Read Anatomy of Melancholy and Other Poems Online
Authors: Robert Wrigley
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ANATOMY
OF
MELANCHOLY
AND OTHER POEMS
ALSO BY ROBERT WRIGLEY
Beautiful Country
Earthly Meditations: New and Selected Poems
Lives of the Animals
Reign of Snakes
In the Bank of Beautiful Sins
What My Father Believed
Moon in a Mason Jar
The Sinking of Clay City
ANATOMY
OF
MELANCHOLY
AND OTHER POEMS
ROBERT WRIGLEY
PENGUIN POETS
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
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First published in Penguin Books 2013
Copyright © Robert Wrigley, 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this product may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
Pages 109
–110
constitute an extension of this copyright page.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Wrigley, Robert, 1951–
[Poems. Selections]
Anatomy of melancholy and other poems / Robert Wrigley.
pages cm
Poems.
ISBN: 978-1-101-59263-2
I. Title.
PS3573.R58A83 2013
811’.54—dc23
2012038722
Designed by Ginger Legato
The author would like to express his gratitude to the Bogliasco Foundation, for a residency in the spring of 2011, at the Liguria Study Center, in Bogliasco, Italy, where a number of these poems were written.
for Robert Coker Johnson
CONTENTS
IN THE WHORL OF THE EAR OF ONE
Seen from the Porch, a Bear by the House
For I Will Consider My Cat Lenore
On a Series of Four Photographs
PINIONED HEART IN THE HEAT OF IT
“This
Melancholy
of which we are to treat, is a habit, a serious ailment, a settled humour, as Aurelianus and others call it, not errant, but fixed: and as it was long increasing, so, now being (pleasant or painful) grown to a habit, it will hardly be removed.”
—Burton
“Melancholy in this sense is the character of Mortality.”
—Burton
“If any man except against the matter or manner of treating of this my subject, and will demand a reason of it, I can allege more than one; I write of melancholy, by being busy to avoid melancholy.”
—Burton
“A nightingale dies for shame if another bird sings better.”
—Burton
“So be it, then. It isn’t all that bad.”
—Szymborska
PART ONE
IN THE WHORL OF THE EAR OF ONE
TRIAGE
Scarred by a long-gone buck’s rubbing,
shoved westward by his develveting grind,
the aspen had always leaned, and I had thought
many times I should stake it up, straighten it out,
but I never did. Then last week’s several heavy
feet of snow became rain, and under that weight it split
at the buck’s scar and bent to the ground,
and I was bereft. But in my regret I hauled
through the snow a hundred feet of ropes,
a come-along, a pair of steel pintle hooks,
and a five-gallon bucket of hopeful arborist’s
paraphernalia. I tied it off to a stouter tree,
winched it upright again, braced it with a two-by-four
plank notched and swaddled at the notched end
in inner tube ribbons, then guyed it off to the fir
that was the engine of its reascension.
Afterward I plastered black tar around its wound,
wound a bandage of grafting tape over the tar,
and covered the tape in a green vinyl sleeve
against the winter yet to come. And every day,
in order to offer such apologies as I can,
I visit it. Sometimes, like the other day, I sit with it,
put an arm around it, and describe the motions
of its leaves in spring and summer,
and especially in its glorious fall:
how its gold shimmers, and how sometimes
a leaf will loose itself and fly the ten yards
to the porch of my shack and settle on a chair,
or in the cold October rains plaster itself
to a window like a kiss. That day I also explained
the next step in our treatment. How once
it is leafed out and green again, I will,
using the same rope that righted it, fasten
that rope at the height of my knee, at the strong
unbroken butt of it just below the buck’s black scar,
and winch it a bit more upright yet, until,
by high summer, as straight as nearly any tree
around it, it will stand. Soon the seat of my pants
was wet from the snow and I was shivering,
but still I didn’t want to go. I stood
and stroked the dressing around its wound
and resolved to come back from my shack
that afternoon, to read it a poem or two—
not my own, certainly not this one, but maybe
“The Wellfleet Whale” or “The Trees,”
in which “their greenness is a kind of grief”—
though I have not done so yet. “Begin afresh,”
I think this afternoon. “Last year is dead.”
Larkin, I think, would have thought me a fool;
Kunitz, maybe not so much. Though I noticed,
in the divot where I’d sat beside it, a puddle
my own face regarded me from. I was empty-handed
and knew neither poem, the long nor the short,
by heart. Only the end of the Kunitz:
“Like us,” it goes, “disgraced and mortal,”
from the puddle, said my face.