POEMS FOR A
REMARKABLE WOMAN
BY
ROBERT WALLACE PAOLINELLI
CONTENTS
Preface....................................................i
A Beautiful
Woman..........................................I
Sotto
Voce................................................II
Fish
Story...............................................III
Poems.....................................................IV
A Kiss of
Venus............................................V
My Hand
Glides............................................VI
Veiled
Isis..............................................VII
Pro Vita Vivere.........................................VIII
On the 17th of Athyr......................................IX
Frankenstein...............................................X
I Love
Mystery............................................XI
Rose Thorn...............................................XII
I Do Not Write These Words
Lightly......................XIII
Sea
Madness..............................................IXV
Somewhere in
Bavaria......................................XV
Things...................................................XVI
I End This Book........................................
XVII
Preface
A poet does not have a choice.
When the Muse calls, he must go.
Writing a poem for a beautiful
woman is the supreme call of the
Muse.
A gift from Heaven must not be refused.
When the Muse leaves,
the
poet must stop.
Should there be a word here or there
that is, some how, out of place,
the
same way a curl is out of place
from
underneath a star-studded hat,
worn
on new year's day, then forgive
my
poetic shortcomings.
I
A beautiful woman
should wear a ring
with the image of a
beautiful queen:
A silver Nofretete
on your finger.
II
SOTTO VOCE E
PARLATO PIANISSIMO
*
Here is the mystery
of my heart. The door
to the treasure
chamber is open.
It is filled with emeralds and rubies; it
is filled with diamonds and
precious crystals; gold
earrings-a silver filigreed box
full for your ears
and worked marble seashell bowls
filled with strands of
pearls to adorn your neck.
It is the poet's hidden chamber. No
one can ever steal it from him,
for it is in
his words. Take freely from it; take twice, for this
treasure can never be depleted.
Yet deeper look. Come, with a small
candle I'll lead you down
passageways
to times remote, times of
archetypes and the
beginning of human traditions,
the first
utterance of human speech,
the first voice of love, the
first voice
of the appreciation for the
universe and
the sanctity of life, the first
voice of
angst when the pure vision was
lost.
Watch how the candle flickers and casts
shadows on the walls which
writhe and
undulate to the pulse of life
and the
changing codes of genes and
chromosomes dancing
in DNA, linked, chained to the
cosmos in cells and
fluids, flowing through our
hearts and arteries.
Watch your step as we meander through
the maze to get us back to the
treasure chamber,
into the light of glittering
things and reflections
of your face on a polished
Etruscan mirror.
III
The trout was very fat
and it swam back and
forth in the fish tank
in the Chinatown fish market.
A poet bought the
trout and cooked it
for dinner.
The trout did not give
up its life in vain.
No;
for on that very eve the poet wrote
many poems about clouds,
mountain streams
surrounded by pines and
Douglas firs.
The poet's cat got the
leftovers and smacked
its chops and sat
contented in front
of the fireplace.
Th cat in satisfaction was
the topic of a poem; so
the trout was the raison d'etre
of the satisfied cat poem.
The ants, living under the
baseboard by the outside garbage
can,
found their way to the
bones and fins and ate
therefrom; and so the
inspiration of this poem is
from the ants and the
last supper I witnessed.
The trout fed all of us:
The man, the cat, the ants.
And it feeds the poet's art,
long after the fact.
IV
Poems,
by their nature,
want to be written,
want to be used.
To have a poem and
use it for something
else is to have missed
the point.
A poem
should be used
for what it is
best suited for.
The poem wants to be
written the way it was
intended; the poet
has no choice, for the poem
causes its own activation.
The nature of a poem and
how it comes to be is
independent of the poet:
it comes in
its own time
the way a baby
is born: when
it's ready.
Free from predestinations, fates,
destinies, karmas and the like,
the poem happens whether
one is prepared for it or not.
Ah, how the poet loves
this mystery and this magic.
V
A KISS OF VENUS
*
Many years ago, when I frequented
museums a lot, I fell in love
with a
contemporary likeness of a naked
Venus,
cast in bronze and displayed in
an alcove
where it stood in isolation from
the rest
of the museum's collection.
I took photographs of her from every angle.
I visited her up close, sensuously touching her
ankles and adoring her neck,
face, breasts and
the curve of her hips and waist.
It was a foolish love; I knew that; yet I
loved her, statue that she was.
One day, a rainy day, when the museum was
wanting of visitors for the
rain, I
visited my naked Venus. For a while
I had her all to myself.
I looked around, making sure no
one was looking, then
closing my eyes in rapture, I
embraced her knees
and kissed her mount ardently,
pressing
my lips and tongue onto her cold
metal.
Breathless,
I stood back almost guiltily,
casting my eyes about, making
sure I had not been seen. Then
I glanced to her pubis,
just in time to see the
misty impression of my
furtive kiss evaporate
from her metal body.
VI
My hand glides back and forth
dedicating every vowel and
consonant
to you; it moves across the paper with
fingers and nib in artful form,
creating visions and sentiments
for you.
These words are a declaration:
Each letter, each word
is written with complete
dedication to you.
A poet has three gifts:
His poems
His heart
His laughter.
I give them all to you
in these pages.
VII
Veiled Isis
*
You are like a veiled Isis
and I don't know whether to
worship you from afar
as one would a living goddess,
or court you in the
traditional ways with unexpected
flowers,
a helping hand with a tight
coat, and
taking your elbow while helping
you
off the curb.
Should I lower my eyes as
would an awe-filled devotee,
humble
before
the image holding burning
incense and prayer beads, or
should I gaze upon you, not in
awe,
but as a poet living in his
treasured world and you, the
jewel of his romantic dream?
What a power you have:
You are, all at once Isis
and a golden bhodisattva's
image on a silk pillowcase, and
the flesh woman whose visage
began to burn in my heart like
a tiny blue flame which made a
lust for you rise up in me so
strong, that it is only poetry
that keeps me from going mad.
O goddess, what now?
VIII
Pro Vita Vivere
*
It is held that to die
for a cause is an
honorable sacrifice; it
is the stuff of heroes
and martyrs.
This poet would not make
a good martyr nor hero.
Yet, I'm no coward, either.
As I see it, to live
for a cause is even
more honorable and there
is no need to sacrifice,
and one might live to
an old age, too.
The cause supreme is life,
the living of it moment to
moment, episode to episode,
exploring the unknown and
experimenting for the future,
and
indulging the present,
sucking up life, tasting it,
eating it, creating it with
brush, pen and chisel, carving
it out of bulks of granite
and marble, imitating it in
pungent chiaroscuro hues on
walls and canvas,
or declaiming it in poetry and
songs.
The dead are dead for a
long time, but life is short.
So do not quote me
dulcet et decorum est pro patria morire.
I give you a new motto:
DULCET ET
DECORUM EST PRO VITA VIVERE.
I affix this to my coat of arms,
I hang it in the armorial hall
of my ancestors, as the new
family motto.
I mint my money with these
words stamped thereon, and I
consecrate
infants with its words.
IX
On the 17th of Athyr
*
Page by page,
archetype by archetype,
I plowed through
the
ancient, translated texts
until I was saturated
with multitudes of gods
and goddesses, created in
human form and with
heads or bodies of
animals or
fabulous beasts.
Surfeited of miraculous
births, deeds and the
planting of the roots
of civilization among
barbarian tribes, giving
them agriculture, music,
decorum and writing,
freeing their brute selves
from the blood lusts and
ritual slaughter of
humans and beasts and
paternalistic slavery and
the chains of crude,
unconscious orthodoxies,
I looked around my technologically
advanced world cut off from
legends and incredible myths
of a god cut up into pieces and
scattered about the land--
recovered
by his
good wife, Isis, who through
nurturing and incantations,
brought
together the flesh and made
it one, and from that renascent
body,
murdered by a jealous brother,
came reborn seed for a son,
Hathor, who grew up to avenge
the
murder of his father by the
conspiracy of his uncle.
Yet I see nothing in my jet-age world
that can compare to the
resurrection
of a cut up body, by the touch
and sound
of a goddess.
All around me, instead,
are dwarfed archetypes,
animated cartoons of
turtle samuraization
by
the accidents of deadly
radiation from
purified uranium:--
Before my eyes, robots in
factories, on the screen
at the cinema, semi-human
entities, bionic men and women,
armed to the teeth, ugly with
intention and more dangerous
than a small army:--
Televised characters living
in garbage cans, speaking
perennial,
pedagogical stupidity:--
Six-shooter-shooting-tough-
dust-covered cowboy-fast on the
draw-hero
astride
horse-
ham fists-and not afraid
to use them to make a point:--
Silly, insipid, monotoned comedians
of late night talk shows using
someone else's jokes, the
straight
man in a transforming malevolent
electronic eye turning couch
potatoes into mushrooms
that begin to glow in
the dark.
What kind of legacy is that?
Generations raised with pseudo-archetypal
heroes who are nitwitted,
ill-mannered
bumpkins, compared to a goddess
who brought her dismembered
husband-brother, Osiris,
back from the dead,
slain on the
17th of Athyr
in the 28th year
of his reign.
X
Frankenstein,
the Victorian monster-archetype,
was created from corrupting
corpses and brought to life
by machines and chemical
concoctions.
His creation was not life
but anti-life, yet it is
an appropriate archetypal
metaphor for the narrow,
queen-named age that
stands out like a clockworks,
all wound up tightly,
gears and springs choking
the human spirit while
it so meticulously dug
up the past to show
it in museums and wrote
footnotes about
ancient superstitions
smug Victorians claimed they
didn't have.
XI
I love mystery and I love
looking into your eyes; they
elate me and frighten me and
stir up in me passion--
all at the same time.
Eyes of mystery which tell me
everything
and, simultaneously, tell me
nothing, and
the enigma of you deepens.
I take heart in my poetry to
keep my head from spinning
as I ponder the memory
of your eyes gazing at
me at the new year's table,
at the Caffe
Puccini,
where I fell in love with
your eyes, and the gracious
way you leaned toward me
asking
me to light
your cigarette.
ROSE THORN
XII
In my poet's heart
there is a rose garden.
And from one of its stems
I tore a thorn and dipped
it in my ink. It is so tiny
and hard to hold. Yet with this
triangular nib, I form the words
of this poem.
XIII
SEA MADNESS
In my youth I was a seaman.
I spent some time before the
smoke stack--the mast, by my day
had long
since vanished and diesel
engines pushed
me across the Pacific and over
the cold
Irish Sea and the bitter gray north
Atlantic of a winter's day.
I am an old salt of typhoons and squalls
and green walls of waves
smashing
against the deck and turning the
wheel house into a sculpture of
rushing white water, smacking
our iron ship
as if for our arrogance of
daring
the winds, tides and swift
currents
trying to turn our head and we
saved
by the power and ingenuity of
the
gyrocompass guiding us true
through
the storm.
The sea is a struggle of a
giant consciousness of water
and the mechanical responses
of mariners schooled in the
whims and dangers of the sea
and all its colorful, enticing
poetry.
Oh, in the vilest of weather I
was aft, roped to a stanchion--
lest I be pulled overboard where
I faced the storm and sang to
it as only a sailor-poet can
sing,
taken with a sudden madness
during a
typhoon, in the Sea of Japan,
a long time ago.
IXV
SOMEWHERE IN BAVARIA
I once had a sergeant, a
tough infantry veteran of
two wars who was hard
and commanding and showed
no fear.
One night we got drunk
and took off our stripes
and he told me, man to man, that
he was so afraid in Korea that
he'd
shat his pants and was
so ashamed of it out
there on the battlefield
that he cried out loud with
shame.
His comrades hearing his
wails thought he'd cracked
because
of the incessant shelling
and two days of only cat naps
and daring night time probes
by the enemy and subsisting
on half frozen C-rations.
A medic tried to console him;
a buddy called for a chaplain.
When the chaplain arrived he
asked my sergeant if he wanted
to confess himself.
He wanted to
curse chaplain; but
being
a good Roman Catholic, he
fell on his knees, and, crossing
himself,
confessed through his tears his
bowel movement and his
shit-shamed pants.
The chaplain, upon hearing this
mad insult to the sacrament,
slapped my sergeant and
went back to his own foxhole.
Chinese mortar rounds began
to fall; flares burst and dangling
on small parachutes, slowly
fell, casting
an eerie, green light across the
barren ground of frozen Chosen.
He didn't remember how long the
human wave assault lasted; but
what did it matter: The next thing
he knew, he woke up in a ward in
secure
Japan, wounded, bandaged, clean and
between spotless hospital
sheets.
And each time a doctor or nurse or an
orderly ministered to him, his
only though was:
"Did they know I'd shit in my p[ants?"
That's what this tough veteran,
this decorated old soldier told
me
one night while in our cognac
cups on a summer's eve during
a break from maneuvers,
somewhere in Bavaria.
XV
THINGS
Things, by their nature,
want to be used.
To have something and use
it for something else is
to have missed the
whole point.
A thing should be used
for what it is suited
best.
The thing wants to be
used the way it was
intended; the user
has no choice in the
matter, for the thing,
its nature and its use
will cause its own
activation.
Let's not confuse this
with predestination,
fate, destiny and all
that; the nature of
a thing and what it was
intended for, will
self-activate--
independent of the user and any
so-called controls one may have
happend
to have created.
Don't kid yourself.
A thing happend whether you've
planned for it or not.
That's the mystery of
life and isn't it
great?
A poem is.
XVI
I end this book.
The muse tugs at
my sleeve;
it is time to go.
Reluctantly, I slow down
my pen--yet the empty page
lures me to inscribe
one last sentiment
with my aching hand,
one last image which
will melt your heart
and blend it
with mine.
**********
January 9th, 1995
San Francisco
{NOTE BY R. Haig: Fragmented text below retrieved from
original MS Word document}
/01234<DPoems For A
Remarkable Woman2/21/96 5/29/95