Read Come on All You Ghosts Online
Authors: Matthew Zapruder
Today I read about the factory
where they make the custom rolling ladders
everyone has probably seen
rising through silent rooms
full of boxes or shelves
crossed by motes in the sun
#5 is my favorite
made of black walnut
with its hinge that folds a small surface out
for reading or placing
books on as you shelve them
it's easy to imagine working in a library
for me at least there is something shameful
about how clearly I can see it
like I am thinking something important is not
I say tomorrow waits for me
but I don't know
if I knew anything about the wars
besides what I have been safely told
I might understand
why they call him a maverick
when he is really just a horse
a horse like me except with dark eyes
terrible from his useless suffering
and the sky
through the oval aperture
above your head in the form
of light that bounces
a little then rests on the walls
and also in the form of whatever colors
you can see and maybe
if you're lucky clouds
pours through
maybe it's obvious
and peacefully alien like a young nun
walking past the local establishments
in a university town in summer
where it's always despite the superficial changes
the same time
even the rain
feels like rain after the evacuation
and even happiness
feels like having survived something
I can't remember
This morning I rode my gray metal bike
through the city throwing its trucks at me,
sometimes along the narrow designated
lanes with white painted symbolic bicyclists
so close to the cars too close to my shoulders,
and sometimes down alleys where people
on piles of clothes lie sleeping or smoking
or talking in the shade. Cars parked there
have signs in their windows that the doors
are unlocked and there is no radio.
It is remarkable to me that downtown
is always so remarkable to me. Every single
time I feel so shiny mixing my intention
with all the other lives, each so much
more interesting and easy for me to imagine
than the tourists muttering to each other
over their maps in some garbled
by traffic or wind foreign language I never
quite hear. From my window the old
brick factory building with its large white
graceful letters seems to be actually
proudly saying
WILLIAM HENRY STEEL
to the sky, the building floats, up and to
the right but it's the clouds of course
that move. Or is it? The earth moves,
farther off a squat little tower with three
huge metal cylinders that must be
for sending some invisible electric
particles out into the city. I only feel
free when I am working, that is writing
this book about a pair of zombie detectives
who painstakingly follow clues they think
are hidden in an authentic tuscan cookbook.
It is really more a sort of transcribing,
every day I close my eyes and see
them in an ancient yet modern high ceilinged
earth-toned kitchen, laughing as they
blunder through the recipes, each day
a little closer towards the name of their killer
whose face will soon to all of us be clear.
They have a little zombie dog, I name him
William Henry Steel, and this will be
my great work time has brought me here to do.
I'm staring out the window at an aluminum shed.
Periodically late March sun against its roof
flashes just randomly enough not to be a message.
A dog has wandered into the yard. He
keeps crouching until his balls I presume
touch the ice and he jumps and yelps.
What I find hilarious shames me. I am
house sitting. I am sitting in the house
watching
ESPN
. Daisuke pronounced
Dice K Matsuzaka throws a gyroball, very
slowly it seems to but does not spin
like a green dress on a mannequin in the sun.
I grow hungry awaiting instructions.
On television the cherry blossom festival
has begun. Already the trees have started
to bloom, along the edges their white
leaves turn a slightly deathly darker red.
Every spring amid the day we light
a giant paper lantern the Japanese presented
to us in 1951. Here I am hanging
a black light bulb in an enormous desert for you.
From what? People, I grew up a wonderful
sullen boy close enough to the capitol
building to dream of hitting it with a stick,
but did not. Inside there's an arch
the exact color of the sky, under it anyone
can stand and barely speak and all the way
across the rotunda someone else can hear.
Now it is known as the Millard Fillmore
spot, but only to me. The world's last
remaining Whig, I lie on my back thinking
we must defeat them, but later, after
this final highlight. A giant foam finger
the color of a fabulous foreign lime appears.
I put it on. Wildly I am cheering for nothing. So much
for someone who doesn't remember his dreams.
This blue vinyl couch
you bought is winter sky color,
blue but also a little white
with cracks like the robin's egg
that fell onto the balcony.
The railing is painted
that green generally intended
by the authorities to make you feel
you are not even intentionally
being punished. For weeks
I did nothing but dream
I was writing a letter
to my younger self full
of useless benevolent warnings.
I wasn't lonely, I was 22
and knew lots of things
I've now forgotten like how
they made the great rivers in Siberia
run backward, there's a city
called Ãlafsfjörður where every
winter hulls are left locked
in ice so they do not rust,
and what all of that had
to do with me. Now on my back
in Minnesota I am reading
about phlox. The blue
phlox is blue and can grow
to such great heights it will
no longer fit in any more poems.
Unlike in the Young Drift Plains
or southern tip of the Canadian Shield
glaciers here did not as they
melted deposit fertile soil,
only boulders and stones. I see
a squirrel I recognize. It's so
silent I can hear his onyx nails
click on the frozen snow.
He watches a tree until it moves.
He has one main and an alternate nest,
and lives with other squirrels
in a temporary winter community
called an aggregation. I hope
no great watchman comes
with claws to take him
in the night before he can master
techniques of gliding
from tree to tree, so he can
find just what he needs, for that
is what he is looking for.
Under the dark blue pre-night sky I stood
holding a flag I had cut from an obsolete windbreaker
and painted with the green fluorescent initials
of our brand new organization. Because of some
quality of the disintegrated light everyone
was a silhouette. William teetered on stilts beneath
the unmistakable hat of Abraham Lincoln. Lula
was the adorable giant robotic rabbit that marched
through our favorite television program harmlessly
ruining the plans of the space fleet authorities
as they endlessly circled our atmosphere in the not
too distant future, waiting for enemy beings
or rogue asteroids that never came. We were
a ragtag collection of young collectors.
We felt enthusiasm for the tentative friendships
we had after long years of hiding from each other
on the breezeway at last and almost too late
aggregated to protect our enthusiasms. Someone's
pet cat was lazily stalking someone else's
giant pet snail. It was all too good to be true
or last. Soon we would all be graduating and along
would amble the appropriate goons to gather
us into the welcoming arms of our new apprenticeships.
We knew if we went wherever we wanted
the starry wizards would guide us, and
if we didn't we would never see them again.
Friends, what is beauty? Right now for me these paper replicas
I glanced at in a book I did not buy.
Paper Toys of the World.
I hardly
think of anyone but myself. For a little while right now
I know many tiny pagodas were built with knowledge they are not
meant to last. There was paper and there was time someone
had to consider, time no one was in crisis, time no one was dying.
I think each breath the maker sent through them is like
a trusting class of architects sent through an ancient building
where used to be copied terrifying decrees. I bet people
who build pagodas are people who think they won't ever see them.
That thought is true, people know people and I am one. I like
saying this morning in Houston contains many tiny pagodas of wishing
for better things for people we do not know. I like knowing
somewhere social workers consider their clients. Last night Tonya said
I worry too much, she said it softly and firmly because she hardly knows me
and knew I worry I worry she's wrong. Here she is in my thoughts
along with all this beautiful silver fear, beautiful because
it with a silver penumbra protects the family readying itself
for school and work. So I choose to believe and choose to ask you
to believe it too. Today we are driving through the Painted Desert
where a few people live and breathe, it seems possible, Vic says look out
the window and feel and that's what I'm going to do.
Your eyes are not always brown. In
the wild of our backyard they are light
green like a sunny day reflected
in the eyes of a frog looking
at another frog. I love your love,
it feels dispensed from a metal tap
attached to a big vat gleaming
in a giant room full of shiny whispers.
I also love tasting you after a difficult
day doing nothing assiduously.
Diamond factory, sentient mischievous
metal fruit hanging from the trees
in a museum people wander into thinking
for once I am not shopping. I admire
and fear you, to me you are an abyss
I cross towards you. Just look
directly into my face you said and I felt
everything stop trying to fit. And
the marching band took a deep collective
breath and plunged back into its song.
Everything I know about birds
is I can't remember plus
two of the four mourning
also known as rain
doves, the young ones
born in my back yard
just this April. I saw
them moving their wings
very rapidly in a back
and forth motion
particular to their species.
Monica said it means
they want to be fed.
Their parents are likely
deeper in the stand
of trees being careful.
The wind has a metal hand.
Around them the city
explodes with helicopters
and tourists but here
on Francisco Street where
you also live this yard
is protected but not quiet.
I can hear the Russian
woman talking out
the window, I catch
a few words, one
of which sounds like
“object force.” It makes
me think of Anna
who is probably married
to that Finnish Brazilian
martial arts instructor.
That was afternoon.
Now it is later,
much, the absolute
worst pure center
of night, for an hour
in bed I resisted coming
here to my desk
to search for those terrible
destructive questions still
hiding from me.
Do you do that? Or
is there some other way?
I thought I might
but I can't see
the yard at all, just
some yellow safety
lights in the alley. I try
to keep the chair
from creaking, I know
Sarah knows in her sleep
I am in my study,
disturbed. I wish
I could send the word
asylum out very far
into the air like a clear
colorless substance
all my friends could
breathe in sleep, you
can never protect
everyone. That constant
humming sound is time
coming to take us
away from each other.
Or the refrigerator,
keeping the milk cold
and pure. So much
noise all the time
in the city, do you like it?
You must, you stay.
Last week I limped
in my giant ridiculous cast
one block to get coffee
on the corner and sat
outside feeling very sorry
but also happy. You
sat next to me and I was
pretty sure you
were you but I didn't
know. I gave you
my
New York Times
and we talked about torture
and baseball and how
many more weeks
are left for newspapers.
And then you asked me
if I'd ever be able to walk again.
That's what it's like
to be eighty I thought
but I don't know. Nothing's
natural to me anymore.
I forgot to buy a light bulb.
Now in the afternoon
the blades of grass
are completely still. No one
tends a little television
in the Russian woman's window.
All I know is I have tried
for a long time to be useful,
like everyone I am also
always balancing
on the small blade of not
letting other people down.
Now it is getting darker.
Orange nasturtiums
you can go out and gather
and place directly into a salad
are glowing, and pink
roses wander along
the very old green wooden
trellis towards the blue shed
where Ephraim carefully traces
his engineering plans
for great structures
that will never be built
at least in the few
decades of his lifetime
remaining. He walks
with a little hunch towards
me to collect my rent
check and I am holding it
out to him both of us
with matching apologetic smiles.
In Oklahoma once
I ate blueberries, I
recall they tasted like lake.
If dust is particles
of our skin why
is there more each
time I return?
I know tomorrow
I will sit in that dark
before daylight without
a name, and feeling
the last few drops
of water from the shower
still on her shoulders
she will come and stand
next to me where I am
at my desk pushing
against one word feeling
its hinge creak like wind
would a gate if it could feel
anything at all.