Rothko’s Yellow

What I don’t understand is the beauty.

The last attempts of the rain, my shoulders

aching from all afternoon with the ladders

and the hour with her. I watch the rainbow

until I have to focus so hard I seem

to create it. Thinking of her watching

this storm, wanting him. This lightning.

This glut in the gutters. Now only

the yellow left. Now the blue

seeped out. The purple gone. The red

gone. People downstairs playing Bach,

the quiet, attenuated Bach. She must

have tried and tried. The holes drilled in.

The small man in the movie who looked

like laughter would kill him. The carnation

farmer who left snared birds for the woman

he loved. Who would hang himself after

stitching her ribbon to his chest.

What I don’t understand is the beauty.

I remember the theater in Berkeley where

we sat eating cucumbers, watching the colossal

faces played over with colossal loss.

I would get off early and meet her outside,

her hair always wet. All last night

I listened to the students walk by until 3,

only the drunk left, the rebuffed and

suddenly coupled. What did I almost

write down on the pad by my bed

that somehow lowered me into sleep? One morning

when she and I still lived together,

the pad said only, cotton. Cotton.

Sometimes it’s horrible, the things said

outright. But nothing explains the beauty,

not weeping and shivering on that stone bench,

not kneeling by the basement drain.

Not remembering otherwise, that scarf she wore,

the early snow, her opening the door

in the bathing light. She must have tried

and tried. What I don’t understand is the beauty.