Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
His behavior was affecting her marriage.
She chose never to introduce her children to Durell.
Perhaps he had a mental illness, perhaps he inventedâ
perhaps, perhaps, perhapsâ
but no, she pressed on, perhaps it
was
his sexuality, he was
too
sensitive . . .
“People can be cruel,” she said.
She felt he had never adjusted to cruelty
as if cruelty was something that one needed to adjust to.
Later, he was picked up for charges of soliciting sex.
And the more she told me, the less I knew.
All about us, a stillness began to displace the light
and Durell was there, and no longer there, staining that stillness.
After an estrangement ends there comes a great stillness,
the greater the estrangement the greater the stillness.
Across the parking lot, a gate rattled.
I told her he often said his life had been a failure,
I tried to convince him otherwise, but he never believed me.
Half a century ago, she broke off contact.
Her protracted estrangement made her look ill.
“Please, please,” she said.
Her voice trailed off,
although what she was pleading for was not clear.
No, no, she did not want her grandchildren to know.
Subtle variations of Florida evening light withdrew with finality.
The pool brightened with moonlight, the color of snow.
The pool was still.
Darkness spilled everywhere.
There we were,
a man and a woman sitting in cushioned lounge chairs,
as if the world would always be an endless pair of separated things.
We did not touch each other.
We were still a long time.
from
Poetry
Wax
Family portrait with French Revolution and cancer
Tussaud is said to have knelt herself at the cooling bath
to mold him: Marat, “just after he had been killed
by Charlotte Corday. He was still warm, and his bleeding body
and the cadaverous aspect of his features presented a picture
replete with horror.”
Now, the dripping head remains exactly
as it once looked, according to the placards, and to which
the famous painting can attest,
though what one says and what is history
are each rarely certain: here are only fragments
of what is left: the white sheet swaddling
the head, white body and bath, lank arm splayed
and the pallid face with its Egyptian cheekbonesâ
In the painting,
death comes in the form of a slight slit
delicately emblazoned on the right
pectoral: how tiny must have been that organ
for such a small wound to finish him. Not
like this wax man's heart, which must be large,
dangerous, intractable, worse than yours as the knife's great size
and placement indicate. Death
is not a small thing here. It takes work
to make it exact. It takes diligence.
Look,
the doctors said,
as they took us in the room.
The new cells with the old ones.
And they held the little chart up to the light.
*
Hands snatching in the plaster, the eye
sockets, lip cleft: all Tussaud could take back to reconstruct
cire perdue
's inverse procedures: to coat the wax
on plaster instead, favor the viscous
over molten metals; Tussaud's uncle, Curtius, taught her,
taking out the little calipers and stylus, looking
at the body and only seeing it, stopping thought
in order to make it spectacle. “Curtius
has models of kings, great writers, beautiful women,”
noted Mercier. “One sees the royal family
seated at his artificial banquetâThe crier calls from the door:
Come in, gentlemen, come see the grand banquet; come in,
c'est tout
comme à Versailles!
”
Come and look. The king
is seated by the emperor. He is just your size
though his clothes are finer, and now you see the long face
is less attractive than imagined, the crab-like hand curls
over plated fork and knife: you are so close, you can walk beside him,
pointing out the little similarities, the curved
and moistened lip, mild smile, fat pads
of the cheeks: all of it so close it hurts the eyes to pinpoint
just where the light is coming from, to give it shape,
distance by giving it a perspective altogether
different from yourself.
List all the family members
with a history of this condition.
Today,
*
on the first floor of Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum
you can find celebrities and sports stars, every politician of note
though you will not see these same figures five years in a row:
there is a death even for the deathless, objects
that depend on reputation to survive,
while the bodies in the chambered basement fever
in their blood-stained gowns. They can live forever
inside our terror, as in Florence, where once they sculpted
skeletoned ex-votos out of wax, oil-stained skins
appearing to stretch even as they stayed frozen, recalling Dante's belief
that the medium's malleability would retain whatever power
could be impressed upon it: a face, a ring, a life force.
It was a plague year. Churches
were filled with offerings: friezes of figures
writhing with disease, infants staked
in their parents' grips. The wax gives each body
illness' vivid texture, yellow skin, purple skin, skin that blackens
at the joints, all the colors corruption takes
as the bodies too collapse themselves to shelves
on shelves of flesh: the family become a single,
swarming mass of misery, as each ex-voto was itself
a prayer but altogether became a panic:
Take this shape, take this
body that is better than myself, that can be
burned down, melted, added to, can accrue
new filigree and detail: this one will survive
where the other won't.
Look: the wax
shares our secrets of birth and age, but unlike us keeps renewal
stored inside the cells.
The doctors
took out their pens. They wrote down all the family
members with this condition: grandmother, grandfather,
aunt, uncle, father, mother, who
was it among us who hadn't been touched? There
the ring of candles smoking gold beside the casket.
And so we looked and looked, the mother's
father's face frozen in reposeâ
You have to look,
the doctors said. And turned
*
the human into map, drew bodies that could be
chart and information traced through centuries of experiment.
How many bodies to make the one body, endow the corpse
with attributes of life?
To keep it mute, intemporalâ
And so the medieval
manuscript's
écorchés
playing the lute, riding horses,
striding their bloodless legs into town. Here
one skeleton tilts a skull in his palm, his own bone face tilted toward us:
Genius lives on
while all else is material
scrolled atop the vellum in its little,
withering snicker: it is all material here: all
answer and answer for the doctors,
and when the manuscript wasn't enough they scraped
the hive's glass scales with a knife.
They pounded and shaped, they took skulls
and poured on paraffin for skin
to give the blank bone personality again.
The wax could go where the mind was stuck.
It abandoned the map.
You're
a visual person,
the doctors said.
Imagine this,
and pointed to a color, a stain, an opening.
I'd needed more and so they gave me more. They made
an anatomy of me.
*
In the museum, families want to take their pictures
with the murderers. They pace
the chamber's cavern to stare into black pockets
of shock, cave after cave:
it was Tussaud who thought to bring in the death,
though hadn't it always been here?
Here is the killer with his handsome face.
Here is Manson, Bundy, Hitler,
the Terror's row of heads still spiked on stakes:
you can see into the cavern
of the jaw, and what is that feeling
its way out through the neckhole, these dead
of the dead, these never-dead,
where to look disperses what we think we see
the second it enters us?
The world is all brain, and does it matter that the thing before us
is a replication?
Even the wax only holds its breathâ
And here is pancreas and breast, ovary, uterus, veins
that spangle fragmentary ropes, a negative
of this view outside my window where snow
on the hills creeps downward, turns fall trees in their fog beauty
necrotic, ghost.
The code, simply, degenerates. On a table,
*
the head of Robespierre, Fouquier de Tinville.
They are here still, some personality crawls
like an animal into its tiny hole, fits itself there, invites us in,
then repels us: back, back: we are the kings here still and you
cannot join us, and when they marched the busts of the ministers
from Curtius's house (“They demanded,” he wrote Tussaud, “insistently
the citizens”), the busts were burned, were violently attacked.
The real has no limits, and still, is full of limit.
We think the heart matters. We think the breath,
too, and they do, that is what the wax says, and then
denies it: you are a king, too, and if you have loved him so long
by his symbol, here is something more exact.
Otherwise, why keep a real
guillotine crouched in the corner, why real
period clothes, real blood-stained shoes, no glass
so that when you go to the bathroom later
you are surprised to see the face in the mirror
twist into its expressions?
And the long corridors opened, and the doctors moved their hands
across my mother's breasts, her hips, they marked on charts the places
that were familiar. We used to joke
about the pesticides her father used, little silver canister swinging
at his hip. You could hear how close he was
in the garden by that panicked clatter, the stupid
immigrant. The tomatoes were silver after he'd finished.
And the radiation after X's polio. And the pills
the doctors pushed for Y. And the chemicals with which they infused
our napkins, our pencils, our mattresses, our milkâ
*
Look how the wax imbibes our novelty and richness.
It takes on some of our power as well, the blood paint
of the Christ statue seeming
to run, to swell. For centuries they argued
how to divide him, man or God, till Calenzuoli shaped
a wax man's head then split the face
to find it: scalp flayed over the intact portion of his crown, flesh halo
where the passive gray eyes flicker and the stripped muscles gleam.
What is man is all red and red, tendon, cartilage
glimmering with a sheen of beef fat,
while the rest is the expression
of a patience endured through pain: our image
of the image of Christ, the exactness
of his interiority, the wet formulations of the mind.
“Eye, nose, lip / the tricks