Afternoon at the Mall
I stand by the Walt Whitman Mall,
its entrance just a stone's throw
from the young poet's cradle.
His birth house stands preserved
on the crammed highway's other side,
a tiny refuge of culture
amid the sprawl of Route 110.
Could that lover of all things
have stretched his embrace so wide
to hug this leviathan bearing his name?
Leaves of Grass was painted
all around its concrete perimeter,
but now his barbaric yawp is stifled
by water valves and fast food signs
clamoring against the words.
I'm here to buy a CD player
that will work in the shower.
It seems our second son
can't endure the ten long minutes
required to cleanse himself
without the company of music.
An indulgence to be sure,
but my wife and I do it gladly,
knowing well his two siblings
will never visit in our old age.
I've been reading poetry,
and I find dead writers' images
springing at me everywhere.
A travel agency poster
shows a white-capped Irish shore
and I see a woman's body
interred by Hardy in drier ground,
her spirit escaping each night
to commune with the sea.
The girl at the Starbucks counter
where I stop for cappuccino
is dimpled, darling, nineteen.
I think of Berryman's dining woman
filling her compact & delicious body
as I fall, ridiculous, in love.
Amidst The Sharper Image junk,
I find the boy's wet music box
and can't help but ponder
Ammons' vision of human detritus
which all this must become,
disgorged to nature's current.
At the Victoria's Secret window,
I pause (as always) to inspect
their huge cardboard goddesses,
but find myself distracted
by words of imprisonment and rage
intoned by Plath and Sexton.
I'm burning to write myself,
but rarely know of what.
Privileged soul that I am,
my sorrows are lamentably small.
I suffer only the minimum anguish
required for Cowboy Junkies fans.
I am long resigned to my time,
which feels to me distressing
but altogether logical.
I think of my cousin's son,
a gentle soul now gone two weeks.
A seizure killed him at seventeen,
we learned of the horror days ago.
My daughter cried when I told her;
he had covered her, laughing, with burrs
at my aunt's stable when they were eight.
I saw him last at twelve,
a quick grin and cornsilk hair,
in his new home in High Point.
Though I faintly mourn this boy,
I wish I could write
from his mother's heart,
and infinitely more
than the lines on the card
I hoped for just a moment
might salve her terrible gaping wound.
I'm neither immersed in nature
nor irreparably estranged.
Years of numbers blunted my soul
and I want to ask Wallace Stevens
how he sold all those policies
and still wrote glowing poems.
It falls to me now, I think,
to be a writer of small things,
having little talent for metaphor,
less for images bleeding truth,
the imagination of an ox.
I will never, sadly,
envision the airborne soul of a jester
courting the heart of a queen
(nor express it perfectly if I could),
but still, there is a grudging joy
in turning the inside out
with what meager verse I can.
The overpriced toy in tow,
I drive home and think,
I will ready myself. One day,
there will be tragedy enough
and perhaps I can do it justice.
Posted by Anna Belle
at 5:44 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 14 May 2005 6:25 PM EDT