Part of
a Life Poems, Cartoons, Commentary, and Some Photographs
by Gerald Grow
No one in his right mind would resurrect
unpublished poems from
30 or 40 years ago, comment on them, put them together with cartoons
drawn in the same period, and publish them.
So, from around 1970, here are mine!
Reading Anglo-Saxon in graduate school,
immersed in Milton, struggling with Ovid in Latin, I thought I'd burst
if I could not occasionally pour forth something creative and,
preferably, silly.
The Leifiad is from that period.
(The poem appears in a separate window when you
click the title.)
I'm embarrassed that I wrote some of these
things, but I love the exuberant melancholic who wrote them.
--Gerald Grow, 2008

|
-
-
-
- A Poem about Ecology
- against defoliation
- -
against war
- -
for insects
- -
and for people like you
-
- and
also about the two springs in New Haven, Conn.,
- that
I caught a dozen yellow-plated hornets
- each
morning in a drinking glass
- (sometimes
standing unstung naked still
- trusting
from sleep) and turned them loose
- in
the direction of that humming stump
- of
copper beech (and only then would you
- come
out of the locked bathroom and
- breathe
free enough to eat breakfast):
(here's the poem):
- Bee,
When I was a young
man, I had no
skin.
Everything
I experienced took me apart and put me back together in a different
way, if it put me back together at all.
I often felt like a shattered
egg, a peeled eel. Caravans of semis packed with chickens drove right
through me. (Leaving me nothing but a cloud of feathers.)
To compensate for being scattered across the
landscape by every glint of sunlight, I used my brains to engineer an
identity, where at least I could come in out of the rain. That identity
would work for a while, then become stifling, then break down, and I'd
build it back
again.

The first few times that identity fell apart
were really scary. I thought I'd die. But after a while, going to
pieces came to seem commonplace.
Drawing cartoons helped
honor such feelings
while putting them into some perspective. In the early 1970s,
I
grew from being a laid-off teacher to an internationally unrecognized
cartoonist. You can see that with the cartoons, I was working through
many of the same themes found in the poetry, sometimes in a contrarian
mode.

Having no skin even had advantages. I kept
rediscovering
magical things everybody else had long ago decided were ordinary. (That
still happens: Look through the bottom of a glass as you drink from
it!)
One year I volunteerd as a companion at a
mental hospital, where each week I spent an afternoon with a smart,
sweet, miserable schizophrenic. She taught me that, no matter how
scattered I became, compared to her I was an amateur.
Later I met a dear poet who could not put
herself back together when her shell broke and she had to make periodic
retreats into hospitalization. I was by comparison ordinary and even
normal.
Still, it took almost 20 more years to
develop enough
center to have a self to give, and an ego to give up (but that's
another
story).

This is what some love poems looked like when
I
was that ancient young man:
|
-
When Are
Apart We
I you
much very love,
- I to that spring you said;
- A-were and sky stars-bove,
- A-were and trials time-head.
To you
lovlier than are me,
- Be, before winter last-fore,
- When other each saw first we,
- And to of joy height-soared.
Ac-tan
for years ces-quain,
- We but friends passing were;
Or you
said later-dained,
- To each heart other’s stir
Te I in summer sang
adoro,
- When played your hair, on sun
- And the whirled ’round sand
below
- The I cared for most one.
We the
sun blazing chased,
- We the moon stay-to pleaded;
- Time through summer raced:
- It not delight our heeded.
In a
times hundred fall
- I, I you so love said,
- With-and my soul; heart all
- A-dark lay winter-head
Harsh
winter’s was the cold,
- All worst our ig-doubts-niting;
- How could love grow, our old
- By its own way lighting?
I you
much very love,
- I to this spring you said;
- A-were and sky stars-bove,
- A-were and life time-head.
--Gerald Grow
-
-
- requium for the
-
-
- any
- there
are many
- millions
will do
- all
the same
- a
-
- none
of this or that
- always
a
- anonymous
a
- collective
a
- indefinite,
indistinguishable a
- common,
statistical, computerized a
- a
word, a man, a time, a place
- a
life
-
- vote
for a
- uncommitted,
flexible a
- a
solution to the's and thisses
- to
I and Thou
- a
general against specifics
-
- keep
your old the's
- they
will become collector's
-
- none
but the
- none
but the
- none
but the
-
-
- Good Morning!
At first
I thought it was the light:
The
sweetgum tree pronounced its
Orange syllables
To the blue
(that must be why)
Sky.
Surprise:
From my old pine bookcase:
Whirlpools dancing
Down the
grain
To wake me out of thinking
I knew it
Just because I'd stopped looking.
Each egg
breaks its own way:
One stringy, gliding in the shell,
One neat as a plump lady
Plopping after opera
To say, "And would you take some tea?"
Scramble
together -- eggs, milk, salt,
Left-over tuna
Sweetgum leaves
Pine grain
Autumn light.
Something that was killing me
Evaporated
Last
night.
Something that was separate
Scrambled
In my
smooth
Pine eggs.
I have
never seen a plate before.
While I am looking
At this bell-ring circle
Scooped
out of space,
Someone
comes downstairs:
Light lights
A candle-cheek I know:
You! You live here too!
I'm having a
Love
affair
With
You!
Even the
eggshells glow.
In this light,
Everything
Is
New.
In the late 1960s, I was on a solitary drive
through Northern California and at the point of fatigue where I begin
to read signs backward, when I noticed that the town of Ukiah,
backward, spells haiku!
Later at a campground, I resolved to write a
haiku commemorating this palindrome.
Having Milton in my blood, I first wondered
if I could write an epic poem about the meaning of life, in haiku form.
Fortunately, I soon saw the wisdom of abandoning that project.
That left this poem -- partly an exploration
(in the second stanza) of how many perspectives I could layer into 17
syllables (three: the poet, the woman riding by, the horse), partly an
effort to crank haiku up to macho volume, but mostly just a record of
how a young man's perfectly sound solitude fizzled into loneliness
because a woman happened to ride by, and he couldn't stop thinking of
her. That is, I couldn't.
|
-
- Ukiah
Haiku
-
-
- In
the saddle, she
- rolls
her hips like a lover.
- The
horse knows her thighs.
-
- Saddle-thighs,
I all
- men
look at me want (clipclop)
- only
(clipclop) you.
-
- Spreads.
Sighs. Fiddleferns.
- Hoof-loam
silence. Lover, when?
- Clouds
behind his eyes.
-
- Circle-arching
hawk
- sweeps
(sparrows) looking, looking:
- sky-curved
lizard's eye.
-
- Roar
beyond silence.
- Face
in the pool. Who am I?
- Skimming.
Choice of stones.
-
- Fly-fuck
bzzzzz. Bent hairs.
- A
panther on my arm. (Whhhhh!)
- The
feel of absence.
-
- Silver-soaked
needles.
- Light
drips: no sleep, no sleep. Here
- listening
to the moon.
-
- Listening
to the moon.
- Stallioned
star-sweat sheens the sky.
- Rest
alone, my thighs.
At the time of Round Thoughts in a
Square Dome, it seemed to me that nothing could be said
without something else being said at the same time that explained it or
contradicted it or showed it in a different perspective. It was a
kaleidoscopic time.
I often listened to Bach fugues and late
Beethoven quartets -- and I experimented with language where meaning
came not only by sequence but also by layering and by the thematic
packing of significance into certain words and images. I fumbled for
ways to write about things I would never understand.
In the manner of a single young English
teacher, you might hear me arguing with T.S. Eliot, worshipping at the
feet of Yeats, regretting I ever read Wallace Stevens, eating and
sleeping Milton, giving a buck to a panhandler who looks like William
Blake, proposing to Emily Dickinson every morning, cinching up
Cervantes' saddle, and hounding Shakespeare to go to the pub. I was
lonely in the best of company.
As I look back on this period, I think I was
in part grappling with visual thinking (with its simultaneity and
multiplicity of meanings -- thank you, Marc Chagall), writing (which
analyzes experience into
ideas that can be opened like a succession of petals on a
rose-thought), and music (whose little hollow notes are so huge that no
amount of feeling can fill them). All three modes of thought were as
real to me as breathing.
Writing a dissertation on Shakespeare's
tragedies and Milton's Paradise Lost, I learned to
see how the West developed the myth of the Fall into a way of
organizing a vast amount of thought about what it is like to have a
mind that contemplates what it is like to live in a body on this earth.
Or as a body:
- Not to be able to distinguish which things we
know and which we project.
- Creating concepts that divide, diminish, and
torment us. Always wondering how we won our twoness.
- Inspired and distressed by thoughts that
smell of immortality.
- Forever longing to be whole, as if we had
been whole once in the distant past, and would be whole again,
sometime, somewhere -- if only...
- And yet this tragedy is not only our
condition but also our strength, even our salvation, and perhaps the
comedy we were born to play in.
The myth of the Fall is a sequential,
narrative (horizontal) way of talking about something that is
non-sequential, simultaneous (vertical), and changing. (I think that is
a paraphrase of Joseph Campbell.) And so I tried to draw and write
things that were nonsequential, multiple, simultaneous, and changing.
Given the times, this was a fairly harmless hobby.

Such considerations underlay the following
effort at a poem from December 1970, which I filed away, knowing that
nobody (not even I) would ever want to read it. Re-reading the poem
more than 35
years later, I decided it deserved better, and it is now posted on the
internet where billions of people have the opportunity not to read
it.
While I was revisiting the poem, one word
called out to be changed (No, I won't tell which). Otherwise, this is
the original.
If you do read the poem linked below, don't
try to figure it out. Just listen to how the themes dance with one
another, separate, and, inexplicably, resolve, like a piece of music
(if you know it, think Beethoven's Opus 130 Quartet). If something
doesn't work for you, just ignore it.
Incidentally, the interlude titled "The Case
of the Schizophrenic Fox" is part of the larger poem, not the beginning
of a different poem. Read through that part to the end.
This poem will open in a separate window.
(falls)
|
- Link to Poem: Round Thoughts in a Square Dome
-
-
-
When I went to college, life got very
confusing. Here I was, little more than four years out of a tiny South
Georgia town, attending Harvard. Like every other overachiever in
Cambridge, I moved from
a place where everyone knew me and I was top of my class, to a place
where no one knew me, and they
were top of my class.
So much was new. For someone with a history of being overwhelmed,
Harvard overwhelmed me by several more orders of magnitude (as they
taught me to say).
I listened to a lot of fugues: Here at least was an art form that tried
to hold many concurrent elements and bring them into a whole.
But I could not hold
things together --
my first Shakespeare performance, the history of science, astronomy,
religion, philosophy, music out of every pore, and the endlessly failed
pursuit of endlessly fascinating women.

Sometimes it was even hard to distinguish
what was serious from what was funny. The best I could do was make
collages like the odd poem that follows, full of obscure things my mind
seized upon
and jammed together, in the hope that perhaps one of them would help
make sense out of the others.
It didn't.
Over the next 30 years,
I came to accept that I would always be a person with many parts and
pieces, even though hardly anyone would notice -- since most of us
appear to the world as a single thing. It was a state I made some peace
with and gradually even came to enjoy -- as hinted in my favorite
self-portrait:

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To Put a Man in an Ape’s Hide
or
Variations
on “Exist, Pursued by a Bear”
Levity is
the soul of wit.
Thesis the
way the world ends.
(By
Jupiter!) And thou
knowest not
“…family as the social unit?” she asked.
(By the sun
and moon!) Thou knowest
not
that thou art wretched
“Shut up,” I said.
And pitiable (By
the Horse-Head Nebula!)
“…nucleic acids?” she asked.
And poor (By
Andromeda!) “Shut up,” I said.
And blind (By
NGC-5128!) “Shut up and kiss me!”
And naked (Damn
your I’s!)
Madonna
nobis pacem (earth)
Avoirdupois
Rex (air)
Every ounce
a king! (and firewater)
Walkyrie eleison (A
pax o’ye!)
‘S a waking
dream, John, a waking dream.
--Gerald
Grow
But I loved (and still love) feeding things
to
my mind -- slipping them under the garden gate, waiting to see what
that amazing creative self will do with them -- as in this silly sketch
of the creative process, with its surprising dolphin-dog.
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
I suppose nobody will believe this, but the
poems that follow -- though they are about real things
-- were also somewhat academic variations on themes by Yeats
(with a bit of Blake), rasped out on electric guitar instead of
caressed by a Celtic lyre.
Some of these poems are the only work I wrote
in that particular voice. That's what it is like not to have one voice,
but to have the voice that
is only the loudest (or quietest) of a scattering of voices, or the
last
one standing when astonishment has flattened the rest.
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- If You Ain't Fucked an Angel
-
- If
you ain't fucked an angel,
you ain't missed much. But
there is one funny thing.
They hang out in the sky
in soft flimsy clouds, pacing the air,
laying around in the sun and rain--
you know, just staying angels
(that's a full-time job).
But when you cheat your way up there
in your best clothes and manners,
your hair combed and your breath all sweet,
flowers in your hand and your language clean,
you find they receive you shyly,
blush, make little jokes,
take out a parasol like you was just going out for a walk.
Then, in some secret corner out of God's eye,
they rip off everything--feathers flying,
light beating madly,
and throw themselves all over you.
And you fuck them into--earth--
--grass--sun--
smooth pebbles by the shore, a handful of soil
from the bottom rotten compost of old weeds and manure,
into apples in sunlight, beech-leaves, pine pollen
blown golden in the rim of lakes
--till it's over.
Then they withdraw--full and bored--
climb wearily to the staring clouds and empty sky,
and reassemble themselves coldly to perfection.
- --Gerald
Grow, around 1970

- Angel-Face
-
- What
is it they want, these men?
Again and again they come to me
dissatisfied. I do what I can.
Because they like my hair long and blonde
it is long and blonde.
I mother the one who always cries,
hold him just so on my breast
and stroke his hair, and sing a little.
Some court me -- with flowers and candy
and love-poems to their Angel-Face (isn't that sweet?)
Others screw me -- in their different ways.
Some afraid, going limp on entry;
some bold and nervous -- sleepless the rest of the night;
some high, babbling about explosions of light,
with bad rhythm and a puny come.
For a few it's rape. I lie still and let them.
I don't mind -- not really.
But still they go away staring at spectres.
I suppose I am what they want me to be.
Not much else.
But you know it's interesting --
you're the second one this week who's turned over
half-way through and masturbated.
- --Gerald
Grow, around 1970

Sweetest of
Hearts and
Hardest of
Sweets
Sweetest
of
hearts, and hardest of sweets,
In
you the
softest pleasures meet
The
toughest
of realities.
Your
gentlest waking dreams must seize
And
harness
floods of madness
And
freeze
them balanced in a sadness
Tragically
desiring spring.
You
know
love’s rivers, you can bring
Peace
to the
starving soul, and rest
To
the
ice-locked savage prowling breast
Awhile.
Then
you dissolve and flow
Deep,
distant, where alone you go.
Your
Indian-summer embrace chills
To
indifferent, honest, frost-face quills.
But
we, like
children, love the flower
And
not the
roots that give it power –
Searching,
tangled organic strife
To
find some
self to raise toward life.
So
when your
seasons whirl you away,
We
friends
or lovers in dismay
Pity
and
envy who next meets
The
sweetest
of hearts, and hardest of sweets.
-- Gerald Grow
-

-
- Raphael
-
- Raphael,
you alone have been
- consistently
my friend.
- Many
an afternoon have I sat
- at
your feathered feet and heard
- truth,
old tales, the mystery of things
- unseen.
Your words burn in my brain
- like
lenses, straightening the snags,
- spotting
the significant detail,
- ecthing
similarities, welding a world
- out
of tangles and old shoes.
-
- Still,
one thing bothers me.
-
- On
the summer solstice,
- as
I observed Antares
- flickering
from the wings of Actias luna
- and
sniffed the ozone in the heavy air,
-
- how
is it that I could not
- tell
you from the Fiend?
-
--
Gerald Grow (1967)
The unending vitality of
the universe is not the only inexhaustible thing, There is also a
seemingly inexhaustible craving that comes from a place so hollow
nothing can fill it.
From different years: a drawing, a poem.
|
- Food-Bat
-
- There
is a cave you don't want to know about -- in your belly.
A wet wind chills it like the wind of death.
I sleep there. Feed the food-bat, and I will not wake.
-
- Slow,
thick, almost-stopped drips form
teeth on the roof and floor of my home, my prison-hole,
where I hang. Feed the food-bat, and I will not wake.
-
- Full,
I fill the hollow, warm the slick walls with my soft
silky-spread fur, hold it open with my heartbeat
as I sleep. Feed the food-bat, and I will not wake.
-
- No
food? -- A tiny flutter questions everything you do.
A shadow smarts your eye. And you might hear the howl
begin, deep underground, like wind, and echo out
in spasms of sound that shake you, kick you from the inside, hit
so hard you double over gasping -- but -- hold on, hold on --
quickly, feed the food-bat! -- before the cave crumbles in
and you collapse into the clawed wings waiting to roll you
-- poor beetle, flying with your shell up -- to my yawning mouth.
-
- But
I sleep now. Feed the food-bat, and I may not wake.
-
Some
poems are difficult to go back to because they wrestle with
difficult things. Here is a link to two
poems about struggling with my recurring fear of
feeling nothing.
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
Shell
Round
is easy.
Rocks
can do it.
Round
and soft
is
egg-yolk
beating
heart.
Touch me and I smear.
Touch
me again,
I'm
on your hand.
Touch me a third time
And with a single snap
of
my shell,
I've caught you.
I never thought much of the poetry I wrote.
It was easy for me to see the brilliance of others' work and the flaws
of my own.
Indeed, few of them were what I'd consider
poems. They were more like tools, shovels I used to dig my
way out of
some hole I found myself in. Poems were my Prozac.

If I got out of the hole, the poem served its
purpose, like ranting in a diary no one will ever read. And so I filed
the poem away or just let it evaporate. In a fit of poetizing, a few I
even burned. By moonlight, no less. (Poetic conventions are hard to
overcome.)
The two dolphin poems that follow were part
of years of learning to face depression, and life, instead of
running away from them both.
"Dolphins" is about going through
and coming
out the other side.
But nothing is always easy: "Searching for
the
Dolphins" (at the same link) is about the times that approach didn't
work.
Link to poem: Dolphins.
|
-
-
- The Barking of a Dog
-
- Dark
freezing dawn.
I listen to the barking of a dog
Dead twenty years.
-
-
- Snake
-
- When
an insect splatters on the windshield
all you get is juice.
Who would ever think a snake
had insides enough
to spill out on the asphalt?
-
- I
have insides enough like his
to back up over the still-living head
before the scavengers start on him.
-
- (I
want to dump his guts
into that bastard's lap who stopped
just to run him down.)
-
- I
peel him off the pavement
by what's left of a tail
and lay him out gently in the grass.
-
- COME
ON, BUZZARDS!
Here's your snake.
-
- Mosquitoes
-
- Mosquitoes
have such delicate bodies.
Their snouts bend.
They like to sit on 4 legs, even 5,
with the other one or two curled out behind
like eyelashes.
-
- Some
have white knuckles.
-
- Their
ringed bellies make them look like
skinny hunchbacked bees.
-
- Bats
are supposed to eat mosquitoes;
but I climbed over the mouth of a cave in Nevada
and craned around till I could see
the Mexican Free-Tailed bats sheathed in the crevices--
and it's true, I saw it with my own eyes:
Mosquitoes feed on bats!
-
- When
they are serious about you,
they spread out all eight points
and come at you like a star.

- Gerald
as the young man who wrote these poems and drew these pictures, on a
hot but
cheerful afternoon at the Renaissance Pleasure
Faire, near San Francisco, 1969.
-
-
Notes for an Argument
I want
to remember a few things first.
You,
rolling that tiny little girl
up, over
your shoulders, around,
and down
to the giggling ground.
How full
you get
dreaming
about your clinic, friends,
future
babies,
healing
with a lighter touch, loving your man.
The ways
you shine
from
dancing, batik,
running
with your arms spread
through
the house, astonished,
singing.
Horseback
riding in Yosemite.
Camping
out.
Then,
the bed, with sheets.
Wrestling
with you, holding back,
and
suddenly it takes everything I've got
to hold
on,
and I
don't know about winning any more,
just our
movement, weight, the sudden floor.
And the
surprise of being here
in the
same place with you.
Improbable
two.
Before
we blunder into
what's
been going wrong --
I'm real
glad you're you.
Once we
get started,
there's
no knowing then.
If we're
unlucky,
one of
us will win.
-
--Gerald Grow
Apology
I'm so sorry.
Please accept my apology.
I mistook me for somebody else!
Hello, Diane
"Hello, Diane"
is not a piece to
stumble upon lightly, because it is about dealing with the death of a
friend. But if you have followed me this far, you may want to read it.
It jumps forward 15 years to complete something that happened during
the time these poems were written.
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I lived in the middle of
some of the main events of the 1960s, but I found myself on the edges
of most of it, looking on, listening, sometimes taking pictures. Most
of that history went by without me.
I didn't quite live
there; I lived in a space where Mozart played, and I could tilt my head
at any time and hear lines from Milton.
Still,
even I could not miss some things, such as the cold fear, around 1970,
that the country might come apart, with me torn between the young world
I found so exhilerating and the old world I had anchored my allegiance
to.
I
watched snipers watching from the rooftops during the San Francisco
State strike, got tear-gassed from helicopters over Berkeley,
marched for almost every good cause, taught at a holistic health
center, visited dozens of spiritual teachers, studied in what John
Argue modestly called acting classes. But I had actually read Thoreau,
and the drummer I marched to was actually different.
For
17 years, I owned a 1968 Dodge Dart (with the slant-6 engine). Because
I didn't drink and hardly ever got stoned (it just put me to
sleep), I became one of the designated drivers of the '60s. I
was
one of those who made sure a lot of sweet, young giggling people got
safely home.
Then, at Kent State, in
the middle of protests against the Vietnam War, some young people did
not return home, and they became one of the symbols for that
generation. Much
of this I could think about only with the help of themes from
literature
-- Yeats and Blake again, the unpaid agitators of my '60s --
which, now in my 60s, I recall with far more knowledge about
how
difficult it is to build supporting structures that do not become
prisons.
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Rain
(May,
1970
-- After
the Kent State killings)
It
was a
mistake.
Out
of a
confusion, a confusion of shots,
and
out of a
faceless crowd
four
people -- particular, young,
angry,
uncertain, much like you and me --
dead.
(There was a mob of students coming at us,
all those crazy hippy kids throwing rocks)
Four,
by
mistake, made real.
They
could
have stayed like you and me -- puzzled,
angry,
old
for their age, young only in helplessness --
never
quite
sure who they were,
or
what they
were mad about, exactly,
but
for a
mistake.
They
were
defined.
They
lost
all doubt. Their confusion ripped away,
all
complexities of blood and thought spilled on the sidewalk.
Knowledge
came to them all at once, exploding
the
equivocal flesh. Out of that crowd
arose
four
faces: most alive in our shocked flesh,
most
certain
in the stone of our reluctant ears.
There
are
some things we don't want to know.
But
who can
turn away the dead?
2.
Call
the
dying,
call
the
dead,
call
together all who carry
tombs,
who
walk with graves --
call
the
dying
call
the dead
into
the
rain.
Rain
seeps
slowly
into
caverns: howling mouths
locked
up in
the earth.
Nothing:
screams in silence.
No
one:
hears.
Rain
on the
tombstone melts the stone slowly.
The
stone
scream rolls away from our ears.
The
dead and
the dying meet as they have always met,
only
now
they know.
Can
the
living honor the dead, and go on living?
Can
stone
nourish soil, certainty flesh,
filling
our
caverns with broken caskets?
We
know what
we know.
Rain
runs
down our cheeks.
We
the
living, we the dead, we the dying parents
mold,
once
more, the mud of our melting prisons
and
dream of
not building tombs.
--Gerald Grow
Time
Passes like the Passing of Time
Time
passes like the passing of time.
A
flower blooms, takes to the wing,
And
erodes again to a level plain.
Time
passes like the passing of time.
A
flower blooms, takes to the wing,
And
erodes again to a level plain.
Yet
cherish these illusions:
Think
those are men, these children, that a house.
And
call the darkness home.
A
Man with a Hole in His Stomach
The
other day I looked up from reading to think
And
saw a man with a hole in his stomach.
The
hole opened on a sea of light.
Light
poured from him
Till I
could not see him. In the light
A
single sail flashed on the bay.
The
sail became a white-cap and collapsed;
Another
sail rose up; foam took wing
In
the form of sea-gulls. A swirling eddy
Turned
into a swimming man. A shark
Tore
through his stomach. Light poured out.
And,
in the bleeding light, I saw you,
Tender,
hold him while he drowned.
-- May, 1972
As I've grown older, I've become more
aphoristic, and I've come to understand that aphorisms are not ways of
enunciating eternal truths. They are, instead, ways of stating
positions held by various voices inside me.
When you don't have the truth, the next best
thing is to have several really good positions to triangulate against.
We are always somewhere in between the survey
markers.
(See? That's an aphorism!)
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-
- There Are No Words
-
- There
are no words
- for
anything
- important.
-
- You
must
- reinvent
the language
- if
you want to say it
- once.
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-
-
- A Found Poem
-
- After
taking me to see the graves of some ancestors who are buried in a tiny
plot in the pinewoods bordering a south Georgia farm, my Aunt said:
-
- People
did what they knew how to do.
- They
were no different from me and you.
- They
thought the world revolved around them, too.
-
-
My old friend Satti said that the Indian
mystical poet Kabir was full of delight and play and surprise -- and
not the sonorous and solemn orthodoc he has been elevated to.
So, for fun, we tried to render a few of
Kabir's poems in a way that suggests that delight. Here is my favorite
from that collaboration.
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- Oh my Ranting Heart
- --Freely translated from Kabir--
- Oh,
the rant, the babble, of my gibblegabble heart!
- How
you do shovel out the words!
-
- This
old beggar knows what's sewn in his seams.
- Why
should I brag? Why look? Why even squeeze it?
-
- When
food was scarce, we weighed every morsel -- twice.
- Now,
who bothers with scales?
-
- Would
a swan--cleaving the diamond of a mountain lake--
- want
her old mudholes back to flop around in?
-
- Heaven
holds every hair. Why do you work so hard
- to
comb the beard of your world?
-
- It's
right here. You're right here. You, friend, are
it!
- Now,
what is it you're looking for?
-
- Kabir
will tell you. Listen:
-
- Taking
one last look at my last sesame-seed,
I saw this whole dead Nothing of a universe
- wink at me.
- --
Gerald Grow and Satti Khanna (1977)
- The
Face of Orion
-
- These
lines survived from a translation Satti, Brian, and I made of a ghazal
by the Urdu poet, Ghalib:
-
- Orion
lured my love. When I drew close to kiss,
- his
face vanished in a random field
-
of stars.
-
-
One story is especially hard to tell,
because it is so big, so central, that it underlies everything.
Meanwhile -- here is a glimpse,
with
the help of a tiny bug.
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Creatures
When
you
were off somewhere
They
way you
do go off,
I
lay and
watched a sow bug
--the
tiny
armor-plated roly-poly bug
that
lives
in compost -- crawl.
Busy,
regular, he waved
His
grey
antennae as if he alone
Conducted
the enormous symphony of weeds.
On
my hand
the morning sun
Stretched
out his shadow,
Humped
his
thick back
To
make him
tall, delicate,
A
jellyfish,
daddy longlegs,
Walking
thundercloud, the drawing of a child --
And
I found
tears in my eyes
As
I watched
him, thinking,
What
a
miracle it is
To
live in a
world of creatures,
Just
to
watch them move,
And
just to
move among them,
As
one.
--Gerald
Grow
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There were moments when the glory of Being
sang, and I sang with it -- as
in the tree with the lights, along a road near Yosemite National
Park.
Many such moments were so powerful, though, that they made everything
else feel like nothing. Naturally somehow vulnerable to mystical
experience, I tried to enter that realm of brightness without having it
make the sun seem dark, but with limited success.
So I fumbled toward a life where I could
embrace, and be embraced by, the grace of ordinary existence. Again, I
had limited success. In a generation where so many sought
enlightenment, I had to run and hide from it. I
found myself struggling to stay attached enough to the world to develop
an ego worth giving up.
Like my cartoon character, I really would
have lacked self-esteem -- if I had had a self.
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As I looked for ways to dramatize an
unforgettable moment that required less than one second to take place
-- to take a snapshot in words -- I realized I was writing a grateful
footnote to Wordsworth, who taught
us how to do that, and how to do it simply.
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Butterflies in
the Mud
A Pig and
Some Butterflies
(for, of all people,
Wordsworth!)
In
dry seasons, butterflies gather
Wherever
there is water. Sometimes you find
Dozens of
them on a river bank, on the sides
Of a
ditch, in a watered garden,
Probing
the moist earth
With their
questioning tongues.
I was
driving through South Georgia
In such a
season. The sky glared, empty.
For miles,
corn stood
Burning in
the fields. Pines yellowed
And hung
on. Plants died by the millions,
Shrivelled
into shredded paper, dead wings.
The road
curved out of a pine forest
And opened
onto pasture land. There were no cows
In the
browning fields. Long lines
Of fence
posts marked off
Empty
spaces of parched earth.
I passed a pen
with a single pig in it.
He was
tall, lean, and red. He stood erect
Like a
watchdog, his front feet planted
In a
circle of mud, his back feet
As solidly
on the ground as any statue.
A curl of
tail sprang off him like “Hel-LO!”
Hairs
around his ears caught light
And
glowed. He radiated a sheer,
Gorgeous
vitality that seemed to pulse him
Outward
with a shout of “PIG!”
All around
his head
There was
a cloud of yellow butterflies.
--Gerald Grow
The drawing of a pig dancing came later,
around the time of my mid-life Rembrandt project, when I felt
solid enough that rising on my toes was exhilerating instead of
scary.
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Orion
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Dawn Poems
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Ole Hound-Dog done bit 'chure
shell in two
an'
et up the sun-rise,
leaving
only
everything.
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If
I could climb -- inside -- a daisy?
I
would be
so-o-o-o-o
----------
In
this broken place,
we
learn to be whole.
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