finally in, in the new house. homing it up some. i don't think we'd been home for more than a week all summer, or it felt that way. went to iowa, where the land is flat and corn-ruined and where it felt like fall. i read a book by robert haas while i was there. i don't read poetry, i don't know why, but a friend recommended it pretty hard and i like "eastern" things and i like haas's version of basho, issa, and buson. so i read Praise and loved it. it fit so so so much a summer into me besides the one i was living. here's an excerpt from a poem called "Songs to Survive the Summer":
...I thought of Wallace Stevens
walking equably to work
and of a morning two Julys ago
on Chestnut Ridge, wandering
down the hill when one
rusty elm leaf, earth-
skin peeling, wafted
by me on the wind.
My body groaned toward fall
and preternaturally
a heron lifted from the pond.
I even thought I heard
the ruffle of wings
three hundred yards below me
rising from the reeds.
Death is the mother of beauty
and that clean-shaven man
smelling of lotion,
lint-free, walking
toward his work, a
pure exclusive music
in his mind.
and this from "The Beginning of September":
In the summer
peaches the color of sunrise
In the fall
plums the color of dusk
there's no way of saying what these poems felt to me reading them in a foreign bedroom in the summer, without airconditioning, curtains blowing, moving from bedroom to a tent the next night, where the wind swept so hard through an oak tree outside that i dreamt of ocean waves all night. i want summer hotter and heavier and like some thirst, to stay just unquenched, because it's always the longing, i think, that's better.
2 comments:
you forget you got to sleep in a cabin at a place called "dog creek." That should fill you with longing. Oh, and beer. Lots of beer. Iowa isn't so bad.
oh yeah, those were details i forgot. also, the biker party. i really, really enjoyed being up there and meeting everyone. and the beer.
Post a Comment