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A CHIDE'S ALPHABET : EMMA
LEW
EMMA LEW
Man Coming
Back as a Bird
In the office he unfolded the papers.
Other times I saw him press his pencil harder, and still no sense.
We were watching, I thought, a man tapping on windows, too much in
love with his ink and spit. Genius who made night in his little room,
he drove himself from rain to hail, with his rigid thanks ("there
is something wrong with me"), wounding himself where the buses go
up the street. I don't know for sure why he had such a hard time
with words, why he clenched his fists and went forth to the
midnight feast as if to crumbs. I felt great fear for him in the
barren fields. I couldn't have found a plain limb to touch. What
country did he mean: "shining in its illness"? I think he saw a moment
where he could fly up emerald, make his mark as if his axes cut
down nothing, as if he had been crossing bridges all his life.
Pursuit
I have not had fortune but I have
seen the resplendent moths of Daghestan. I have travelled through
clusters of their castles and found them wingless, lain deep, like the
oak apple. And in Angola I have seen hundreds of butterflies grieving.
I have seen butterflies swerve like the fiddle and the bow. I once
heard a boy sing on the deck of a Black Sea steamer, There is a
small and fragile bug! The respiration, the pulses of the
heart, the beating that bursts the lid of the shell. In sago I found
the weevil itself, and I smelled the perfumes of the males. Often I've
dreamt of the wasp's tumbled journey, the mosquito's guilt and thrift,
how the ant slipped down to haunt the grass, how the hornet left only
the skin of my fruit. For insects have a beauty that hurts, and that
may even darken the sky. They drum with their bellies upon the twig.
They have learned to cleanse their blood with light. I have seen a
mantis of a delicate mauve impaled on the flea's single spine. I have
known the mere segmented grub, and I have shared the earth with
lice. In the forests of the Congo, I recorded the stickiness of
swarms. O unforgettable flies of Palestine! O cicadas of Spain in the
year I was born!
Prey
I was daydreaming
about wiping out the whole school I was rehearsing and perfecting the
'gentle giant' approach Rebellious and defiant, had no ambition
Death is a beginning, it's beautiful
I swore I never shot at a
windowless wall I was calm and denied, and was allowed to drive away
And killed a young bride, inconclusively It's sad, but I don't
live there anymore
Not like you'd expect - real dark, red blood
Humid in the city known for its beer I was wrestling with a list,
perhaps posing as a cop And I wrapped my fingers around your throat.
Did you panic?
I'm not an expert, I don't know the terminology
They were looking for a guy who was ghoulish or foamed It's a slow
road with a lot of curves Maybe I should have toyed with her more
Her Embroideries
He was the shadow of the
deep bed. He was very beautiful and, as always, there was
something perfect, as though I were his cousin. On the map he had
shown me a forest, but there was no such forest, hence the lies,
the discomfiture, and the rest: the manor, steeped in the odours
of freshly ploughed earth; shops rife with Trieste dialect. And
his messages ended with vows like, "Believe me, I am always at
your side." It is impossible to relate what or how he played, the
sudden modulations that I could not grasp. I felt at such times
that only my body was riding, yet I said the loveliest things.
He awoke with the violence of the sensation, so that I was forced
to fasten with pins. His sisters again donned their sombre
mourning. Even the sea-birds lost their way. And then the moon
rose and shed a different light. Listen: how he dreams, how he
weeps!
Usual Rosettes
Once, twice.
Today, tomorrow. There will always be a limit Marc
Chagall
Early flowers caused the frost, but the plane tree
threw its shadow, and the lilac bush stood cool, shocking the
house like fresh linen. My father supported my mother in such
precautions. They quarrelled and broke, no matter how it
simplified things, and her large white skin was smooth - sweet though
forbidden. I could make a lake of the dusty bundles that held
everything in life for me - the dour wallpaper always bulging at
the seams, the kitchen cupboards of pine without knots, the hurled
unbreakable plates on the floor. The street below had just begun
to heal. Strange to come away from the lamplit, the knife grinders
calling out, deafening the empire. I loved the fireworks, but I
needed to be saved from myself. Cracks demoralised our little house.
Father surfaced again when the fortune was lost, and mother rained
into every room, proudly hampering herself while we ate a dark
soup. Yes, in the past everything is beautiful, like a twilight where
water would flow very slowly - the chastenings, the bread, the
pallor; the fires I started so they could not see me cry. I played a
game called 'Wreck Everything', though I dressed in silks and
delicately nurtured thanks. But now I'm frightened of another sort of
ruin, and the orioles nest someplace else
My Illusion of the
Tycoon
1 Genitals once appeared in a letter he sent
me, and gray wool so that I might be seen in company with him. He
was elaborately courteous, and stood alone like music. Even desire
includes a kind of mourning.
2 I struggled with my
other lens, sometimes aiming at the camera behind the eye. The
nakedness is always his. Each pointless ornament is loved. He saw my
pictures, he walked at night, up the paved street, into the arms
of barren elms.
3 Long emulsions and tiny aperture.
The dressing-for-dinner, the exact stallions. Warm enough for the
modernist deckchairs, and guests were seen moving among the statues,
where he had dreamed. It was jazz, but very languid jazz, although
he himself danced with some abandon.
4 A shot I
took, probably in October. Man yearning over marble, and gradual
alcohol. The ferry and its schedule; the dog, huddling. Sun on a
straw hat next to the stair. That day the youngish woman in the
market. The sea, rumpled by a wind and slow need.
5
The gesture, the expression, and of course the magnificent
devastation - these are images of surrender we do not know. He had
admitted me into his room, closing the moment when light elopes.
Dangerousness of the man, it is quite beautiful.
6
Screens, mirrors, artifice - I assemble him. What haunts is the
absence the eye collects. The photograph accepts the dark
truth. His puzzling home, his imperfectly knotted tie, and Chinese
rain today at last.
Snow and Gold
So,
on the heels of the army, our troupe moved. I gave birth in the street
and night nailed the great city to the earth. I saw the plague
stalking like a stranger whose language I could not understand. My
sores were dressed, my handkerchiefs hemmed.
It is one thing to
listen to the heart and its murmurs. A strange woman came to see me,
saying that she was my lover's wife. It was the twilight hour that is
called the 'grey hour', when mourners become lost and follow the wrong
coffin. We walked a little way together, and the talk burned like
agate.
I know they say that one should speak well of the dead or
not speak at all. The winter came in one jump like the wolf. An
eye grew sightless because there were frightening scenes I did not wish to
see. I had talent for the noble virtues of blind faith even then.
An agile acrobat threw his plank across the ditch. The wine
now travelled from mouth to mouth. The sentry's face clouded over, and
he wept at the prompting of my fingers on the strings. So the young
men paid their precious francs.
The wagons pulled out to the east
like a sunburst. Of course I sang, like a log covered with ice. We
lived unbuttoned through the black country, taking such great
mouthfuls of bread, as though we were seagulls.
What was I besides
the strength of my shadow? I climbed up on the trains and tossed down
coal. The wind blew and merged with me, my childhood and my life, my
passions and transgressions. Even if they weren't gold, the trinkets
glittered.
I often wonder how unpenitent people could live under a
sky. It was that kind of Tatyana I had come to be. Let my father
say as many harsh and stupid things as he likes, but the skin of my
hands was like fine snow.
Beloved Jug of Cream
It's cold: we must revise our dreams, but abidingly and
still perceptibly. Oh I fell in love, and your father's mouth made
me sad, being utterly, sensing and gripping, in prayer, but far,
far above. Suddenly, everything is different: what was yellow is
yellow, your eyes of Silesia, pernickety, and speaking to me in a
way we've never spoken yet. I'm quite certain, and I say this to you,
now, as an echo of that morning when we walked among our senile
teachers. Which reminds me: do you like dogs, or can't you? I
infinitely prefer the smallest hour, and the evenings, when I
always change into nice clothes. But the good and the awkward slide
together, each night brings the universe, such resemblances; I am
too young and you too imperilled, which causes tears - hot, heavy
tears. Soon it will be August, the month we longed for so much,
and I can't help thinking through the medium of other people's
words, as if they had been written in freedom, sleeves rolled up,
collar open. You wore a lily in your buttonhole - wasn't there a
custom like that in olden times? How I envied your sisters their place
on the sofa, the young beech forest lit up by the sun. The finger
I struck on a needle yesterday is hurting. Or is the answer really
here inside us, so long as we don't keep asking for more? The blue
vases are broken, thank you. Only my soul disperses.
Rose Constructions
Sometimes my teacher
changes her conduct strangely, pressing her heart like dead
leaves. She sleeps in the chapel, which is haunted. Already
the shadows write in her diary.
She burns the letters
silently, reverently. Like a bride, she pushes away her plate.
She reads to me like a will-o-the-wisp, and I ask her if
there are bitter drops in everyone's cup.
She says, "I respond
to the ploughing of the fields, whereas a man grows
fainter by a love." All the things we talk about I sew into
the seams. She opens the window and lets in the dark flowers.
A Patient Carpentry
quince tree,
birds, light, snow, rains, everything. Joseph Cornell
A ship
that was mostly cobweb, someone so astonishingly lean, who had
himself sold fabric for a decade. A kind of voyager, and his notes
were full of references to pigeons taking flight, to theatres he
would never step inside, to moons. Just enough body to keep a soul
in. A gaze like caged birds. His evenings were uneventful, but he
seemed not to mind, prizing echoes over truths, thimblefuls.
Winter was coming, and the house was quiet, except for the
rattling of the radiator, and it would just come over him
sometimes towards midnight: an image of her sorting through his
papers and books, or moving about on his enclosed porch, as
the planets orbited
coldly
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