poems in the march shredness tradition: timothy donnelly
poem interrupted by whitesnake
(Originally appeared, in different form, at poets.org.)
That agreeable feeling you haven’t been able to
put into words to your satisfaction despite
too many white-knuckled attempts to do so might
prove in the end to be nothing more than
satisfaction itself, an advanced new formula
just waiting like product to be marketed as such:
Let my logo be the couch, I can feel it pulse
like the moon like the fool I have come to feel
attached to continues to pull away at an estimated
1.6 inches every solar year: Let my logo be
the couch you merge into nights until you can’t
love like the shadows of a factory warehouse
ghost-historic Secaucus built on top of old swamp-
land I can feel it: Let my love be the couch
you merge into nights until you can’t even tell
what you wanted to begin with, let my theme be
the scrapes of an infinite catalogue’s pages
turning over again until the right product finds you
widened in the air above the city as a goldfinch,
state bird of New Jersey, stops midflight and falls
to the asphalt of its final parking lot. Where it lands
is a sacred site and Earth is covered in them,
each opening the tongue through which the entire
wheat field generates. As this happens inside
oneself one has felt oneself to be the owner of it.
From the perimeter of the field you watch over
a harmony of workers busy with their given tasks:
some cut the wheat, others bundle it; others
picnic in the shade of a central pear tree, itself a form
of labor, too, unfolding at the worksite, a gentle
pride gilding this last observation like jellied sunlight
spread through October. Because it happens
inside you, you feel you must be the owner of it,
owner at least of what you feel, but call out to
the workers, even kindly, and they won’t call back
in kind, they won’t even look up from their work.
There must be someplace
else where life takes place besides in front of
merchandise, but at the moment I can’t think of it.
In the clean white light of the market I am where
I appertain, where everything exists for me
to purchase. If there’s a place of not meaning
what you feel but at the same time meaning every
trembly word, or almost, I might have been taught
better to avoid it, but
here I go again
on my own, going down the only road I’ve ever
known, trusting Secaucus’s first peoples
meant something specific and true when they fused
the words seke, meaning black, and achgook,
meaning snake, together to make a compound
variously translated as “place where the snake
hides,” “place of black snakes,” or, simply,
“salt marsh.”
Going moon over the gone marsh
Secaucus used to be, I keep making the same
mistake over and over, and so do you, gradually
speeding up your orbital velocity, and thereby
increasing your orbital radius, just like Kepler
said you would, and though I keep trying not
to take it to heart, I can’t see where else there is
to go with it. In German, a Kepler makes caps
like those the workers wear who bundle twigs
for kindling under the irregular gloom. One looks as if
about to make repairs to a skeletal umbrella
or to thoughts a windmill might entertain by means
of a silver fish. Off in the distance, ships tilt
through the choppy inlet. Often when I look wholly
at an object, I feel it looking back, evaluating
my capacity to afford it.
Maybe not wanting
anything in particular leaves you mildly wanting
whatever, constantly, spreading like a wheat
field inside you as far as the edge of the pine
forest where the real owners hunt fox. They keep you
believing what you see and feel are actually
yours or yours to choose. And maybe it’s this
belief that keeps you from burning it all down.
In this economy, I am like the fox, my paws no good
for fire-starting yet, and so I scamper back
to my deep den to fatten on whatever I can find.
Sated, safe, disremembering what it’s like
up there, meaning everywhere, I tuck nose under tail
after I exhaust the catalogues, the cheap stuff
and sad talk to the moon, including some yelping
but never howling at it, which is what a wolf does.
Timothy Donnelly’s publications include The Cloud Corporation and the chapbook Hymn to Life. He is on the faculty of Columbia University’s Writing Program and poetry editor of Boston Review.