Thursday, December 30, 2021

Robert Hass

 Robert Hass in 2001.


The Nineteenth Century as a Song 


“How like a well-kept garden is your soul.” 
   John Gray’s translation of Verlaine 
Baudelaire’s butcher in 1861
shorted him four centimes
on a pound of tripe.
He thought himself a clever man
and, wiping the calves’ blood from his beefy hands,   
gazed briefly at what Tennyson called 
“the sweet blue sky.”

It was a warm day.
What clouds there were
were made of sugar tinged with blood.
They shed, faintly, amid the clatter of carriages   
new settings of the songs
Moravian virgins sang on wedding days.

    The poet is a monarch of the clouds 

Swinburne on his northern coast
trod,” he actually wrote, “by no tropic foot,” 
composed that lovely elegy 
and then found out Baudelaire was still alive 
whom he had lodged dreamily
in a “deep division of prodigious breasts.” 

   Surely the poet is monarch of the clouds.   
    He hovers, like a lemon-colored kite, 
   over spring afternoons in the nineteenth century

while Marx in the library gloom
studies the birth rate of the weavers of Tilsit 
and that gentle man Bakunin,
home after fingerfucking the countess,   
applies his numb hands
to the making of bombs.


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