Read The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly Online
Authors: Denis Johnson
We understand well that we must hold
our lives up in our arms like the victims
of solitary, terrible accidents,
that we must still hold our lives to their promises
and hold ourselves up to our lives
to be sure always they are larger,
wholer, realer than we ourselves, though we
must carry them.
We on this train with our lives in our laps
are waiting patiently for the next moment
and maybe we will be lifted away by our lives
as are the moments we rise up to hold with us,
or maybe we will just slacken
above our drinks in the club car chatting baseball,
all of us headed
to apply for the same job, all of us qualified,
all of us turning now into snowflakes
too delicate,
yet each holding in itself a tiny
stark particle of darkness
and weight, the heart's cinder
turning over.
The dust almost motionless
in this narrowness, this stillness,
yet how unlike a coffin
it is, sometimes letting a live one in,
sometimes out
and the air,
though paused, impends not a thing,
the silence isn't sinister,
and in fact not much goes on
at the Ariel Book Shop today,
no one weeps in the back
room full of books, old books, no one
is tearing the books to shreds, in fact
I am merely sitting here
talking to no one, no one being here,
and I am blameless.
More,
I am grateful for the job,
I am fond of the books and touch them,
I am grateful that King St. goes down
to the river, and that the rain
is lovely, the afternoon green.
If the soft falling away of the afternoon
is all there is, it is nearly
enough, just
let me hear the beautiful clear voice
of a woman in song passing
toward silence, and then
that will be all for me
at five o'clock.
I will walk
down to see the untended
sailing yachts of the Potomac
bobbing hopelessly in another silence,
the small silence that gets to be a long
one when the past stops talking
to you because it is dead,
and still you listen,
hearing just the tiny
agonies of old boats
on a cloudy day, in cloudy water.
Talk to it. Men are talking to it
by Cape Charles, for them it's the same
silence with fishing lines in their hands.
We are all looking at the river bearing the wreckage
so far away. We wonder how
the river ever came to be so
gray, and think that once there were
some very big doings on this river,
and now that is all over.
The moon swells
and its yellow darkens
nearer the horizon
and soon all
the aluminum rooftops
shall appear, orange
and distinct beside
the orange sun,
while the diamond
flares in its vacuum
within. It is simple
to be with the shovel,
thoughtless, inhabited
by this divorce,
it is good
the luminous
machinery, silenced,
waits, nice
that the conveyor
belts choked with sand
convey nothing.
When I return home to
coffee at
7:45 the lithe
young girls will be going
to high school, pulling
to their mouths stark
cigarettes through
Arizona's sunlight.
These last few months
have been awful, and when
around five the roosters
alone on neighboring
small farms begin
to scream like humans
my heart just lies down,
a stone.
This is the middle of the night.
There are no stars. It's been lightly snowing
a while, and it is silent. Many men are sleepless,
and for some, within, it is blazing noon.
The commander cries in the street dirt,
the apprentice rides on the mayor.
And yet one pool of light
is succeeded by another tonight,
as always, amid silence, beneath the lamps,
but even these impenetrable things
waver, and aren't quite real,
and we take no comfort from them.
For the fathers parade as leering women,
the entrails of pets drape the sewer-grates.
Our shadows are black stumps.
Some of us fire
with our mouths open,
amazed, firing.
The cup is overturned by the dagger
and blood dots the window-glass.
This is the way of it
for many men this quiet night of snow.
The snow descends in a sparkling light but many are blind,
walking out without jackets as if into the sun,
and they would not say anything of the snow,
but would say only this
of the weather, that something falling burns on them.
The supermarkets
of Los Angeles are blinding,
they are never closed,
they are defended
by the mountains
on the North, on
the Southeast by the
desert and on
the West by the large,
sad Pacific Ocean.
We enter such
brilliance as we entered
the world, without
shopping list, perfectly.
It is unpleasant,
but each is thinking
he may be here
to escape still worse.
What? There is nothing
out there other
than late winter,
Hollywood, the moments
before morning.
Â
We are never alone
here: above our heads, though
close enough nearly
to touch, is television,
in which may be disclosed
our own faces. They do not
become us. They are
the little faces we wore
as children, now wrinkled,
as if we were not grown
but only aged. We want
to cleanse those wrinkles
of accumulate filth,
these faces whose names
are being withheld, so tiny
in the relaxed fist of
Los Angeles, hearing
Los Angeles singing
to the murdered. We see
the eyes, and we see
what the eyes see,
we see the mouths moving
in utter silence, but of
course we know exactly
what the mouths are saying.
It is a fine, beautiful
and lovely time of warm dusk,
having perhaps just a touch
too much
enveloping damp;
but nice, with its idle strollers,
of whom I am one,
and it's true,
their capacity for good
is limitless, you can tell.
And thenâascending
over the roofs, the budded tips
of trees, in the twilight, very whole
and official,
its black
markings like a face
that has loomed in every city
I have knownâit arrives,
the gigantic yellow warrant
for my arrest,
one sixth the size
of the world. I'm speaking
of the moon. I would not give
you a fistful of earth for
the entire moon, I might as well tell you.
For across the futile and empty
street, in the excruciating
gymnasium, they
are commencingâ
degrees are being bestowed
on the deserving,
whereas I'm the incalculable
dullard in the teeshirt here.
Gentlemen of the moon:
I don't even have
my real shoes on. These are some reformed
hoodlum's shoes, from the Goodwill. Let
me rest, let me rest in the wake
of others' steady progress,
closing my eyes,
closing my heart,
shutting the door
in face after face
that has nourished me.
There is a part
of this poem where you must
say it with me, so
be ready, together we will make
it truthful, as there is gracefulness
even in the motioning of those
leafless trees, even in
such motion as descent. Fired,
I move downward through it all again
in an aquarium of debt, submerging
with the flowering electric
company, with March the 10th, 1971,
its darkness, justice and mercy
like clownfish, funnily striped.
Let them both as a matter of policy
redevour the light that
escapes them, Shakespeare
had just candles, lamps,
Milton had only the
dark, and what difference? as
poetry, like failure, is fathered
in any intensity of light, and light
in all thicknesses of darkness,
as your voice, you out there,
wakes now, please, to say
it with me: There
are descents more final, less graceful
than this plummeting
from employment; it is the middle of a false
thaw, the ice undercoating
of a bare branch is
in the midst of falling. Where
can it all be put except
in this poem, under us, breaking this fall,
itself falling
while breaking it? Look
at this line, stretching out, breaking even as it
falls to this next, like a suicide,
the weather singing
past his face, and arising to kill him
this first last line in weeks.
They hold out their hands crushed
by misfortunes and I kiss
my fingers, touch my lips.
When they talk I can't help it,
I recede,
the words fall down and break.
I shut all the windows of my house
and look out onto the green lawn and am ashamed.
Students, for me, life
is just the ice-pick lying
beside the letter from the County Clerk
of Court, and the hesitation
of a hand between them,
hand I can't get
my own hand out of.
And the worldâit's merely this place
of unfair vending machines
and women with short hair dyed red
who order another, and weep, and are unmasked.
Then later the world
is a repetitive street.
The hour is too late,
all, all is closed.
The red-haired woman touches the single
discolored tile in the bathroom.
She touches the marks the elastic
makes on her belly, her shoes awry.
She journeys
into the vast bed.
She reaches to the lamp
and makes it dark, relaxing.
She is not rising or even moving
but like many people at the verge of the dream
she feels as though she begins, now, to fly.
Several of those faces on the avenue
are blossoming
into that light thrown always toward them
off the interminable, blue
backstretches
they gaze upon hopefully.
And from what separate, enraged oceans
can they possibly expect
to save themselves,
and for what? At times I say, obviously
this window opens
upon the seas and the blindnesses, it is from
this very window
that the signal will at last be issued for
the taking of our own lives.
Other times I suspect
that among the trembling inner organs
of a captured bird, people
are climbing into buses in the morning fog,
and I observe
a woman, how the movements of her parts
conspire to propel her
from grayness into grayness, vague
injustices attending her
steps until I wonder
what
can they possibly mean, down there,
by their arms and legs?â
until I wonder
what the voices must mean when they are singing.
The manager lady of this
apartment dwelling has a face
like a baseball with glasses and pathetically
repeats herself. The man next door
has a dog with a face that talks
of stupidity to the night, the swimming pool
has an empty, empty face.
My neighbor has his underwear on
tonight, standing among the parking spaces
advising his friend never to show
his face around here again.
I go everywhere with my eyes closed and two
eyeballs painted on my face. There is a woman
across the court with no face at all.
Â
They're perfectly visible this evening,
about as unobtrusive as a storm of meteors,
these questions of happiness
plaguing the world.
My neighbor has sent his child to Utah
to be raised by the relatives of friends.
He's out on the generous lawn
again, looking like he's made
out of phosphorus.
Â
The manager lady has just returned
from the nearby graveyard, the last
ceremony for a crushed paramedic.
All day, news helicopters cruised aloft
going whatwhatwhatwhatwhat.
She pours me some boiled
coffee that tastes like noise,
warning me, once and for all,
to pack up my troubles in an old kit bag
and weep until the stones float away.
How will I ever be able to turn
from the window and feel love for her?â
to see her and stop seeing
this neighborhood, the towns of earth,
these tables at which the saints
sit down to the meal of temptations?
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And so onânap, soup, window,
say a few words into the telephone,
smaller and smaller words.
Some TV or maybe, I don't know, a brisk
rubber with cards nobody knows
how many there are of.
Couple of miserable gerbils
in a tiny white cage, hysterical
friends rodomontading about goals
as if having them liquefied death.
Maybe invite the lady with no face
over here to explain all these elections:
life. Liberty. Pursuit.
Â
Maybe invite the lady with no face
over here to read my palm,
sit out on the porch here in Arizona
while she touches me.
Last night, some kind
of alarm went off up the street
that nobody responded to.
Small darling, it rang for you.
Everything suffers invisibly,
nothing is possible, in your face.
Â
The center of the world is closed.
The Beehive, the 8-Ball, the Yo-Yo,
the Granite and the Lightning and the Melody.
Only the Incognito Lounge is open.
My neighbor arrives.
They have the television on.
It's a show about
my neighbor in a loneliness, a light,
walking the hour when every bed is a mouth.
Alleys of dark trash, exhaustion
shaped into residencesâand what are the dogs
so sure of that they shout like citizens
driven from their minds in a stadium?
In his fist he holds a note
in his own handwriting,
the same message everyone carries
from place to place in the secret night,
the one that nobody asks you for
when you finally arrive, and the faces
turn to you playing the national anthem
and go blank, that's
what the show is about, that message.
Â
I was raised up from tiny
childhood in those purple hills,
right slam on the brink of language,
and I claim it's just as if
you can't do anything to this moment,
that's how inextinguishable
it all is. Sunset,
Arizona, everybody waiting
to get arrested, all very
much an honor, I assure you.
Maybe invite the lady with no face
to plead my cause, to get
me off the hook or name
me one good reason.
The air is full of megawatts
and the megawatts are full of silence.
She reaches to the radio like St. Theresa.
Â
Here at the center of the world
each wonderful store cherishes
in its mind undeflowerable
mannequins in a pale, electric light.
The parking lot is full,
everyone having the same dream
of shopping and shopping
through an afternoon
that changes like a face.
But these shoppers of Americaâ
carrying their hearts toward the bluffs
of the counters like thoughtless purchases,
walking home under the sea,
standing in a dark house at midnight
before the open refrigerator, completely
transformed in the lightâ¦
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Every bus ride is like this one,
in the back the same two uniformed boy scouts
de-pantsing a little girl, up front
the woman whose mission is to tell the driver
over and over to shut up.
Maybe you permit yourself to find
it beautiful on this bus as it wafts
like a dirigible toward suburbia
over a continent of saloons,
over the robot desert that now turns
purple and comes slowly through the dust.
This is the moment you'll seek
the words for over the imitation
and actual wood of successive
tabletops indefatigably,
when you watched a baby child
catch a bee against the tinted glass
and were married to a deep
comprehension and terror.