A great way to start 11/7/2012, from John Ashbery.
The Bungalows
Impatient as we were for all
of them to join us,
The land had not yet risen
into view: gulls had swept the gray steel towers away
So that it profited less to go
searching, away over the humming earth
Than to stay in immediate
relation to these other things—boxes, store parts, whatever you wanted to call
them—
Whose installedness was the
price of further revolutions, so you knew this combat was the last.
And still the relationship
waxed, billowed like scenery on the breeze.
They are the same aren’t they,
The presumed landscape and the
dream of home
Because the people are all
homesick today or desperately sleeping,
Trying to remember how those
rectangular shapes
Became so extraneous and so
near
To create a foreground of
quiet knowledge
In which youth had grown old,
chanting and singing wise hymns that
Will sign for old age
And so lift up the past to be
persuaded, and be put down again.
The warning is nothing more
than an aspirate “h”;
The problem is sketched
completely, like fireworks mounted on poles:
Complexion of evening, the
accurate voices of the others.
During Coca-Cola lessons it
becomes patent
Of noise on the left, and we
had so skipped a stage that
The great wave of the past,
compounded in derision,
Submerged idea and non-dreamer
alike
In falsetto starlight like
“purity”
Of design that had been the
first danger sign
To wash the sticky, icky stuff
down the drain—pfui!
How does it feel to be outside
and inside at the same time,
The delicious feeling of the
air contradicting and secretly abetting
The interior warmth? But the
land curdles the dismay in which it’s written
Bearing to a final point of
folly and doom
The wisdom of these
generations.
Look at what you’ve done to
the landscape—
The ice cube, the olive—
There is a perfect tri-city
mesh of things
Extending all the way along
the river on both sides
With the end left for thoughts
on construction
That are always turning to
alps and thresholds
Above the tide of others,
feeding a European moss rose without glory.
We shall very soon have the
pleasure of recording
A period of unanimous
tergiversation in this respect
And to make that pleasure the
greater, it is worth while
At the risk of tedious
iteration, to put first upon record a final protest:
Rather decaying art, genius,
inspiration to hold to
An impossible “calque” of
reality, than
“The new school of the
trivial, rising up on the field of battle,
Something of sludge and
leaf-mold,” and life
Goes trickling out through the
holes, like water through a sieve,
All in one direction.
You who were directionless,
and thought it would solve everything if you found one,
What do you make of this? Just
because a thing is immortal
Is that any reason to worship
it? Death, after all, is immortal.
But you have gone into your
houses and shut the doors, meaning
There can be no further
discussion.
And the river pursues its
lonely course
With the sky and the trees
cast up from the landscape
For green brings
unhappiness—le vert Porte malheur.
“The chartreuse mountain on
the absinthe plain
Makes the strong man’s tears
tumble down like rain.”
All this came to pass eons
ago.
Your program worked out
perfectly. You even avoided
The monotony of perfection by
leaving in certain flaws:
A backward way of becoming, a
forced handshake,
An absent-minded smile, though
in fact nothing was left to chance.
Each detail was startlingly
clear, as though seen through a magnifying glass,
Or would have been to an ideal
observer, namely yourself—
For only you could watch
yourself so patiently from afar
The way God watches a sinner
on the path to redemption,
Sometimes disappearing into
valleys, but always on the way,
For it all builds up into
something, meaningless or meaningful
As architecture, because
planned and then abandoned when completed,
To live afterwards, in
sunlight and shadow, a certain amount of years.
Who cares about what was there
before? There is no going back,
For standing still means
death, and life is moving on,
Moving on towards death. But
sometimes standing still is also life.
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