|  | Never Forget  A soundtrack dove would gargle
 all day, gnats dangle their pulsing clusters
 like water-balloons. And the ground
 be overrun with ants and scarabs
 rearranging the earth. Figs
 about to touch ground from the most extended
 branch would note
 how the necropolis corrects dissolution
 with architecture. How domes
 rewrite hills, and fields, grown and cut,
 reduce the river's pull
 where gravity is quietest and most
 conspiratorial, a drift
 content that a single painter restore it
 from allegory to realism. Clouds
 would process their variations
 across the countryside all day.
 What both bird and butterfly did would go
 by the same name. And that ecstasy
 pouring from the stone would pass
 through wheat's variations,
 when the mower appeared mounting the hill,
 its red dome and puff of smoke
 so like the scythes of the painters.
 
 
 
 
 
 Into the Wall
  
 
 An anvil-shaped cloud
 spreads its iron shadow
 across the hill adjacent to our town.
 As on a floor viewed upside down,
 other clouds, in turn, suggest
 figures of the moment,
 requiring only the arrival
 of the next bit of future to cancel
 the suggestions. The struggle
 is ancient: clouds' agon drives the painter
 into the wall, attempting impossible
 compressions proper to time beyond
 a lifetime. Here, where the sound
 of a scooter merges with a horsefly,
 a pack of gnats beats up a swallow
 until the next frame. Or the classical
 head turns with its look
 of a god disappearing into time:
 things are as they are,
 turning in middle air,
 and as they will be,
 emerging from the rock.
 
 
 
 
 
 Vespers
  
 
 Wind carries off the slighter
 birds, after which a purling of doves
 adjusts the evening. An owl stands
 quiet as a pine cone when a blade of light
 breaches the hilltop and is gone. Behind me,
 a compact car carries compact profiles
 to town. Only a cloud, like a lipstick kiss
 left on a mirror, offers
 its supplemental farewell to the unbroken haze.
 This is the final atmosphere
 of a work day: not great bindings
 but the modest affinities: bread
 crossing the table,
 as the jet engine overcomes the dove.
 
 
 
 
 
 Secret Hours
  
 
 Like a equestrian act, a cloud
 swivels, turns inside out, then rights
 itself crossing Roman air space.
 In the picture, Montale sits at a window,
 smoking. Terrace candles,
 in sympathy, blow smoke into
 the air above the street. Appearance
 distinguishes the party at Stephen's.
 Will the Borghese come? The Agnelli?
 Dr. Johnson said people were right in
 public to prefer a duke to a genius
 (though in secret hours they were
 also right to steal off to please themselves).
 Over the terrace, down in the street,
 scooters streak by the methadone clinic.
 In the next room, a fantastically tall
 woman lifts a melon-cube to her lips.
 Her head is ringed with acanthus leaves.
 A poet is forced to deliver the story
 of his life in dreamy self-parody.
 Like a bid at cards, his "I was there,"
 washes away, as wine does,
 what the past itself had failed to do.
 Smoke blows over the lip of the terrace.
 Montale is looking out the window.
 "Che ora e?" asks the lizard.
 
 
 
 
 
 Piero's Resurrection
  
 
 Of the four, two of the soldiers
 face the viewer. Theirs are faces
 belonging to citizens of the world.
 The sensual body of one invites comparison
 with Christ's body, which is inferior
 and scarcely regardedeven as
 it rises. Even by him. His being
 is situated in the face, itself tired enough
 to be abridged to eyes. The pull
 of the world is so strong that
 resurrection of the body
 no longer counts as salvation.
 The women, for example, who slept
 with the soldier knew caresses were nothing
 without the indolence of perishable love.
 The other soldier, whose amiable goatee
 hints at a sophistication and savoir faire
 beyond his station, holds in both hands
 his useless pike, whose point seems to
 lance the side of the nearest tree.
 On one arm hangs a drooping shield,
 "SP" visible to the spectator, as if
 even in Piero's time, one had only to add
 et cetera to explain the derivation of force,
 by degrees, from vegetable nature.
 The other figures exist to supplement
 sleep with blindness: while the left one
 cradles his face in his hands to show
 how weariness occludes awareness,
 the other actually faces the god
 but of course can see nothing except
 the insides of his eyelids. One must say God
 is not as fine as these figures who have,
 by casual descent, let consciousness go
 in return for their ordinary beauty.
 At this, the eye wishes to true itself
 like a carpenter's level, and rises to
 the horizon extended from Christ's shoulders.
 Two rows of trees close in, framing
 him in an emblematic trapezoid.
 To the row of young trees, Piero has
 juxtaposed a mature row, suggesting,
 because both lines slant centerwards,
 that when the sequence of growth leaves off,
 trees are free to become instruments
 and signs with their own succession:
 cross-to-crucifix providing the model.
 Here at the painting's crux, thought
 rises from the grave of thought,
 asking: who else can wake
 and move off from this sleep
 from which gravity the cool,
 weary Christ rises brandishing
 the crudest of symbolstwo sticks
 that pull him clear of the dead?
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