WINDOW POEMS

1.

Window. Window.

The wind’s eye

to see into the wind.

The eye in its hollow

looking out

through the black frame

at the waves the wind

drives up the river,

whitecaps, a wild day,

the white sky

traveled by snow squalls,

the trees thrashing,

the corn blades driven,

quivering, straight out.

2.

The foliage has dropped

below the window’s grave edge,

baring the sky, the distant

hills, the branches,

the year’s greenness

gone down from the high

light where it so fairly

defied falling.

The country opens to the sky,

the eye purified among hard facts:

the black grid of the window,

the wood of trees branching

outward and outward

to the nervousness of twigs,

buds asleep in the air.

3.

The window has forty

panes, forty clarities

variously wrinkled, streaked

with dried rain, smudged,

dusted. The frame

is a black grid

beyond which the world

flings up the wild

graph of its growth,

tree branch, river,

slope of land,

the river passing

downward, the clouds blowing,

usually, from the west,

the opposite way.

The window is a form

of consciousness, pattern

of formed sense

through which to look

into the wild

that is a pattern too,

but dark and flowing,

bearing along the little

shapes of the mind

as the river bears

a sash of some blinded house.

This windy day

on one of the panes

a blown seed, caught

in cobweb, beats and beats.

4.

This is the wind’s eye,

Wendell’s window

dedicated to purposes

dark to him, a seeing into

days to come, the winds

of the days as they approach

and go by. He has come

mornings of four years

to be thoughtful here

while day and night

cold and heat

beat upon the world.

In the low room

within the weathers,

sitting at the window,

he has shed himself

at times, and been renewed.

The spark at his wrist

flickers and dies, flickers

and dies. The life in him

grows and subsides

and grows again

like the icicle throbbing

winter after winter

at a wrinkle in the eave,

flowing over itself

as it comes and goes,

fluid as a branch.

5.

Look in

and see him looking out.

He is not always

quiet, but there have been times

when happiness has come

to him, unasked,

like the stillness on the water

that holds the evening clear

while it subsides

—and he let go

what he was not.

His ancestor is the hill

that rises in the winter wind

beyond the blind wall

at his back.

It wears a patched robe

of some history that he knows

and some that he

does not: healed fields

where the woods come back

after a time of crops,

human history

done with, a few

ragged fences surviving

among the trees;

and on the ridges still

there are open fields

where the cattle look up

to watch him on his walks

with eyes patient as time.

The hill has known

too many days and men

grown quiet behind him.

But there are mornings

when his soul emerges

from darkness

as out of a hollow in a tree

high on the crest

and takes flight

with savage joy and harsh

outcry down the long slope

of the leaves. And nights

when he sleeps sweating

under the burden of the hill.

At the window

he sits and looks out,

musing on the river,

a little brown hen duck

paddling upstream

among the windwaves

close to the far bank.

What he has understood

lies behind him

like a road in the woods. He is

a wilderness looking out

at the wild.

6.

A warm day in December,

and the rain falling

steadily through the morning

as the man works

at his table, the window

staring into the valley

as though conscious

when he is not. The cold river

steams in the warm air.

It is rising. Already

the lowest willows

stand in the water

and the swift currents

fold round them.

The bare twigs of the elms

are beaded with bright drops

that grow slowly heavy

and fall, bigger

and slower than the rain.

A fox squirrel comes

through the trees, hurrying

someplace, but it seems

to be raining everywhere,

and he submits to wetness

and sits still, miserable

maybe, for an hour.

How sheltering and clear

the window seems, the dry fireheat

inside, and outside the gray

downpour. As the man works

the weather moves

upon his mind, its dreariness

a kind of comfort.

7.

Outside the window

is a roofed wooden tray

he fills with seeds for the birds.

They make a sort of dance

as they descend and light

and fly off at a slant

across the strictly divided

black sash. At first

they came fearfully, worried

by the man’s movements

inside the room. They watched

his eyes, and flew

when he looked. Now they expect

no harm from him

and forget he’s there.

They come into his vision,

unafraid. He keeps

a certain distance and quietness

in tribute to them.

That they ignore him

he takes in tribute to himself.

But they stay cautious

of each other, half afraid, unwilling

to be too close. They snatch

what they can carry and fly

into the trees. They flirt out

with tail or beak and waste

more sometimes then they eat.

And the man, knowing

the price of seed, wishes

they would take more care.

But they understand only

what is free, and he

can give only as they

will take. Thus they have

enlightened him. He buys

the seed, to make it free.

8.

The river is rising,

approaching the window

in awful nearness.

Over it the air holds

a tense premonition

of the water’s dark body

living where yesterday

things breathed. As he works

through the morning

the man has trouble

in the corner of his eye,

whole trees turning

in the channel as they go by,

the currents loaded

with the trash of the woods

and the trash of towns,

bearing down, and rising.

9.

There is a sort of vertical

geography that portions his life.

Outside, the chickadees

and titmice scrounge

his sunflower seed. The cardinals

feed like fires on mats of drift

lying on the currents

of the swollen river.

The air is a bridge

and they are free. He imagines

a necessary joy

in things that must fly

to eat. He is set apart

by the black grid of the window

and, below it, the table

of the contents of his mind:

notes and remnants,

uncompleted work,

unanswered mail,

unread books

—the subjects of conscience,

his yoke-fellow,

whose whispered accounting

has stopped one ear, leaving him

half deaf to the world.

Some pads of paper,

eleven pencils,

a leaky pen,

a jar of ink

are his powers. He’ll

never fly.

10.

Rising, the river

is wild. There is no end

to what one may imagine

whose lands and buildings

lie in its reach. To one

who has felt his little boat

taken this way and that

in the braided currents

it is beyond speech.

“What’s the river doing?”

“Coming up.”

In Port Royal, that begins

a submergence of minds.

Heads are darkened.

To the man at work

through the mornings

in the long-legged cabin

above the water, there is

an influence of the rise

that he feels in his footsoles

and in his belly

even when he thinks

of something else. The window

looks out, like a word,

upon the wordless, fact

dissolving into mystery, darkness

overtaking light.

And the water reaches a height

it can only fall from, leaving

the tree trunks wet.

It has made a roof

to its rising, and become

a domestic thing.

It lies down in its place

like a horse in his stall.

Facts emerge from it:

drift it has hung in the trees,

stranded cans and bottles,

new carving in the banks

—a place of change, changed.

It leaves a mystic plane

in the air, a membrane

of history stretched between

the silt-lines on the banks,

a depth that for months

the man will go from his window

down into, knowing

he goes within the reach

of a dark power: where

the birds are, fish

were.

11.

How fine

to have a long-legged house

with a many-glassed window

looking out on the river

—and the wren singing

on a winter morning! How fine

to sweep the floor,

opening the doors

to let the air change,

and then to sit down

in the freshened room,

day pouring in the window!

But this is only for a while.

This house was not always

here. Another stood

in its place, and weathered

and grew old. He tore it down

and used the good of it

to build this. And farther on

another stood

that is gone. Nobody

alive now knows

how it looked, though some

recall a springhouse

that is gone too now. The stones

strew the pasture grass

where a roan colt grazes

and lifts his head to snort

at commotions in the wind.

All passes, and the man

at work in the house

has mostly ceased to mind.

There will be pangs

of ending, and he regrets

the terrors men bring to men.

But all passes—there is even

a kind of solace in that.

He has imagined animals

grazing at nightfall

on the place where his house stands.

Already his spirit

is with them, with a strange attentiveness,

hearing the grass

quietly tearing as they graze.

12.

The country where he lives

is haunted

by the ghost of an old forest.

In the cleared fields

where he gardens

and pastures his horses

it stood once,

and will return. There will be

a resurrection of the wild.

Already it stands in wait

at the pasture fences.

It is rising up

in the waste places of the cities.

When the fools of the capitals

have devoured each other

in righteousness,

and the machines have eaten

the rest of us, then

there will be the second coming

of the trees. They will come

straggling over the fences

slowly, but soon enough.

The highways will sound

with the feet of the wild herds,

returning. Beaver will ascend

the streams as the trees

close over them.

The wolf and the panther

will find their old ways

through the nights. Water

and air will flow clear.

Certain calamities

will have passed,

and certain pleasures.

The wind will do without

corners. How difficult

to think of it: miles and miles

and no window.

13.

Sometimes he thinks the earth

might be better without humans.

He’s ashamed of that.

It worries him,

him being a human, and needing

to think well of the others

in order to think well of himself.

And there are

a few he thinks well of,

a few he loves

as well as himself almost,

and he would like to say

better. But history

is so largely unforgivable.

And now his mighty government

wants to help everybody

even if it has to kill them

to do it—like the fellow in the story

who helped his neighbor to Heaven:

“I heard the Lord calling him,

Judge, and I sent him on.”

According to the government

everybody is just waiting

to be given a chance

to be like us. He can’t

go along with that.

Here is a thing, flesh of his flesh,

that he hates. He would like

a little assurance

that no one will destroy the world

for some good cause.

Until he dies, he would like his life

to pertain to the earth.

But there is something in him

that will wait, even

while he protests,

for things turn out as they will.

Out his window this morning

he saw nine ducks in flight,

and a hawk dive at his mate

in delight.

The day stands apart

from the calendar. There is a will

that receives it as enough.

He is given a fragment of time

in this fragment of the world.

He likes it pretty well.

14.

The longest night is past.

It is the blessed morning of the year.

Beyond the window, snow

in patches on the river bank,

frosty sunlight on the dry corn,

and buds on the water maples

red, red in the cold.

15.

The sycamore gathers

out of the sky, white

in the glance that looks up to it

through the black crisscross

of the window. But it is not a glance

that it offers itself to.

It is no lightning stroke

caught in the eye. It stays,

an old holding in place.

And its white is not so pure

as a glance would have it,

but emerges partially,

the tree’s renewal of itself,

among the mottled browns

and olives of the old bark.

Its dazzling comes into the sun

a little at a time

as though a god in it

is slowly revealing himself.

How often the man of the window

has studied its motley trunk,

the out-starting of its branches,

its smooth crotches,

its revelations of whiteness,

hoping to see beyond his glances,

the distorting geometry

of preconception and habit,

to know it beyond words.

All he has learned of it

does not add up to it.

There is a bird who nests in it

in the summer and seems to sing of it—

the quick lights among its leaves

—better than he can.

It is not by his imagining

its whiteness comes.

The world is greater than its words.

To speak of it the mind must bend.

16.

His mind gone from the window

into dark thought, suddenly

a flash of water

lights in the corner of his eye:

the kingfisher is rising,

laden, out of his plunge,

the water still subsiding

under the bare willow.

The window becomes a part

of his mind’s history, the entrance

of days into it. And awake

now, watching the water flow

beyond the glass, his mind

is watched by a spectre of itself

that is a window on the past.

Life steadily adding

its subtractions, it has fallen

to him to remember

and old man who, dying,

dreamed of his garden,

a harvest so bountiful

he couldn’t carry it home

—another who saw

in the flaws of the moon

a woman’s face

like a cameo.

17.

For a night and a day

his friend stayed here

on his way across the continent.

In the afternoon they walked

down from Port Royal

to the river, following

for a while the fall of Camp Branch

through the woods,

then crossing the ridge

and entering the woods again

on the valley rim. They talked

of history—men who saw visions

of crops where the woods stood

and stand again, the crops

gone. They ate the cold apples

they carried in their pockets.

They lay on a log in the sun

to rest, looking up

through bare branches at the sky.

They saw a nuthatch walk

in a loop on the side of a tree

in a late patch of light

while below them the Lexington

shoved sand up the river,

her diesels shaking the air.

They walked along trees

across ravines. Now his friend

is back on the highway, and he sits again

at his window. Another day.

During the night snow fell.

18.

The window grows fragile

in a time of war.

The man seated beneath it

feels its glass turn deadly.

He feels the nakedness

of his face and throat.

Its shards and splinters balance

in transparence, delicately

seamed. In the violence

of men against men, it will not last.

In any mind turned away

in hate, it will go blind,

Men spare one another

by will. When there is hate

it is joyous to kill. And he

has borne the hunger to destroy,

riding anger like a captain,

savage, exalted and blind.

There is war in his veins

like a loud song.

He has known his heart to rise

in glad holocaust against his kind,

and felt hard in thigh and arm

the thew of fury.

19.

Peace. May he waken

not too late from his wraths

to find his window still

clear in its wall, and the world

there. Within things

there is peace, and at the end

of things. It is the mind

turned away from the world

that turns against it.

The armed presidents stand

on deadly islands in the air,

overshadowing the crops.

Peace. Let men, who cannot be brothers

to themselves, be brothers

to mulleins and daisies

that have learned to live on the earth.

Let them understand the pride

of sycamores and thrushes

that receive the light gladly, and do not

think to illuminate themselves.

Let them know that the foxes and the owls

are joyous in their lives,

and their gayety is praise to the heavens,

and they do not raven with their minds.

In the night the devourer,

and in the morning all things

find the light a comfort.

Peace. The earth turns

against all living, in the end.

And when mind has not outraged

itself against its nature,

they die and become the place

they lived in. Peace to the bones

that walk in the sun toward death,

for they will come to it soon enough.

Let the phoebes return in spring

and build their nest of moss

in the porch rafters,

and in autumn let them depart.

Let the garden be planted,

and let the frost come.

Peace to the porch and the garden.

Peace to the man in the window.

20.

In the early morning dark

he dreamed of the spring woodsflowers

standing in the ground,

dark yet under the leaves and under

the bare cold branches.

But in his dream he knew their way

was prepared, and in their time

they would rise up joyful.

And though he had dreamed earlier

of strife, his sleep became peaceful.

He said: If we, who have killed

our brothers and hated ourselves,

are made in the image of God,

then surely the bloodroot,

wild phlox, trillium and mayapple

are more truly made

in God’s image, for they have desired

to be no more than they are,

and they have spared each other.

Their future

is undiminished by their past.

Let me, he said in his dream,

become always less a soldier

and more a man,

for what is unopened in the ground

is pledged to peace.

When he woke and went out

a flock of wild ducks that had fed

on the river while he slept

flew off in fear of him.

And he walked, manly, into the new day.

He came to his window

where he sat and looked out,

the earth before him, blessed

by his dream of peace,

bad history behind him.

21.

He has known a tunnel

through the falling snow

that brought him back at dark

and nearly killed him on the way,

the road white as the sky

and the snow piling.

Mortality crept up close

in the darkness round his eyes.

He felt his death’s wrenched avatars

lying like silent animals

along the ditch. He thought

of his wife, his supper and his bed,

and kept on, and made it.

Now he sits at the window

again, the country hard and bright

in this winter’s coldest morning.

The river, unfrozen still,

gives off a breath of smoke

that flows upstream with the wind.

Behind him that burrow

along the wild road

grows certain in his mind,

leading here, surely. It has arrived

at the window, and is clarified.

Now he has learned another way

he can come here. Luck

taught him, and desire.

The snow lies under the woods

and February is ending.

Far off, another way, he hears

the flute of spring,

an old-style traveler,

wandering through the trees.

22.

Still sleeping, he heard

the phoebe call, and woke to it,

and winter passed out of his mind.

The bird, in the high branches

above the road-culvert mouth,

sang to what was sleeping,

two notes, clear and

harsh. The stream came,

full-voiced, down the rocks

out of the woods. The wood ducks

have come back to nest

in the old hollow sycamore.

The window has changed, no longer

remembering, but waiting.

23.

He stood on the ground

and saw his wife borne away

in the air, and suddenly

knew her. It is not the sky

he trusts her to, or her flight,

but to herself as he saw her

turn back and smile. And he

turned back to the buried garden

where the spring flood rose.

The window is made strange

by these days he has come to.

She is the comfort of the rooms

she leaves behind her.

24.

His love returns

and walks among the trees,

a new time lying beneath

the leaves at her feet.

There are songs in the ground

audible to her. She enters

the dark globe of sleep,

waking the tree frogs

whose songs star the silence

in constellations. She wakens

the birds of mornings. The sun

makes a low gentle piping.

The bloodroot rises in its folded

leaf, and there is a tensing

in the woods. There is

no window where she is.

All is clear where the light begins

to dress the branch in green.

25.

The bloodroot is white

in the woods, and men renew

their abuse of the world

and each other. Abroad

we burn and maim

in the name of principles

we no longer recognize in acts.

At home our flayed land

flows endlessly

to burial in the sea.

When mortality is not heavy

on us, humanity is—

public meaninglessness

preying on private meaning.

As the weather warms, the driven

swarm into the river,

pursued by whining engines,

missing the world

as they pass over it,

every man

his own mosquito.

26.

In the heron’s eye

is one of the dies of change.

Another

is in the sun.

Each thing is carried

beyond itself.

The man of the window

lives at the edge,

knowing the approach

of what must be, joy

and dread.

Now the old sycamore

yields at its crown

a dead branch.

It will sink like evening

into its standing place.

The young trees rise,

and the dew is on them,

and the heat of the day

is on them, and the dark

—end and beginning

without end.

27.

Now that April with sweet rain

has come to Port William again,

Burley Coulter rows out

on the river to fish.

He sits all day in his boat,

tied to a willow, his hat

among green branches,

his dark line curving

in the wind. He is one

with the sun.

The current’s horses graze

in the shade along the banks.

The watcher leaves his window

and goes out.

He sits in the woods, watched

by more than he sees.

What is his is

past. He has come

to a rootless place

and a windowless.

There is a wild light

his mind loses

until the spring renews,

but it holds his mind

and will not let it rest.

The window is a fragment

of the world suspended

in the world, the known

adrift in mystery.

And now the green

rises. The window has an edge

that is celestial,

where the eyes are surpassed.