Read For As Far as the Eye Can See Online
Authors: Robert MelanCon
close does the pure joy of living come
to a sorrow without name or reason.
In the green, green grass, a ball
becomes a second sun, to be captured,
under the enormous sky where big
bellying clouds parade, and birds,
and a plane that's another bird
to be imitated, running, with outstretched arms.
The reader who's lifted his eyes from his book
perceives the sky above as the true ocean,
the immense expanse of blue enclosing
the whole earth, at whose end we might tumble
out of everything, should we ever find that end.
An enormous white cloud appears as
the crest of foam on a wave; it breaks and
streams in tatters while a pair of gulls fly through
the hollow space where blue ebbs and flows.
Before picking up the thread of the sentence
where he left off, this reader will have scanned
a summer afternoon's supreme iambic.
That's his cry we hear:
tweet-tweet-tweet-tweet
â¦
A cardinal's proclaiming his possession
of the street. There's no need to search for long
to catch sight of the scarlet patch he makes
at the top of an aspen; he's turned towards
the river, which we see at the foot of the slope,
over a factory district that the eight o'clock
sunlight is slathering, for the moment,
with the Arcadian softness of Claude.
As far as the horizon crenellated with towers
stretches a zone of rail lines and vacant lots:
his domain, soon to be buzzing with insects.
Ahead, always ahead, arises the day, the night,
the evening and, we imagine without proof,
that it's the same behind, that from this whole
a concave space is formed, within whose centre,
under a perfect dome, we settle in, arranging
the streets and their people all around us.
But it's never more than a screen, set on the retina,
with all the rest painted in. Quick as we turn around,
we never glimpse the nothingness that sinks away behind,
and which no mirror, a screen if ever was, can show.
Between the buildings the people press on, each one
pushing his world ahead, without looking back.
The stubborn bass of the crickets endlessly repeats
four notes that we hear through the humid night
at August's end, trying in vain to sleep. We listen
to the few cars trailing a rumble that swells,
then fades away, as a counterpoint of nighthawks'
cries enters in, or a distant siren, or footsteps,
or a breath in the trees, or the curtains rustling.
We hear other sounds too, confused and vague,
dreamt up in the slight delirium that arises always
from insomnia, but the true murmur of the world,
should one heed, even a little, its glorious orchestration,
at once covers over their too predictible monotony.
The rain arrives, familiar, expected, in an act
so close we touch the space that it enshrouds.
It descends like memory, green and grey,
forest, sea and street mingled in the cold light
that adorns each object with fresh details;
it comes nearer, repetitive, inexorable
as childhood was, with a rustling like the curtain
one draws at evening to enclose the room
and its swarm of dreams; it murmurs
a single word, repeated indefinitely, that
we cannot quite grasp, that we divine
or foresee, which is the secret name of time.
Sitting on the ground by the trash can, he stinks up
the subway entrance, calling out in confusion
to people passing, who know where they're going.
No one listens to his drunken, drugged-out
monologueâwho could?âand no one
spares more than a sidelong glance for his
fumbling gestures, his pitiable efforts
to struggle to his feet, the looks he casts
at the incomprehensible mess around him.
He's a tangle of misery, a child of the slime,
made in the shape and image of their God, and
the police will shortly come and collect him.
As soon as the blind is raised, on which
only whitish rectangles were outlined
by the crosspieces, the landscape unfolds:
trees appear, the street, some zones of blue;
over the roadway is a tracery of branches
with the shadows of birds flying through.
Plotinus believed the eye sees only images
derived from inconceivable archetypes, but
the glance by instinct shuns the burning sun.
In the bathroom, when from the mirror's depths
we see a stranger looking out at us, we understand
that we're nothing but a knot, coming undone.
There's no better dancer than the aspen leaf,
its supple stalks the longest, the slenderest of the legs
to flicker in the green majesty of high summer's light.
From a distance, perhaps at the far end of a field,
an aspen looks to be fluttering thousands of flags,
like a strip-mall lot on a suburban boulevard
amongst expressways, motels, garbage dumps and lawns.
But that's beside the point, and a slight effort will
help us recover some commonplaces of the poetic tradition
such as “
lampâthe aspen is the lamp of the solstice,
” etc.
or
“a vertical river, a shower of reflections, a standing fire,”
etc.
But we prefer
“dancer”
or better still,
“the quaking aspen leaf.”
In the light of eight o'clock in the morning,
at the bus stop, people are waiting, lost
in thought and gazing at the sunlight
that washes down over the housefronts
on the other side of the street, and the cars
that go by, stop for the red light, and move on.
A woman clutches her bag under her elbow;
a teenager's beating time to the noises
heard crackling out of his Walkman;
a man's reading a newspaper and worrying
about rumours of war, to take place, it is thought,
a long way from here, in the evening, on television.
The blind's pallor hints at a clear sky.
It's never so blue, one never sees it so well
as at this season, through the trees' bare bones,
the light shining past unhindered by leaves,
of which there remain just enough to prick out
space with a stippling of red and yellow patches.
You do not raise this blind, not wanting the real landscape
(but what is real?) to cancel immediately
the one you are inventing. Then you give in â¦
and at once there unfolds, vast, motionless and blue,
the vista of the light, but which could not be painted
without an edging of shadows, and there are none.
What we see first is a stretch of rumpled clouds.
There's no white-albed angel passing through
amongst the birds, and therefore none is seen.
Lowering our eyes, we see the brick houses,
each at the end of its garden, covered
with the leaves no longer seen on the trees.
As for the trees, what we see are their branches;
they're joined to the upper parts of the trunks
by their branchings, appropriately named.
One might add the chimneys and the telephone wires,
but we shall not mention the wind; one does not see
the wind, and we shall speak only of what is seen.
We take a fresh look at the bark of the trees
now that the parasol of leaves no longer blocks
the light that's streaming down their trunks.
Under the sky's ruins, a colonnade has arisen
along the streets, and it leads forever
into the white dusk of November's end.
This is no temple, nor has it been deserted
by any gods who never passed here.
This is a neighbourhood with shops
whose windows offer fruit, or clothing; people
come and go; the air carries scents of pepper,
of steam, gasoline, moisture and coffee.
The window lets in the city's sounds
from near to far: hammer blows,
heavy machinery, sirens? some Varèse.
The expressway's far-off rumble stands
for silence, so little do we hear it. In the garden,
the birds are improvising on Messiaen.
Amongst the books, in a room organized
for solitary work, a reader is listening
to the buzzing of bees in the Latin of Petrarch:
“De remediis utriusque fortunae?”
Antidotes
against the blows, either baneful or boastful,
of blind Lady Luck, whom no one escapes.
He was about to open that door, step into that room
where at last all would be revealedâwhen the reader
closes the book, putting off until later the rest
of the novel he's spent some hours with. At once
the characters make their exit, and a different,
familiar room rises up again before his eyes.
There's an armchair, a table, some other books,
and a jumble of all the things he recognizes:
a lamp, a sofa, a glass and a window.
These form a different dream, that seems real, perhaps,
only by a different convention. But who's dreaming now,
who's dreaming him, holding the closed book in his hands?
Strolling through the November dusk, at the end
of an endless afternoon, which is ending only,
is a chance to indulge in matchless delights.
It's not yet night; the brightness lingers
under a sky cemented above the streets and
over housefronts vanishing towards the horizon.
It's not day either; a grey and black fog
wafts up before our eyes as we gaze along
the row of street lights, lit up by four o'clock.
The stores are lighted; each window offers
a summary of the universe, and we stop to look,
with no purpose other than to savour time.
A few maples present an asymmetrical colonnade
unlike anything ever seen in Classical antiquity.
They're so much more ancient, one might declare
them entirely new, bathed in the light of beginnings.
But still ⦠this is only a weekday morning
in the park that we cross on our way to the subway
and the noises of traffic will not let us behold
in this stretch of municipal grass the
locus amÅnus
of
The Bucolics
, or take ourselves for Tityrus,
even if, at the path's end, philosophically, a man
out of work is crumbling a bun into a pigeon ballet,
and eight in the morning is a point in eternity too.
Sunlight casts a spray of slender branchings,
crystals of light, into space as it dips and sways,
delicately, then opens out at the intersection.
One imagines oneself in panorama, set like
an exclamation point at the centre of the colours
as in Miròâpersonage and point of viewâ
since one's watching oneself explore the stretch
that the eye invents on all sides. Then there
chimes in, like a symphony in a single chord,
the harpsichord of the starlings, the orchestra
of the traffic, and the perfumes, and the keen,