THE FIGURED WHEEL

The figured wheel rolls through shopping malls and prisons,

Over farms, small and immense, and the rotten little downtowns.

Covered with symbols, it mills everything alive and grinds

The remains of the dead in the cemeteries, in unmarked graves and oceans.

Sluiced by salt water and fresh, by pure and contaminated rivers,

By snow and sand, it separates and recombines all droplets and grains,

Even the infinite sub-atomic particles crushed under the illustrated,

Varying treads of its wide circumferential track.

Spraying flecks of tar and molten rock it rumbles

Through the Antarctic station of American sailors and technicians,

And shakes the floors and windows of whorehouses for diggers and smelters

From Bethany, Pennsylvania to a practically nameless, semi-penal New Town

In the mineral-rich tundra of the Soviet northernmost settlements.

Artists illuminate it with pictures and incised mottoes

Taken from the Ten Thousand Stories and the Register of True Dramas.

They hang it with colored ribbons and with bells of many pitches.

With paints and chisels and moving lights they record

On its rotating surface the elegant and terrifying doings

Of the inhabitants of the Hundred Pantheons of major Gods

Disposed in iconographic stations at hub, spoke and concentric bands,

And also the grotesque demi-Gods, Hopi gargoyles and Ibo dryads.

They cover it with wind-chimes and electronic instruments

That vibrate as it rolls to make an all-but-unthinkable music,

So that the wheel hums and rings as it turns through the births of stars

And through the dead-world of bomb, fireblast and fallout

Where a few doomed races of insects fumble in the smoking grasses.

It is Jesus oblivious to hurt turning to give words to the unrighteous,

And also Gogol’s feeding pig that without knowing it eats a baby chick

And goes on feeding. It is the empty armor of My Cid, clattering

Into the arrows of the credulous unbelievers, a metal suit

Like the lost astronaut revolving with his useless umbilicus

Through the cold streams, neither energy nor matter, that agitate

The cold, cyclical dark, turning and returning.

Even in the scorched and frozen world of the dead after the holocaust

The wheel as it turns goes on accreting ornaments.

Scientists and artists festoon it from the grave with brilliant

Toys and messages, jokes and zodiacs, tragedies conceived

From among the dreams of the unemployed and the pampered,

The listless and the tortured. It is hung with devices

By dead masters who have survived by reducing themselves magically

To tiny organisms, to wisps of matter, crumbs of soil,

Bits of skin, microscopic flakes, which is why they are called “great,”

In their humility that goes on celebrating the turning

Of the wheel as it rolls unrelentingly over

A cow plodding through car-traffic on a street in Iaşi,

And over the haunts of Robert Pinsky’s mother and father

And wife and children and his sweet self

Which he hereby unwillingly and inexpertly gives up, because it is

There, figured and pre-figured in the nothing-transfiguring wheel.