Read Flow Chart: A Poem Online
Authors: John Ashbery
knew what it was doing, and burgeoned suddenly, before one had any inkling of it,
drawing alarmed gasps of admiration from the besotted throng. Anyway, it was life,
one had to agree, but all the same could have been better written, with more attention
to niceties of style and fewer obscure references, though the concept,
always, was beyond reproach.
Wrapped in shawls, was it? And beyond the wharf where sometimes a rope of water
twisted though not for long, the password leading into danger
was “crotchet”—none of us was too sure of what it meant. We knew the reception
we’d get with it, though—a pattern of smiles opening down along the body,
gentle acquiescence to our most childish demands. We came there to be pampered
once in a while, and weren’t disappointed. But the lips of the fish, speaking
out of fog, told us another story, which we were bound to recall afterwards
when fires blazed and groups, both sitting and standing, collected around them.
There was this well you looked down into and saw shadows
of bodies caught in trees or washed up on the beach, but the townspeople
never acknowledged anything was amiss: they’d look fixedly at you
if you hinted otherwise, and walk swiftly away muttering something about pearls
or children down there, and how long it takes to really mature anyhow
and who is to be the judge of that? Years later you’d run into one of them at a party,
recall what it was, and there’d be only that odd, dank furor of attention,
a glimmer, and then the time frame would change.
In some way the woman knew she was the pivot here, yet it was enough just
being adorable in the sun. A memory of a wish would pass over, but it was a bird-shadow,
giving way to frank sunlight the next moment, wholesome in its steady decline
as all things that seek a way out must be—fresh as radishes or Lucerne.
It is time I explained certain tenets of the land
to you, but you see we can never revel in passing back and forth across it:
the understanding has got to be dumb so that others
will think there is a settlement here, and condone development and repairs,
until one day it will be just another paved-over place without sensors:
there is no cause for alarm in this, nor for complacency either, yet it must give way.
Negatively, the posthorn striates the morning gloom since all things have a beginning
in something, and it falls back on itself, to material shores, clusters
of formal and market gardens, and there there ought to be an end to it
while the firm old peasant stands, head bowed, cap in hand, but the shrill voices
of children run past him into the near wilderness, and all is scattered again.
My fear is like a small house: you can come visit me
but it will not go away, or will itself into an education; the bonds are loosed,
the pattern lost, and who is to say if I made it up
or someone who was here before and departed, leaving no trace
of his passing, no flicker of ashes in the grate? Or by that time
the note has changed; hereditary enemies greet each other
like long-lost friends; snows melt; the incomprehensible messages
of tree-frogs explicate each other; perspectives, by shifting, have subtly changed
the profiles that stand inside them, and we may not be put to the test
until further legal angles have been explored and resolved, a long way
from here, at some distant point in eternity. Then it will be time
to live off one’s resources, but for now one must do battle
with the elements, and stereotypes, and not expect to be called on the carpet
of others’ anxious dreams of what is best for us. Go back inside;
it’s still chilly out here; the fruit is unripe, and no one knows what time it is.
Pity the seer who gets it right, for he only abideth long,
but at the end is shut out or becomes the toy of others of like condition,
persistent animator. Do, and as I say, so shall the city even
take up the cry and track that one to his lair which is nowhere,
not even eight miles away. The drive, the lunch,
cost more than we knew then, bleary mountain ranges mobilized
against the flight of capital, yet it was hard to see how they could cost more even at home
and remain the same, nurse of the arcades to warn the soldiers of potential defeat,
for they came on, blinded by water. The day arrives for him to begin
to grow, but others
in the habitat are puzzled. Wasn’t it just such a gentleman, once,
who made the transition from scarecrow to sergeant at arms without anyone’s
being the wiser? Has he returned now to sup, yes you too get on with it as you must;
a place is made for him at the table, ere conversation is stilled and a heavy black hand
float above on the wall—no! for if it was my error it was a smallish one, he too then beside
us at the deck water pours into. For the one and only is a flower
of the mountaintop and cannot imagine the wrong we have done. They handed us over to it
and we were alone.
Soon all the animals acclaimed the victor, still in bed with pilgrims, drunk
with the wine of defeat, and easygoing, like the hero he never had the wisdom
to set out to be. And the line of supplicants led down to some graceless bushes
on fire, for virtue wears many masks. And when it came time to ask him
for the antidote, the dolmens appeared robed in white, and backlit,
and they thought it was an optical illusion. But it was a joke as old as the centipede
at the base of the morass. And seven questioners came, but they too fell to gazing
at the hearty snack he had left untouched, and were troubled. Then before you knew it
urchins ran screaming away, it had all been a prank! But some, I believe, were convinced,
and to this day swear that a beast had come out of that lair and looked around
and wandered apathetically away, seeing no reason to stay
on and become a weightlifter or
ouvreuse
, but the rest saw it for what it
was, a charade in which they had no part, and began backtracking. And great viaducts crashed
of their own accord; supertankers were upended; the cotillion was cancelled
in favor of life-saving exercises, but nobody knew how many, or where the implicit tone
or structure was leading. And they turned away stiff-necked. So we were able
to buy a few provisions from the locals, and that is how we got here, and why
we can’t stay but a minute, but will see you
on the other side, after the rain, God willing.
And so revived, forgotten, into the long day
angling its shadows at a wider denouement
each time. What would it think of us, if it could think:
mere signers of petitions, names in a long list? Are we tractable
or blotted into the day’s fabric like new boys’ shouts, the careless exhaust?
Will our pain matter too, and if so, when?
For one pesky minute the wilderness stuck out its tongue
and that was all. Too schooled in its ways to feel adrift for long, I sat
naked and disconsolate at a corner of a crevice, hat in hand, fishing,
for who can tell what God intends for us next? And if a little girl can call
and run, her dog twirl, why not be able to slide a leg over the board
barrier that disconnects us from all that is really happening, that hive
of activity as you think of it? From funky, overexposed moments to plain truths, it is
all there, actually, which isn’t to say you desire it yet.
Once the teeth have smiled and the lights been doused yet again, though, it’s like
stones caring, and you think, what if that big one up there fell on my head?
Life, read my life, would be over, the jig up, so what’s the point
even of moving off somewhere else? Something else could always trigger it.
But I don’t want to back off, partly because it isn’t
my nature. I think I’ll wait behind this old counter, maybe a noise
will remind me a thing isn’t right and I’ll get
in the groove again. Besides, the wind is a punisher. Tonight
all the old ghosts are back on the radio. How sad that some people have to be unhappy
to keep the rest of us barely alive, breathing, I think. I was
in my dressing room and didn’t hear it. It must have gone through the house like a bird’s swoop
yet I am innocent, my clothes, the ones I’ve hardly worn, barely on.
Now the official announcement, probably. These dustcatchers …Look, if you’re going to swear
you may as well leave, you can come with me, I’m leaving this place.
I’ve had it. Twenty centuries is too much. Just drifting, like a leaf, is more
than I bargained for, at the beginning when the tin was new, the smoke clean, and
a bramble’s red could scorch your heart, leaving you alone, and now it’s too late
for pie and others. All’s stranded. The pergola in the plaza beckons
still but it’s the smile
of a latecomer, all candy and cigarettes, no more insulation for the cheers and puffery
we assumed would be forthcoming until he sets down his tray and it was empty
except for a dirty napkin and an orange stick; whose business are you playing
with now, in front of the old microphone? Painted
a bit more lugubriously now, true, but the busboys, the brunch crowd want danger; zero in
on sloth; what’s a poor old fright to do? Suicide? No, I don’t think you…
It was then I discovered the pavements were made of the same flagstones found underseas
except there they were arranged more brightly in schools; here, clusters
are the thing. School is for kids. I think I’ll go, Miss MacGregor, honest
I will, this time or bust? You have cleared out my lounge…
There is no place to talk, no amphitheater
under which we can put our heads, deducing all-too-violent theorems, yet
I quite like it, one is active. Besides, didn’t I hear you say our daddy was once picked up
here by the secret police, and shaved heads are no longer the thing inside the gates,
and the stand of birch is there, but it is all, there is nothing left over
to eat a sandwich next to? If he had tried too soon, if the sun…But plus or minus
is unimportant; beware of negative thoughts. The ewe and the prunes are mine
anyway; insistence on finer points is the stuff highwaymen’s dreams are made on, until
the lost chord; it sounded so brittle back there. Come to my desk, we’ll talk it out
and by George the next time it will come round, in a dress, and we’ll all thank our
premonitions and the power of staying up alone
in a rain-lashed stadium with the TV on. So much power, at such a distance. But it glows.
All along I had known what buttons to press, but don’t
you see, I had to experiment, not that my life depended on it,
but as a corrective to taking the train to find out where it wanted to go.
Then when I did that anyway, I was not so much charmed as horrified
by the construction put upon it by even some quite close friends,
some of whom accused me of being the “leopard man” who had been terrorizing
the community by making howl-like sounds at night, out of earshot
of the dance floor. Others, recognizing my disinterest, nonetheless accused
me of playing mind-games that only the skilled
should ever attempt. My reply, then as always, was that ignorance
of the law, far from being no excuse, is the law, and we’ll see who rakes in
the chips come Judgment Day. I can see why someone who didn’t know me
might be kind of appalled at this flip attitude, but was unprepared for the chorus
of condemnatory shrieks from the entourage, as though
they
hadn’t been through
much of it themselves, and could cast the first stone. Once upon a time,
however, I was new to it and felt the land catching up to me
as on the outskirts of a town where one is seeking a night’s lodging
unprepared for whatever consequences may befall. I spent a week once
in someone’s house in a small town in Pennsylvania, without ever
learning whose it was, or addressing anyone by name. Another time, in Maine,
I found myself face to face with a wolf at sunset. So you see, my
rationale is that I’ve taken my lumps as well as enjoyed the good times
now and then, and don’t see what difference it makes to old soldiers,
of which I’m proud to count myself one. On at least one occasion
when I felt I hadn’t slaked the lime sufficiently, so to speak, it all seemed
to be going from bad to worse. I had my companions, and my kit,
and was ready to pack it in as soon as morning arrived, glad
to escape with my skin intact. But then a curious thing happens:
an old guy comes up to you and tells you, reading your mind, what a magnificent
job you’ve done, chipping away at the noble experiment, and then, abruptly,
you change your plans, backtrack, cancel the rest of the trip
that was going to promise so much good health and diversion for you; you suddenly
see yourself as others see you, and it’s not such a pretty sight either, but at
least you know now, and can do something to repair the damage, perhaps by
looking deeper into the mirror, more thoroughly
to evaluate the pros and cons of your success and smilingly refuse all
offers of assistance, which would be the wrong kind anyway, no doubt, and set out
on your own at the eleventh hour, into the vast yawn or cusp that sits
always next door. And when we have succeeded, not know what to do with it
except break it into shards that get more ravishing as you keep pounding them. See,