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Larry Levis - As It Begins With A Brush Stroke On A Snare DrumLarry Levis - As It Begins With A Brush Stroke On A Snare Drum
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The plaza was so still in that moment two years ago that everything was clear, As if it had been preserved beneath a kind of lacquered stillness, &, for a while, I did not even notice the pigeons lifting above the sad tiles of churches, Or how they must have sounded like applause that is not meant for anyone; I must not have noticed that blind woman on the corner who begged coins For a living, who had one eye swelled shut entirely while the other, a thin film Of glaucoma over it that had taken on the lustreless sheen of a nickel, Was held wide open to witness spittle on the curb. And soon the band In their sun-bleached military uniforms were tuning up beneath the blossom of rust Covering the gazebo, its eaves festooned with the off-white spiderwebs of unlit Christmas lights. And that girl, Socorro, her smile surfacing voluptuously as an unspoken thought Again, was selling gardenias—their petals already beginning to appear Faintly discolored around the edges—from a basket she carried on her head In an unwobbling stillness; Martin was selling chicklets but no one bought Chicklets anymore; no one bought the little squawking birds or the cheap stone Animals turned out on a lathe in Veracruz, either; no one wanted his shoes shined. By then the band was playing show tunes from My Fair Lady & South Pacific & was Interrupted only once because of a routine demonstration by the Communists, who, Mostly, were demonstrating because it was Sunday & because that is what they did, On Sundays. After a while I started walking vaguely away beside some fading stonework, Which in fact is not called Our Lady of Perfect Solitude nor even Our Sister Of Perpetual Solitude, but simply Santo Domingo. I do not know why I walked near it then, & passed without entering. * Still, in the painting the children kept skating, & the others are probably Walking home from school at this moment in their yellow raincoats, with The stale smells left on wax paper locked in their lunch pails. That woman Keeps brushing her hair, & so somewhere it is still 1970 & the riot police Are spilling Out of their buses. On the marsh above the Sound there were egrets, There were black swans nesting in the rushes; the canal was warm, & salty. There was a cabin filling with so much moonlight I almost believed I could Dissolve in it if I sat very still, & I sat very still. I watched my son Skating at the edge of a pond in his sleep. It was summer by the time I finally saw the painting in Brussels & counted each one of the children as if To make sure they were still there, & then gradually lost count, & in the dream Of the plowman on the hill there must have been the face of an English poet Looking as lined as a maple leaf pressed between the pages of a book. Beneath it The Danube is gliding, & I am just holding his book now, not even needing to read it Anymore as I cross into the frontier—green wheat, alfalfa, a feeling of distance In it all like sleep or rain reclaiming some lost, rural Missouri slum town until It no longer exists—& now the Hungarian checkpoint, where guards with stars The shade of American lipstick on their caps will enter & seem proud of the unchipped, Deep blue enamel on their machine guns. Most of them are just poor teen-agers From the surrounding villages & farms . . . & innocent, & The only glamour that is left On the Orient Express Is a soiled, torn doily on an armrest. Rhyme then, rhyme & dream, but in the other painting, which is not a painting, They are trudging home from school in the rain which is like a kind of sleep When one of them thinks the mind is not the mind in the unbewitched, meticulous, First shaping of numbers on a blackboard; it is only the shadow of a skater over A white pond. There is a sea beyond it, roughened by whitecaps, & the mind Moves first one way, then another, then both ways at once, & then one long Glide past the pines that look black from this far away, but aren`t black. The boy`s friend is saying he "hates school, but only sort of." But the child`s Not listening, he is thinking that something he painted was something he dreamt, And then some of the dream got mixed in with the paint, & then with recess, The afternoon, this long walk in the rain, & now he will never get it sorted Out . . . In the story, the boy, falling, must have thought his father had wings Unlike his own, & real. That is why the myth is so clear, & so cruel, And why we survive it. Yellow rain gear. Black woods. Gray sky. Home Is where you can forget some things, the boy is thinking, because he is Tired from having to walk for so long & because he has left his galoshes At school & his shoes are wet as he unthinkingly turns his back to me now, Goes up the worn, slick steps of a front porch, & the door closes. And, Because I am not allowed to see it, there is a glass of milk on the table, The stairs behind it are dark, & from a narrow upstairs window there is A glimpse of the sea, & later, in his dream, there is sometimes a father, And then it is more like a story about a father, & then it is the hush of ice Over a pond`s surface. In spring, when it begins to thaw, there is a little Noise underneath it like steel sighing, if steel could sigh as it seems to, Sometimes—when you are walking home alone on a trestle above a river & there Is a broken pattern of geese above it, a vee decomposing, a sky mottled with blue And some clouds. It is like a father dissolving, & setting you free, & what Has the father ever achieved that will outlast his own vanishing? And so The boy spits over the raillng & watches the silvery web of it falling And thinning until it is gossamer, a filament untying itself forever & saying Exactly what forever always meant to say—that this long pull of spring tide in the river Needs nothing, nothing except its one momentary witness, a boy pausing Above it all on a bridge. * In Oaxaca, after the bomb went off, there were nevertheless a few seconds . . . A pure stillness in which I could hear the fountain in the plaza, distant traffic, The sudden silence of birds. Then everyone was rushing through the streets Toward a place where sound had been, a place that wasn`t there. It is funny, But the sound of a bomb, a few seconds after it has gone off, is no longer even Surprising. In a little while it seems only right, & sad. I sat in the balcony of a restaurant Overlooking it all, & read a poem by Alberto Blanco in the magazine edited by Paz, And waited for the place to open, & in the next hour watched the plaza Gradually fill with the usual crowds . . . those who love, or those who think they love, Novelty; & change.
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