Authors: Louise Glück
you want Orpheus, you want death.
Orpheus who said “Help me find Eurydice.”
Then the music began, the lament of the soul
watching the body vanish.
II
THE EVENING STAR
Tonight, for the first time in many years,
there appeared to me again
a vision of the earth's splendor:
in the evening sky
the first star seemed
to increase in brilliance
as the earth darkened
until at last it could grow no darker.
And the light, which was the light of death,
seemed to restore to earth
its power to console. There were
no other stars. Only the one
whose name I knew
as in my other life I did her
injury: Venus,
star of the early evening,
to you I dedicate
my vision, since on this blank surface
you have cast enough light
to make my thought
visible again.
LANDSCAPE
â
for Keith Monley
1.
The sun is setting behind the mountains,
the earth is cooling.
A stranger has tied his horse to a bare chestnut tree.
The horse is quietâhe turns his head suddenly,
hearing, in the distance, the sound of the sea.
I make my bed for the night here,
spreading my heaviest quilt over the damp earth.
The sound of the seaâ
when the horse turns its head, I can hear it.
On a path through the bare chestnut trees,
a little dog trails its master.
The little dogâdidn't he used to rush ahead,
straining the leash, as though to show his master
what he sees there, there in the futureâ
the future, the path, call it what you will.
Behind the trees, at sunset, it is as though a great fire
is burning between two mountains
so that the snow on the highest precipice
seems, for a moment, to be burning also.
Listen: at the path's end the man is calling out.
His voice has become very strange now,
the voice of a person calling to what he can't see.
Over and over he calls out among the dark chestnut trees.
Until the animal responds
faintly, from a great distance,
as though this thing we fear
were not terrible.
Twilight: the stranger has untied his horse.
The sound of the seaâ
just memory now.
2.
Time passed, turning everything to ice.
Under the ice, the future stirred.
If you fell into it, you died.
It was a time
of waiting, of suspended action.
I lived in the present, which was
that part of the future you could see.
The past floated above my head,
like the sun and moon, visible but never reachable.
It was a time
governed by contradictions, as in
I felt nothing
and
I was afraid.
Winter emptied the trees, filled them again with snow.
Because I couldn't feel, snow fell, the lake froze over.
Because I was afraid, I didn't move;
my breath was white, a description of silence.
Time passed, and some of it became this.
And some of it simply evaporated;
you could see it float above the white trees
forming particles of ice.
All your life, you wait for the propitious time.
Then the propitious time
reveals itself as action taken.
I watched the past move, a line of clouds moving
from left to right or right to left,
depending on the wind. Some days
there was no wind. The clouds seemed
to stay where they were,
like a painting of the sea, more still than real.
Some days the lake was a sheet of glass.
Under the glass, the future made
demure, inviting sounds:
you had to tense yourself so as not to listen.
Time passed; you got to see a piece of it.
The years it took with it were years of winter;
they would not be missed. Some days
there were no clouds, as though
the sources of the past had vanished. The world
was bleached, like a negative; the light passed
directly through it. Then
the image faded.
Above the world
there was only blue, blue everywhere.
3.
In late autumn a young girl set fire to a field
of wheat. The autumn
had been very dry; the field
went up like tinder.
Afterward there was nothing left.
You walk through it, you see nothing.
There's nothing to pick up, to smell.
The horses don't understand itâ
Where is the field, they seem to say.
The way you and I would say
where is home.
No one knows how to answer them.
There is nothing left;
you have to hope, for the farmer's sake,
the insurance will pay.
It is like losing a year of your life.
To what would you lose a year of your life?
Afterward, you go back to the old placeâ
all that remains is char: blackness and emptiness.
You think: how could I live here?
But it was different then,
even last summer. The earth behaved
as though nothing could go wrong with it.
One match was all it took.
But at the right timeâit had to be the right time.
The field parched, dryâ
the deadness in place already
so to speak.
4.
I fell asleep in a river, I woke in a river,
of my mysterious
failure to die I can tell you
nothing, neither
who saved me nor for what causeâ
There was immense silence.
No wind. No human sound.
The bitter century
was ended,
the glorious gone, the abiding gone,
the cold sun
persisting as a kind of curiosity, a memento,
time streaming behind itâ
The sky seemed very clear,
as it is in winter,
the soil dry, uncultivated,
the official light calmly
moving through a slot in air
dignified, complacent,
dissolving hope,
subordinating images of the future to signs of the future's passingâ
I think I must have fallen.
When I tried to stand, I had to force myself,
being unused to physical painâ
I had forgotten
how harsh these conditions are:
the earth not obsolete
but still, the river cold, shallowâ
Of my sleep, I remember
nothing. When I cried out,
my voice soothed me unexpectedly.
In the silence of consciousness I asked myself:
why did I reject my life? And I answer
Die Erde überwältigt mich:
the earth defeats me.
I have tried to be accurate in this description
in case someone else should follow me. I can verify
that when the sun sets in winter it is
incomparably beautiful and the memory of it
lasts a long time. I think this means
there was no night.
The night was in my head.
5.
After the sun set
we rode quickly, in the hope of finding
shelter before darkness.
I could see the stars already,
first in the eastern sky:
we rode, therefore,
away from the light
and toward the sea, since
I had heard of a village there.
After some time, the snow began.
Not thickly at first, then
steadily until the earth
was covered with a white film.
The way we traveled showed
clearly when I turned my headâ
for a short while it made
a dark trajectory across the earthâ
Then the snow was thick, the path vanished.
The horse was tired and hungry;
he could no longer find
sure footing anywhere. I told myself:
I have been lost before, I have been cold before.
The night has come to me
exactly this way, as a premonitionâ
And I thought: if I am asked
to return here, I would like to come back
as a human being, and my horse
to remain himself. Otherwise
I would not know how to begin again.
A MYTH OF INNOCENCE
One summer she goes into the field as usual
stopping for a bit at the pool where she often
looks at herself, to see
if she detects any changes. She sees
the same person, the horrible mantle
of daughterliness still clinging to her.
The sun seems, in the water, very close.
That's my uncle spying again, she thinksâ
everything in nature is in some way her relative.
I am never alone,
she thinks,
turning the thought into a prayer.
Then death appears, like the answer to a prayer.
No one understands anymore
how beautiful he was. But Persephone remembers.
Also that he embraced her, right there,
with her uncle watching. She remembers
sunlight flashing on his bare arms.
This is the last moment she remembers clearly.
Then the dark god bore her away.
She also remembers, less clearly,
the chilling insight that from this moment
she couldn't live without him again.
The girl who disappears from the pool
will never return. A woman will return,
looking for the girl she was.
She stands by the pool saying, from time to time,
I was abducted,
but it sounds
wrong to her, nothing like what she felt.
Then she says,
I was not abducted.
Then she says,
I offered myself, I wanted
to escape my body.
Even, sometimes,
I willed this.
But ignorance
cannot will knowledge. Ignorance
wills something imagined, which it believes exists.
All the different nounsâ
she says them in rotation.
Death, husband, god, stranger.
Everything sounds so simple, so conventional.
I must have been, she thinks, a simple girl.
She can't remember herself as that person
but she keeps thinking the pool will remember
and explain to her the meaning of her prayer
so she can understand
whether it was answered or not.
ARCHAIC FRAGMENT
â
for Dana Levin
I was trying to love matter.
I taped a sign over the mirror:
You cannot hate matter and love form.
It was a beautiful day, though cold.
This was, for me, an extravagantly emotional gesture.
. . . . . . . . your poem:
tried, but could not.
I taped a sign over the first sign:
Cry, weep, thrash yourself, rend your garmentsâ
List of things to love:
dirt, food, shells, human hair.
. . . . . . . . said
tasteless excess. Then I
rent the signs.
AIAIAIAI cried
the naked mirror.
BLUE ROTUNDA
I am tired of having hands
she said
I want wingsâ
But what will you do without your hands
to be human?
I am tired of human
she said
I want to live on the sunâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Pointing to herself:
Not here.
There is not enough
warmth in this place.
Blue sky, blue ice
the blue rotunda
lifted over
the flat streetâ
And then, after a silence:
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I want
my heart back
I want to feel everything againâ
That's what
the sun meant: it meant
scorchedâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
It is not finally
interesting to remember.
The damage
is not interesting.
No one who knew me then
is still alive.
My mother
was a beautiful womanâ
they all said so.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I have to imagine
everything
she said
I have to act
as though there is actually
a map to that place:
when you were a childâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
And then:
I'm here
because it wasn't true; I
distorted
itâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I want she said
a theory that explains
everything
in the mother's eye
the invisible
splinter of foil
the blue ice
locked in the irisâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Then:
I want it
to be my fault
she said
so I can fix itâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Blue sky, blue ice,
street like a frozen river
you're talking
about my life
she said
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
except
she said
you have to fix it
in the right order
not touching the father
until you solve the mother
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
a black space
showing
where the word ends
like a crossword saying
you should take a breath now
the black space meaning
when you were a childâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
And then:
the ice
was there for your own protection
to teach you
not to feelâ
the truth
she said
I thought it would be like
a target, you would see
the centerâ