-it-all,
 Black.
 Here was the form: a preponderance
 of intersecting improvisation, in each
 bereft moment a bequest, every shovel
 in my back a new spade head.
 I had slithered hungrily after the end of me
 to learn that all I’m made of is beginnings.
 I am the hydra of  I
 and soon I will be the next thing.
 I was bred in an animal condition.
 I am criminal by nation.
 I come rabidly available to cannibalize
 the traditions of the kings and the wise and good
 citizens. Asylum never rested in the lyric.
 It is midnight in the bottom and the winter
 is an embolism. Coverlets of frigid civility.
 I carry the seeds in my beautiful jaws
 for the milkweed of malcontent.
 There will be no lily here, only venom.
 I will sow the music.
 Its trumpets, they will ramify.
 When I arrive I will be always arriving.
Source: Poetry (December 2019)


