winding stone stairs, Florence Cathedral
I start on the 463 steps up
to reach the church dome
in the tight space of this vertical
tunnel and, in weak light, bent back
against the wall in a breadth intended
for one monk only
I pause with strangers
as other strangers pass earthward
their traffic so close our clothes reach out
as if to touch, even if
sweaty, and here I remember
while buying the ticket far below
that sign: âThis height not for those
with heart disease'
on the walls, a recurring notice:
âDo not write on the walls'
covered with names, not a desecration
more an understanding that
Guido and Alessandro are joining
the celebration this building is making
their rough signatures just two
of the many I pass
an international explosion of names
one pink man bending
and gasping, and we push past him
up onto the outer ledge
fresh air at an eerie height
I dare not look at those ants
on the streets, plus I feel again
that urge only satisfied by falling
so I follow the steps back in
past the stone curve untouched
for centuries, its power intact
on gangplanks, we enter the dome
greeted by giant frescoes of hell
devils' red mouths roughly painted
but so high above the worshippers' floor
they cohere, reminders that thousands
for hundreds of years
feared, turning quickly to find
faces, robes, clouds
of their sunlit saints
tour guide . . .
holds high a wand or staff
tufted with yellow ribbon
so followers can spy her flag
each group an ectoplasm
that forms and bubbles around
nuclear leader who directs all
to see what cannot be seen:
underlay of history burnt off
by sun and sea breeze, her
rapid-fire iteration of details
they can't find on their own
eyes blurred by overload
I watch always for the one
who strays away, pulled toward
sea or street ephemera as if
he can only connect
when silence surrounds him
not mob hubbub pierced by
shrill voice in charge
I want to walk beside this
wanderer, tell him to plunge
down narrow streets, go blank
in plazas, feel panic rising
to be so alone, without
a language and without a sign
except for dog-peed corners
church bells, gathering
crones and a few old men
familiars he grows fond of
when he sits on a quiet bench
as one who wears the momentary
mantle of local garb, his hands
though, still holding pamphlets
and does he remember then
the guide's arm, how it must ache
in the evening, and how her voice
croaks when she speaks to
her lover of her clever phrases
intended to inspire but flattened
made dull by day-after-day delivery
that erodes pride of place and
hollows out where breath comes from?
Albrecht Dürer and me
at the Albertina Museum
his entire life he thought
of death approaching
it was the century syphilis arrived
1500 meant the end of time
one self-portrait an imitation
of Christ
for me, it's his rabbit
each ear bent differently, every
whisker visible
its mood pensive
another sort of portrait
and his monogram â
ad
, 1502 (same year
his medieval father died) â
floats beneath the brown foot
as I float
back to rodents I snared
in a winter garden
frozen next day
and still the fur soft
(or back to fuzzy lucky
charms on key rings
among coins in pockets
of the slightly odd)
from him almost all
German art springs, begins
from me up pops this poem
when here I stand
(wanting to touch the painting
and feel the fur again)
one of many awed viewers
this young hare has seen
in five centuries
even as he draws into
the calm before trembling
to ponder his animal thought
and from my departing train
I see him once more
a tall buck alert in rows
of early corn, escaped, free of
any frame â though red dots
of waving wild poppies
defining the farmer's field
draw my eye to his readiness
for leaping
Self-Portrait Nude
I stand in front of a tortured portrait
completed in 1910 by Egon Schiele:
skin reddish and raw, a scraped skeletal self
tilting, electrified by jagged outline of light
eyes closed, hair livid red blue
elsewhere in this museum
hang works of his other distortions
in legs and torso, some kink of the inner
made visible, along with the more famous
Gustav Klimts though they
failed to hold me as did these hysterical shapes
which perhaps foreshadow the artist's death by
Spanish flu, 1918, thousands dying contorted
and now I recall my father also suffered that
influenza in Detroit where he went to work
in car factories, he and his brother for days
sick in their room, young men â and
did he know they might be dying, waiting
and praying, no doubt they were praying, and
though he believed in the strength of that power
he could not deny the virus, illness eating
in him so he coughed himself up â and still
he did survive, crept out of that stinking house
an emaciated, gaunt adolescent, made
his way back to Canada to live and eventually
make me
and I think now some spirit of Egon flew
from Vienna, drawn to my weakened father
who in his fatigue raised an arm above
his burning forehead and deflected it, returning
to himself as he was before he descended
into days of half breathing, half living with death
â and yet part of the painter entered Father
as an unseen arrow that pierced through
matter and was itself released in his last
offspring, so here I stand in this Viennese vault
recognizing myself in these twisting limbs
and later buying a black T-shirt with one of his
signature figures of skewed appendages stencilled
in shiny blue, I almost wish I hadn't succumbed
to such tourist delirium, but I needed an emblem
to remember my long-gone juvenescent wild skin
and jutting bones, my imprisoning self-pity
to evoke him, to keep him close, talisman
to protect me from my own age's plagues
coming from outside on the wind and those
eventualities from within rising up in blood
and phlegm, ushered along by semen and soul
I knock on Thomas Bernhard's door . . .
Thomas Bernhard (February 9, 1931, Herleen, Netherlands to February 12, 1989, Gmunden, Austria)
once, twice, raise the iron ring
and bring it down hard in case
his ghost is sleeping, boom
rolling over a table of books
the farmhouse locked, unattended
I can't enter the place
he called his writing prison
only half affectionately â he hated
his country if not this house
its gangly flowers' unfamiliar
pungent scent around me
as I peer in, leaning against
stone and mortar wall, brown
board, field of cut green hay
nearby, the road-edge battle
of weeds versus wheels
that hollow knocking
echoes some hollow in me
and later I read: âI am one
of those people who cannot bear
to be anywhere and are happy only
between places,' and I think of those sought
and left behind by brown boots
the brochure depicts for walking
(
gehen denken
: going thinking)
across Alps I imagined
but stalled now, stuck
here only â and I leave then â
on to Vienna, its blindness
he railed against, its equestrian icons
I slip past, determined to go
light-footed among graves, cafés
monuments, even to him
Nestbeschmutzer
, my smile
not quite that
of an innocent
book under my arm slipping
narrow street rising up:
horse droppings and
iron rims on yesteryear carriages
scraping on stone through an ageless crowd
of foreign wanderers, most unaware
Bernhard's hammer hangs
over the city, poised to fall
with a hard clanging all must hear
his joy deemed untranslatable
though still sufficient, wondrously so
for the seeker
sun-filled photo, Dubrovnik . . .
where a woman laughs
says she lost 50 kilos
from the Serb shelling
â she refused to enter
the fortress, willing instead
to die in her bed
and her husband recalls
a grandmother cautioning
about the placing of money
the grandfather exclaiming
âAustria cannot lose!'
â sure as only the colonized
are sure â and betting on an empire
that ended, coin devalued
(turtles in the garden also tell
a story: when Pavo fails to feed them
on time they begin to eat the small
patch of grass they call home
either voracious or desperate)
nevertheless this terrace
is
peace:
purple blooms, cactus transplant, high
wall of stone and vine and sun-stunned
mortar, rosemary greeting at my door
to the street and its slant down
past outdoor tables and tour buses â
in Adriatic's blue and breeze (both)
where Odysseus speaks not of exile
but of travel, his messengers
minnows darting in clear sea
old woman cleaning fish at the wall
feet in lapping, evening water
three cats await her gifts
â and wet, bronzed bodies step
out of the cove into a night
already cooling around me
into a kind of home I might
remember if I stay one day more
above the Danube
we climb in heat and humidity above the Danube
and a once-upon-a-time town's constricted streets
the way up paved with slanted stone soon
a path, elevation gain severe but
breezes increase, and below becomes
picturesque as we crawl upward to ruins:
this castle held Richard the Lionheart hostage
on his homeward-bound Third Crusade
when these cream-coloured stones shone new
and the tiny space for prisoners â
iron bars across an opening in rock, a cavity
reflecting, we hope, short height then of men â
gives a chill amid August's fiercest sun
we linger on what we perceive as parapets
where others loll as well, some eager
to commune with ghosts
and at this moment we look west and discover
on a distant headland what looks like another
schloss
, though not a ruin, which even at this remove
glows, its walls firm, cupolas secure, and called
we learn, the monastery of Göttweig
where Benedictines maintain themselves and
keep the sun shining as well as it does
such thoughts occur in a foreign land
where all is brightly new â and why travel if not
to grow into the unknown where we'll hit upon
what transforms us, as bread is changed
when eaten if prayers are offered beforehand
as age is held back from the listener by a story
on the way down I pick up a whitened piece
of wood or bone, hard to tell which, but certainly
weightless, and I do not believe such a thing's
a relic or a mystery or even a worthy souvenir
but for a moment I hold it, rub it close to me
thinking to link back through eras to marauders
who appeared on the river, and to villagers
who prepared wine and meat for their feast
and prayed among families after they left
that the devils would not return again before winter
in Hallstatt
red hair of the guide leads us down
into earth mined for twenty-seven centuries
though only we and our recent progenitors
are tourists, all earlier visitants came
for salt, their individual stories lost or
merged with legends from the Celt
cemetery exhumed nearby in this valley
shadowed by peaks beyond peaks and
steep walls where nothing clings but myth
had I once been one of those who wore
gold bracelets on his biceps, and if one
such prince should touch me now, will I
know, the shiver of eternal recognition
shocking me backwards out of these
protective overalls all visitors must wear
a gaggle of us turning into a platoon
in red outfits, same for me as for
the Japanese and South Africans
will I walk into these depths older than
possible to grasp, even with the dark
illuminated by the guide's torch and words
and not return to reasoning as a city-
walking, siren-cringing, magic-missing
modern but find beneath these mass clothes
bronze body armour, and in my hand the
amber-embellished hilt of an iron sword
that led me over more than mountains
later we eat fish from the crystal lake
and under the calm of local wine speak of
the last war here, of a mother who carried
to her grave hope her missing son might
yet return, and then I sleep, my femurs not
unlike those in the close-by charnel house
until its flanking church's pre-dawn bells
announce I must begin again the work
of unearthing who I might yet become