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Acknowledgments Epigram quoted from The Greek Anthology, translated by Kenneth Rexroth. Benjamin John was originally published by Red Clay Books as part of a larger collection titled Lovers and Agnostics (Charleen Whisnant Swansea, ed.). Table of Contents The Lightfoot Boys Benjamin John and the Green Queen O to have been Ben ben Bijn! The Wind from the North Like a Hootowl Hawking Horse Sense Puts Him Down At the Greensboro Zoo A P.O.W. Asian Warlord, Aristocrat, Slips This Poem to PFC B. John ...And Benjamin John Looks to Himself The Getaway His First Exploration of the Sea Made at Midnight The Graduate School of Arts and Science The Sun For Alice, Whom He Marries One Year Later: The Proposal Snowflakes He and His Wife Entertain Certain of the Faculty He Teaches in a Girls’ School and Delights in His Pupils To His Daughter He Summers in Europe but in Secret Search of the Green Queen: Norfolk Farewell His Wife’s Birthday A Threnody for Theorists To His Nephew Enrolled in a School for Emotionally Disturbed Children Daylight To His Wife The Night After Christmas O to have been Ben ben Bijn! The Wind from the North Like an Old Goat Grazing a Trail Bucks Him Aside Drunk, He Sheds a Tear for the Landscape His Stoned Younger Colleague in English Speaks ...And Benjamin John Looks to Himself A Vision October The Rose-Lipped Girls A By-Line: On His Cancer
The Lightfoot Boys He and his friends took the town; Together, they painted it red. Sneaking slugs into Stanley’s jukebox, Benjamin John said:
“In Ithaca
I used to rollerskate
At this mention
of death. Benjamin John and the Green Queen He nurses his pint on Washington Square. Plainly, the cops figure, this is a dare To be lightly taken.
Like a goggle-eyed
rube he has been shaken
Who, friend
Curt used to say, last night was seen
And she was
matchless. A fifth of a pint more
Some semblance
to the image, in his mind,
Benjamin John,
drunk, shamed, and elated, O to have been Ben ben Bijn! The Wind from the North Like a Hootowl Hawking Horse Sense Puts Him Down At the Greensboro Zoo At dusk, at last Crawling crabwise across The sky, the Milky Way Readies to waylay Coxcombs and ghosts, Night owls,
And himself: caught
Passions
Sparked sky,
Cublike,
Of his mind: rise in spring
A P.O.W. Asian Warlord, Aristocrat, Slips this Poem to PFC B. John 1 Skirting this field Rain from the west Slapped those low hills Hemmed in by mist
2
The sun will
shake off ...And Benjamin John Looks to Himself The draft board said, “You are wanted Alive or dead.”
Juggernaut
Board
That I couldn’t
care less. The Getaway East of the sun, West of the moon, South from Tennessee, Benjamin John lies loafing; but the wide brass bed Like a plumped-up anecdote Seems to say, “You are a dream-ridden fool Who is no exception nor any rule.” Benjamin John, Riding the fevers of 3 a.m., Yanks the top sheet over. To this lackluster, easy, leggy girl Stretched out in shadow, He would say, “Wash the anchovies,/While I pour the wine” In the words of a crazy Greek, Cynical, lyrical. She sleeps in her grand and blockish bed, Benjamin John. O this dull indolence. O this lack of clarity; fuzzy pretense... Lack of rhythm, drama, sense... He will pack his toothbrush; Solo, straddle and spur a llama to Chile or Peru...
Mad as a hatter,
like a child His First Exploration of the Sea Made at Midnight Sportively, he holds his breath: The bubbles spring lightly above his head, slicing the water-sheet... thus is rolled back; above him, cold is the airy aerie Heaven sent to taunt him in his discontent: From Chesapeake Bay upward, he sees stars, stars, stars.
Algae, fishes,
O wretchedly
The Graduate School of Arts and Science Money! my honey bangs the world around. Ghosts of Veblen, ghosts of Marx, stalk the sun across that yard. The Sun On any day with a very blue sky, the Blue Ridge swells from his rented book as a rose from his rent skull For Alice, Whom He Marries One Year Later: The Proposal Long distance. “How are you?” “Fine. How are you?” “Fine.” Restlessly, restlessly, Pines scrape the sky.
Silence. Then
together.
In the dark
room Snowflakes Last night the Ides of March swooped, not softly, down and settled on his head; above the mean clack-cackle of wind he heard wings of birds white, shrill and unshakeable: chilled to the bone, he stationed his Florsheims on the furnace grate
and snores
past one,
serves the
damned storm right, and he notes:
shoveling of
snow from off the front porch. He and His Wife Entertain Certain of the Faculty They file in, vague or cheery, band By habit at the makeshift bar Where ill at ease his wife disbars (He knows) each from her no man’s land And nods and chats and shoves caviar At them, since only the best is good Enough for those she “cannot stand.”
He backs away
from her trumped-up bride: He Teaches in a Girls’ School and Delights in His Pupils No sooner does spring invade The campus than everywhere In sleeveless dresses birds With Beatle pins, long hair,
Long arms,
bare legs invite
Figuring so
in their dreams
Sticking with the old high way, Mouthing the same old text: He’s got, christ, bills to pay,
And his wife
is due next month;
Half-heartedly,
he upbraids
And chugging
after the train The sun assaults his eyes...
The sun assaults his eyes...
Sun-coppered
arms, minted
To His Daughter
Her dark hair holds The light of the moon. She scales his knee: “If I should grow up, Would you marry me?” I will: but hurry, He Summers in Europe but in Secret Search of the Green Queen: Norfolk Farewell
His Wife’s Birthday She sups with him and bravely smiles; And smiling back, he is perplexed By age, an dby her tendered sex, By her loose dry skin, her juvenile Bangs; that her hair is dyed to a Greek Shade, her eyes are shadowed. How vexed He is at the unsuccess of her wiles
Which yearly
mocks him; her female fears A Threnody for Theorists The leaves want raking; four o’clock settles A reddish glaze on the front-yard pinecones.
Benjamin John,
slumped in his chair, scanning
And frowns
at statesmen and their paramours
Skeptically,
As day by day
the fallout climbs; and China, To His Nephew Enrolled in a School for Emotionally Disturbed Children Retface in the lamplight rocks, Rocks...rooted in his own shadow. Balder than a mushroom, longfaced
And sloopshouldered,
small, small,
See Ratface.
This is Ratface. Run,
And before
long, my hair will go Daylight lolls upon his desk. Sticky in steaming curls,
washed out,
the thick, thin girl
unleashes,
in her eyes,
the hell she
sics on him.
in wordless
dreams, she is made
He listens
to her tears,
He sees, looking
beyond her cursed whining eyes, To His Wife His wife is dead. He is divorced From what she said, From what she read: Trollope, Roth, Ruth, Bless Ovid. He feels no pity, Neither remorse; But why has he got This ache in his head? The Night After Christmas Clearing a space on the windshield, He angles down this winding street Toward Park, and curses the fool speed Limit that hounds him in to heel. He can hardly see in the middle ground Those mangy azaleas, whipped by the sleet; Or make out where the clouds have wheeled.
At the end
of the road, does he wonder O to have been Ben ben Bijn!
Drunk, He Sheds a Tear for the Landscape Here lies no one, only the drab delta, lowering and sullen and dumb, by down- pours, over- flows, beat and stopped; and near the river’s mouth, lies rudderless, lies unmanned, a drabber craft—not moored, not salvaged, only— lonely— beached. Beached.
“Let the earth/Which
has borne us all, His Stoned Younger Colleague in English Speaks When I review myself, I wink. Steve Link is a ballsy fink.
How sad I am
on Sunday.
I tend to drink.
“You’ve got
that, what we ain’t got any,
I scan her
dogeared eyes, Ben.
I needs wise rise To torture the truth of Kafka’s lies. ...And Benjamin John Looks to Himself The figgly wars that gobbled me have passed away from gluttony and a weak heart. I’m tart. A Vision Light spread on shade, riding the wide wind down. The Greek green queen streams Suddenly like a falling star. She sighs like a tired avatar.
In her fire-eating
face, signs
Who from peck-pecking
at her mirror
And still,
slyly, unseen, But wasn’t pain sweet? But doesn’t she tax his patience now they meet?
The lady ever
wore her hair upswept What good does it do us to mourn For our sons when the immortal Gods are powerless to save Their own children from death?
GENTLE and without warning ELEGANT —like a small girl sidney in velvet beret— fitfully, light rain at evening sprays his storm window: his studio window. His son-in-law, gray-haired, lantern-jawed. thin, hands him his glass: grave, GRAVE boy of fifty years; chee. Did sons in law like this one FERRET for—god knows, god knows what they hunt for in a dead wife’s father. He objects (bearing the glass and his to his ONE-man’s bar), he has his own teaser: but what screwed son- in-law could see, no man is a man until he like bow-legged Sarasite can bandy an OLD tune about/in double time. (He shrugs) And (He shrugs) he has no words. He was born knowing none and has SHUFFLED into his last years knowing none and cares less. How then should he content a shook son-in-law who never trembled nor giggled when Markos, as was right, as was FINE, rightly concluded: “So pour the whiskey and kiss my wife or yours.”
Or did both
women, hand-in-hand
Mirror, on the wall; He is not, now, surprised By love or death or by the startling, silky Rain or the Fall
His turn, his turn will come; and dead, Even this fool will have time to grow wise. He draws the brown study drapes
...rain, what
remarkable...(sighs)
The Rose-Lipt Girls Each day the past seems longer ago: Facts, faces, figures, fade And perhaps he is not unafraid At night, that they were never so: Or where could all those flowers go? ...The wind in the willows, brushing The moon, spanking the wild roses, Foreshadows their full eclipse.
But for every
Beauty he’s forgotten, A By-Line: On His Cancer Wife and mother, father, daughter, Each in death dispraises me.
At sunup, I
start on scrambled eggs
The trellis
roses, damp, bud. I see
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