Read Come on All You Ghosts Online
Authors: Matthew Zapruder
I remember the house
where I first lived, it was
small and wooden
and next door to a loud
friendly catholic family
whose three sons Andy
and something and something
else constantly with mysterious
lack of effort flicked
an orange basketball
through a rusty hoop
and one afternoon taught
me
duh.
Once
a car screeched and hit
a girl whose name
I just remembered Julia!
We weren't there
but came running out,
it was quiet and we stood
a little away from the man
from the car who stood
over her, there was
a dark spot on her leg,
it was broken, she was fine.
But they decided to limit
the danger by making
the street one way
with a speed limit of 30.
Who were they?
Since then they have been
here looking over
my shoulder, sometimes
taking care, at others
making the wrong decisions
leading to more bad things.
There's no way
to talk about it
except maybe right now.
Now when I look
at photographs of me
and the twins I hear
the green glass beads
separating my bedroom
from theirs clicking in my mind,
is that a memory? Or
what I know those
sorts of beads sound like
in a breeze? Every day
one block up to Connecticut Ave.
and over to Oyster
Bilingual where I sometimes
was asked to stand
in front of the class and hold
up the picture of a duck
or a house when the teacher
said the words in Spanish
and English both. I played
Santa in the Christmas play
which made sense.
One day Luis stabbed
another kid with a pencil
in the throat, he was also fine.
Another day I went to visit
a friendly girl and ran
straight through the plate glass
window in her apartment building
lobby and out the door
and home, my parents
never knew, I was as I would
now say unscathed. Soon
after we moved to Maryland
where the new Catholics
were threatened and mean,
but that's a different story
I don't yet remember.
I think once a parent dies
the absence in the mind
where new impressions would
have gone is clear, a kind
of space or vacuum related memories
pour into, which is good.
from a book I was reading about
a dead architect I saw not the fabulous
empty pale blue almost white desert
sky above the brand new sewage
treatment plant. Nor my handwriting
in which I had thankfully never written
with a huge glowing made of fire
finger stellar advertisements for starlight
in the sky. Just a few artificial contrails
made by jets on their way to Denver
for me with my eyes to follow,
fading like the thought that had made
me raise my face to catch them
at all. Now only the pure white drug
interdiction blimp tethered to a bristling
radar installation remains, scanning
the sixty or so miles between here
and the border for movement dispositive
of a human trying to survive. Goodbye
Robert Creeley, you died looking out
over the plains. No more will
your fractured days emerge for us
to live a little while in, though we have
your collected poems of which
there are many. And farewell Kenneth
Koch, whom I also never met.
Reading his kaleidoscopes causes me
to wonder if perhaps he is not
a lawn chair, knocked over last night
by a pack of javelina that scared
Richard awake and made him wander
to his table, still half asleep. Or
a blue telephone, waiting in the forest
to ring. This book you are holding
is about dying, as will be the next one
upon which you lay your hands.
Thank you for listening. Now let us
all go separately into the city and forget
everything but our little prescriptions.
Today in El Paso all the planes are asleep on the runway. The world
is in a delay. All the political consultants drinking whiskey keep
their heads down, lifting them only to look at the beautiful scarred
waitress who wears typewriter keys as a necklace. They jingle
when she brings them drinks. Outside the giant plate glass windows
the planes are completely covered in snow, it piles up on the wings.
I feel like a mountain of cell phone chargers. Each of the various
faiths of our various fathers keeps us only partly protected. I don't
want to talk on the phone to an angel. At night before I go to sleep
I am already dreaming. Of coffee, of ancient generals, of the faces
of statues each of which has the eternal expression of one of my feelings.
I examine my feelings without feeling anything. I ride my blue bike
on the edge of the desert. I am president of this glass of water.
I woke this morning to the sound of a little voice
saying this life, it was good while it lasted, but I just
can't take it any longer. I'm going to stop shaving
my teeth and chew my face. I'm going to finish inventing
that way to turn my blood into thread and knit
a sweater the shape of a giant machete and chop
my head right off. The leaves had a green
aspect, all their faces turned down towards the earth.
This is exactly how I wanted to act, but I didn't
know where the little voice had hidden, and anyway
who talks like that? What a loss, another tiny
brilliant mind switched off by that same big boring finger.
Clearly life is a drag, by which I mean a net that keeps
pulling the most unsavory and useful boots we
either put on lamenting, or eat with the hooks of some
big idea gripping the sides of our mouths and yanking them
upward in a conceptual grimace. Said the little voice,
that is. I was just half listening, one quarter wondering
what the little park the window looked onto was named,
and one quarter thanking the war I knew was somewhere
busy returning all those limbs to their phantoms.
My neighbors, my remnants, in what have you chosen
to bury your heads? Shadow, said one mote
in an auditorium after a lecture. Some
archive explorer had just finished discussing
a group of islands. Inside me for a while
a tribe had theorized purely and wrongly
its location merely on the basis of tides. I was
feeling extinct, and wishing for a sudden
totally silent sliding out from the wall of twenty
or so very excellent beds so we the audience
could together engage in further collective
dreaming. I would describe that lecturer's voice
as twilight shadow smeared origami cloudlet
but the historical ceiling gilded by the names
of agreed-upon great thinkers is a beautiful dowager
making her sleepy wishes into dimness
soon to retire gracefully known. I hear soft
seventies cell phone songs. Come home
those who love a librarian aspect. I am one,
for give her time and she will answer any question
no matter how spiral, no matter how glass,
so slow to judgment you can sit among her
like a reading room and read and think
until the docents come, they move as trained,
as trained they place a careful hand on our shoulder.
The door locks automatically but not before
wind slips in to do its research on blackness
which gets even blacker, on the fabulous black
dust intercom orchard of what happens
when people fall asleep in their dreams and dream
what they are. Have I mentioned lately
I have been reading a book about a steam powered
carriage we are actually in moving slowly
through the countryside towards the kingdom
and its ruined citizens? Have I mentioned tonight
we shall both stand before the enormous spiral
of wrecking balls in a dress made of laughing glass?
The wind made a little movement
as if it were trying to reassemble.
I looked up from my affidavit. Sometimes
my life feels taped, and quiet evenings
I listen back. I hear the humming of the car
and through the windshield see the road
twisting down a series of cliffs to a very small
blue ocean that like the placid eye
of a beast that regarded our lives without
any desire to eat them grew larger
and stared a little past us, absently
flecked with gold. I would like now to believe
I felt like a leaf. Each night I told
my brother and sister ever more fabulous
stories about far away humanoid beings
with ordinary loves and concerns
swept up into galactic battles for peace
in which the dark forces
with their superior weapons and numbers
were always defeated by a ragtag company
led by slightly better versions of us. No one
ever asked where we were going.
It was all very clear without anyone
saying the dunes and the sea
would never hurt us. Every morning
I opened my eyes so gently I hardly
noticed the difference. Before I was even
awake I would already be flying
a Japanese kite, or sitting underneath
my favorite tree, biting my nails. Perhaps
I am still not supposed to say
advanced translucent beings with the spirits
of animals walked among us. Light
brushed their human hair and cast
their shadows across the tree trunks
or our faces among our games. Someone
was always strumming a guitar with a bird
made of pearl inlaid at the edge of the sound hole
and singing a tune about how helpful
most people are, especially strangers.
Dear sociologists, I have been asked to explain poetry to you. Thus
in the offices of dazed lute press the clicking begins. Lately
we've been conducting field experiments into our private thoughts. One
faction next to the soul shaped watercooler wonders whether
there's any reason at all to remember the feeling of being a child. Is
it best to imagine oneself again beneath the desk as the rusted
air raid siren explodes with its bi-monthly ritual Wednesday afternoon
fear distribution? Like you I was always holding particular crayons
in the dimness of certain morning assemblies. I have been told
some of you think the only constant is constant observation. I know
city planners designed the city and still there are diffusionists who pace
the deep blue edge of do you know you can never try to discover
why why flowers in the cubicles. Between you and me the buildings
also have a space for the sparrow named never who does not sing
yes the cities die when you leave them, yes no one cares what you do.
The glass covered in dust windows of the thrift store display
a mirror from the 1920s. If you take it it will no longer regard young
lovers with important thoughts pushed towards the mighty river. I
will fall in love exactly about a million times and then I will die. Clouds
playing dominos agree. At Everest on Grand someone eats yak discussing
the endless undeclared war among the neutral provinces. Long
metallic articulated girders cast thin shadows over thousands of windows.
A photograph of a pacifist smiles. He wore a white suit, was a friend
to the poor and worked for the union of unemployed telegraph workers
who listen for signals pulsing as Joni Mitchell never said from the heart of
a distant star. He was like my grandfather, after he died the city fathers
did not know what they were building when they built a museum
to encase a window in a wall brought from a far away country where
it once overlooked the sea. Evenings through giant speakers people listen
to troubled sounds whales bounce off continental shelves. Go tell
everyone everything is related, the rich own the clouds, and you can
always locate yourself with so many shadows to instruct you.
Sometime around 11 p.m. the you I was thinking of
left my head. I was in bed, among my white ten billion
thread count cotton sheets. The pillowcases cradled
my head like the earth a very young carrot.
This very white moment of being alone without
any loneliness I ruled and was ruled by like a benevolent
dictator full of human feelings he manages each day
to actualize for the benefit of his people. He feels
very protective about their souls. To him they seem
to be either tiny milagros in the form of boots
or horses made of pounded flat silver, like the pieces
in the homemade board game that glowed
the way they did just a little when it was his turn
as a child to choose which would represent him,
or small blue aspersions cast like the outside
part of an innocent candle flame that does not burn
your finger if you move it very quickly across.
This moment will never return. You were gone,
for a while I heard crickets and some kind of bird
doing something there is probably a word for between
hooting and whistling. Then the train, which despite
all those songs is not very mysterious at all.