Read Flow Chart: A Poem Online
Authors: John Ashbery
unexamined. It was all because I told him he should change his shirt. He got mad
and went out and I didn’t see him again for thirty years, by which time both of us had aged
considerably but were still reasonably attractive, some might even say more so. I
reminded him of the shirt thing and he just laughed, said supermarkets sell them now
and besides you shouldn’t worry about a little dirt, it’s the spice of life, he said.
And we had set aside Siberia
for us and for a few beloved friends
but the bureaucracy and the logistics of it all defeated us, why we were tied
up in red tape for 2½ years and after that I just wanted out, no
place is worth that much worry. Besides it’s quite quiet and confusing at home, thank you
very much. Yet I was still hung up on his idea of me, I thought I was becoming that person
I didn’t even know or want to know very much about, and all of my
déjà-vus were ones that could have occurred to him. Still, life is reasonably absorbing
and there’s a lot of nice people around. Most days are well fed
and relaxing, and one can improve one’s mind a little
by going out to a film or having a chat with that special friend; and before
you know it it’s time to brush your teeth and go to bed. Why then, does that feeling
of emptiness keep turning up like a stranger you’ve seen dozens of times, out-of-focus
usually, standing toward the rear of the bus or fishing for coins at the newsstand? I’m
sure it’s all coincidence, but it
does have a way of rattling things, like a constant draft through the house, rustling
papers, riveting one’s eye on the clock. So what’s
to feel nervous about? We all know that we have to live for a certain time and then
unfortunately we must die, and after that no one is sure what happens. Accounts vary. But we
most of us feel we’ll be made comfortable for much of the time after that, and get credit
for the (admittedly) few nice things we did, and no one is going to make too much
of a fuss over those we’d rather draw the curtain over, and besides, we can’t see
much that was wrong in them, there are two sides to every question. Yet the facts
fascinate one, we become one of those persons who are only satisfied with thoroughly
reliable information—the truth, if there ever could be such a thing. Our journey
flows past us like ice chunks, maybe it is we that are stationary.
O so much God to police everything and still be left over to flatter one’s
harmless idiosyncrasies, the things that make us
us
, which is precisely
what is fading like paint on a sign, no matter how much one pretends it’s the same
as yesterday. And children talk to us—
that
, surely, must be a plus?
It’s the lunatic frequency this time. One man, taking his kids to the ball
game, reverted and was found playing cards at a friend’s house. In spring the tips of
the apple branches graze the trailer and it’s time for a new round
robin of progressive delicacies and returned thank-you letters. Out in the open
by the gym it was never a question of keep your pants on we’re all getting someplace, getting
to be someone. Those were perspectives too limned to shoot along and the people thanked
the baseball player who invented them. Inactivity is as a syrup to these people, some of them,
they bank on mistrust and in the end are amazed to find their land has been overgrazed
by herds of yak, each of the quadrupeds spaced almost equidistant from its
nearest neighbor, as far as the eye can see, to Labrador and beyond
into the topaz twilight of the Urals. Oh some will say
you can’t trust them let alone see them coming, let alone avoid a collision
with jarring implications for the future of humanity. Even its garish exterior
isn’t as uncompromising as one might
at first conclude, and then they have ashtrays and can see, no one makes extraordinary
demands on them as long as they go on living, and in April
that doesn’t seem an impossible feat. To those residing on the outskirts of some
city or suburb it gets to be even more of a tease—were
they
included in the survey, and,
if so, who are they? Shooting-gallery ducks waiting to be flattened, probably.
What if one crosses the sea
to descend at the pier where one’s sweetheart bade farewell to one several years ago and finds
her there to greet one, not all that changed? And if the parents of both parties pronounce it
a suitable match, why there you are, another union has been consecrated, another
two people been driven from loneliness into the reciprocal dawn of each other’s arms
as if it were long ago, and tidings spread throughout the land and ordinary people
came to appreciate and savor and go back into the narrow, closetlike conundrum of their own
slender existences and be thankful there was for once something to talk about and then
mutually agree on. A pact with the forces that be—nothing less, and that
is saying a good deal. So in all eras bargains have been struck,
horns blown, and in some strange, silly way each of us is the stronger for it. We made
our tea and then we drank it. This is an honorable instance of how shame can disappear
in the dust and the confusion, the aftermath. And if an executive
can teeter on his perch all day long from dawn to dusk, a wren
can say to him, why don’t you go on an organized outing, stop
fooling yourself, this world-situation isn’t nonsense though
real politik
may not be
the accurate term for it either, so why explode like a timebomb that was set long ago
and may no longer be operable? But you see so many
of us are like that bird, that man I mean, that for but a few can life resonate with
anything like serious implications. So many were hung out to dry, or, more accurately, to rot.
And these marginalia—what other word is there for them?—are the substance of the text,
by not being allowed to fit in. One can proceed like a ghost
along corridors and find that doors are closed to one, and then
what good is being invisible? It all goes to show how our parents taught us many things,
including the right one, that we should untie
gently, like a knotted shoelace, and then little expressions of relief occur in the whorls,
and many things, incipient ones, besides. Yet on the shoals of this time
everyone believes himself righteous and lost, that the view is only a way
in all directions, and one must have a timepiece to unravel ramifications that
in fact do not exist, but like a gold toothpick are merely on hand to see that they
get talked about and maybe some club will invite one of them to speak. It is an air
strangely purged of magnolias, and quicklime, and anyone
can be called to take a seat. Best to enjoy it,
not turn up in the unwritten part as a miser or scavenger few would have taken seriously
as a person, but just as many might have feared. We live in an age when terror
opens like breadfruit and one
must
pick and choose—the seeds and proverbs just
aren’t that numerous. Everybody must vote. Everybody’s vote must be accepted into the
tilting radio tower that is collapsing in one’s own best interest in one
dark swoop of mingled horror and relaxed apprehension: to accomplish
anything more would be a joke, yet
the boy
still stands there, hasn’t gone away; by any
other standards a misadventure yet one is going to be firm and tame and positive
in searching out the old prescription, scratching one’s
first initial idly in the wood of the door and only then
going away, to be something else in some other town when newspapers bearing
that day’s date finally arrive and the citizenry, perplexed, still goes about its business
carrying news of new situations into inaccessible corners of this bland
and stultified universe, only to be someone
isn’t then their top priority: getting to be tall in late afternoon is.
The arrogance of these people! Anyone who’s been around understands, and that
includes most of us: barristers…Out of one’s loneliness it’s hard not to forgive
the girl who longs to be seen, and the guy who wishes only to be left alone. Forest
dithers protect us a lot of the time, but for those moments when one is thrust willy-
nilly into the spotlight, then oh dear! I wish I had something more sizable to say—
couldn’t my part be rewritten? But that’s over too before long. And the forest comes to
seem more like a commodity, somewhere one can live and tie rope around oneself.
The annals, if there are any, transform this into glamour and chrysoprase, two
adjacent keys of a piano pressed down one after the other. And one’s modesty—
well it’s all here, in this manila folder. I was going to talk about that, tree
of the deep, tree of being beautiful of, of lost promise and hopes
that still flutter in the distance, and you know somehow…But in the end it got mistreated,
the happy moments streaked with sadness, but perhaps they always were.
Perhaps it says a great deal that there were any, and so
out of tune with the rest that was going on, like a canary in a zoo, and I said
why give any guarantees if it can be rescinded without notice, if entreaties are to
become comments, and you know what he said, he said, well, it’s reasonable for you to expect that
but it’s not unreasonable for anyone else to pay it no mind, so there! I was
crushed. The one person I thought understood. But it’s all right, he can go on paying,
meanwhile I am scarcely alone, though it
is
lonesome. However, when I start
feeling blue I can just stand up like everyone else and lay my cards on the table: look,
it says so, it’s all here, written in this book. So I’m never completely at a loss,
only a little disconcerted, thrashing about, sometimes. In the rival cesspool
of other nations they may think they have it better, but I know that here the
uncertainty is pure. And so I often take the afternoon off, read, write or gaze
intently out of the window for long periods of time. And then you take tea
in the afternoon, that is you make it and then drink it. Oh I’m so sorry, golly, how
nothing ever really comes to fruition. But by the same token I am relieved of manifold responsibilities,
am allowed to delegate authority, and before I know it, my mood
has changed, like a torn circus poster that becomes pristine again in reverse cinematography,
and these moments of course matter, and fall by the wayside in a positive sense.
Perplexed by myopia one still enjoys it, and in the autumn of life cackles somewhat unrestrainedly
before writing off one’s accurate perception
of all that has gone before in the heroic period when books are friends. Nature
wants you to do it. No seism infinitesimal enough not to register in the growing
tornado of disapproval when mountains crash in the rubble, electricity bisects the sky, and
shrill ululations burst forth from caverns deep in the earth’s surface. But I’m
getting ahead of my story, we’re talking about how you, a wanderer, like it,
and how to escape. Oh my dear, I’ve tried that. But if it interests you
you can browse through this catalog and, who knows, perhaps come up with a solution that will apply
to your complicated case, just conceivably, or perhaps you know someone better informed
in the higher echelons where the view is distant and severe,
the ground blue as steel.
But how trivial the music. All this. Yet it is where part of the gender first starts to
emerge and become a blur. The various members
of both sexes never seem to get hurt: theirs is a life that drifts peaceably along
as on a stream and they can wave
to each other like boats and join in the fun and never be forgotten. Possibly
a door opens far down in the wall to admit a lover
who as silently departs later. Possibly there is more to it all than this,
but if we can decipher even what the fair-minded man wants us to, what about the rest,
poverty and disclaimers? And who sees the mountain-mad man through goatshine
and never confesses to an early blunder concealed, to having left a child in the cold once?
And as they marginally edge each other, new and good truths and others, older
and not so good, begin to appear along the bicycle-trail of their itinerary
through space, here on earth. One was a Spanish longshoreman’s daughter,
a laughing girl, who, when told the truth, deliberately spat on it. Another,
young too, and in the full flower of “the devil’s beauty,” had good cause to come up and grab
an arm, an elbow resting on a newspaper as it happened, and tickle the thing
half to death. And in the interval of slide, or portamento, a lot of laughing does
get to be heard, only it’s like you’re not doing it, it’s the boys
on the other side of the ridge obeying their zeal again. The moon abruptly decides to set
and kids pester their parents for more firecrackers, in the crevices, where eyes
lately peeked out—O bored hero,
why not return to earth for a while? We have forgiven thee
what was construed as negligence rather than rancor, so in return we
should be taught by thy knee. Later when she comes to throw out the table scraps there it will be,
a little sliver of haven made and purposely rigged for you
to come and go many times without noticing, slinging your coat over your shoulder