Ninety-Fifth Street
Words can bang around in your head
  Forever, if you let them and you give them room.
  I used to love poetry, and mostly I still do, 
 Though sometimes “I, too, dislike it.” There must be 
 Something real beyond the fiddle and perfunctory
 Consolations and the quarrels—as of course
 There is, though what it is is difficult to say.
 The salt is on the briar rose, the fog is in the fir trees.
 I didn’t know what it was, and I don’t know now,
 But it was what I started out to do, and now, a lifetime later,    
 All I’ve really done. The Opening of the Field, 
 Roots and Branches, Rivers and Mountains: I sat in my room
 Alone, their fragments shored against the ruin or revelation
 That was sure to come, breathing in their secret atmosphere,
 Repeating them until they almost seemed my own.
 We like to think our lives are what they study to become,
 And yet so much of life is waiting, waiting on a whim.
 So much of what we are is sheer coincidence,
 Like a sentence whose significance is retrospective,
 Made up out of elementary particles that are in some sense
 Simply sounds, like syllables that finally settle into place.
 You probably think that this is a poem about poetry 
 (And obviously it is), yet its real subject is time, 
 For that’s what poetry is—a way to live through time 
 And sometimes, just for a while, to bring it back.
*     *     *
 A paneled dining room in Holder Hall. Stage right, enter twit:
 “Mr. Ashbery, I’m your biggest campus fan.” We hit it off
 And talked about “The Skaters” and my preference for “Clepsydra” 
 Vs. “Fragment.” Later on that night John asked me to a party in New York, 
 And Saturday, after dinner and a panel on the artist’s role as something 
 (And a party), driving Lewis’s Austin-Healey through the rain 
 I sealed our friendship with an accident. The party was on Broadway,
 An apartment (white of course, with paintings) just downstairs
 From Frank O’Hara’s, who finally wandered down. I talked to him
 A little about Love Poems (Tentative Title), which pleased him,
 And quoted a line from “Poem” about the rain, which seemed to please him too.
 The party ended, John and I went off to Max’s, ordered steaks 
 And talked about our mothers. All that talking!—poems and paintings,
 Parents, all those parties, and the age of manifestos still to come!
 I started coming to New York for lunch. We’d meet at Art News,
 Walk to Fifty-sixth Street to Larre’s, a restaurant filled with French expatriates,
 Have martinis and the prix fixe for $2.50 (!), drink rose de Provence
 And talk (of course) about Genet and James and words like “Coca-Cola.”
 It was an afternoon in May when John brought up a play
 That he and Kenneth Koch and Frank O’Hara—Holy Trinity!
 (Batman was in vogue)—had started years ago and never finished.
 There was a dictator named Edgar and some penicillin,
 But that’s all I remember. They hadn’t actually been together
 In years, but planned to finish it that night at John’s new apartment
 On Ninety-fifth Street, and he said to come by for a drink
 Before they ate and got to work. It was a New York dream
 Come true: a brownstone floor-through, white and full of paintings
 (Naturally), “with a good library and record collection.”
 John had procured a huge steak, and as I helped him set the table
 The doorbell rang and Frank O’Hara, fresh from the museum
 And svelte in a hound’s tooth sports coat entered, followed shortly
 By “excitement-prone Kenneth Koch” in somber gray,
 And I was one with my immortals. In the small mythologies
 We make up out of memories and the flow of time
 A few moments remain frozen, though the feel of them is lost,
 The feel of talk. It ranged from puns to gossip, always coming back 
 To poems and poets. Frank was fiercely loyal to young poets
 (Joe Ceravolo’s name came up I think), and when I mentioned Lewis
 In a way that must have sounded catty, he leapt to his defense,
 Leaving me to backtrack in embarrassment and have another drink,
 Which is what everyone had. I think you see where it was going:
 Conversation drifting into dinner, then I stayed for dinner
 And everyone forgot about the play, which was never finished
 (Though I think I’ve seen a fragment of it somewhere). I see a table
 In a cone of light, but there’s no sound except for Kenneth’s 
 Deadpan “Love to see a boy eat” as I speared a piece of steak;
 And then the only voice I’m sure I hear is mine,
 As those moments that had once seemed singular and clear
 Dissolve into a “general mess of imprecision of feeling”
 And images, augmented by line breaks. There were phone calls,
 Other people arrived, the narrative of the night dissolved
 And finally everyone went home. School and spring wound down.
 The semester ended, then the weekend that I wrote about in “Sally’s Hair”
 Arrived and went, and then a late-night cruise around Manhattan for a rich friend’s
 Parents’ anniversary bash, followed by an Upper East Side preppie bar
 That left me looking for a place to crash, and so I rang John’s bell at 2 AM
 And failed (thank God) to rouse him, caught a plane to San Diego
 The next day, worked at my summer job and worked on poems
 And started reading Proust, and got a card one afternoon
 From Peter Schjeldahl telling me that Frank O’Hara had been killed.
Ninety-fifth Street soldiered on for several years.
 I remember a cocktail party (the symposium of those days),
 Followed by dinner just around the corner at Elaine’s,
 Pre-Woody Allen. It was there I learned of R.F.K.’s assassination
 When I woke up on the daybed in the living room, and where
 John told me getting married would ruin me as a poet
 (I don’t know why—most of his friends were married), a judgment
 He revised when he met Susan and inscribed The Double Dream of Spring
 “If this is all we need fear from spinach, then I don’t mind so much”
 (Which was probably premature—watering his plants one day
 She soaked his landlord, Giorgio Cavallon, dozing in the garden below).
 It was where Peter Delacorte late one night recited an entire side
 Of a Firesign Theatre album from memory, and set John on that path,
 To his friends’ subsequent dismay, and where he blessed me with his extra copy
 Of The Poems, and next day had second thoughts (though I kept it anyway). 
 Sometimes a vague, amorphous stretch of years assumes a shape,
 And then becomes an age, and then a golden age alive with possibilities,
 When change was in the air and you could wander through its streets
 As though through Florence and the Renaissance. I know it sounds ridiculous,
 But that’s the way life flows: in stages that take form in retrospect,
 When all the momentary things that occupy the mind from day to day
 Have vanished into time, and something takes their place that wasn’t there,
 A sense of freedom—one which gradually slipped away. The center
 Of the conversation moved downtown, the Renaissance gave way to mannerism
 As the junior faculty took charge, leaving the emeriti alone and out of it
 Of course, lying on the fringes, happily awake; but for the rest 
 The laws proscribing what you couldn’t do were clear. I got so tired
 Of writing all those New York poems (though by then I’d moved to Boston—
 To Siena, you might say) that led to nowhere but the next one,
 So I started writing poems about whatever moved me: what it’s like
 To be alive within a world that holds no place for you, yet seems so beautiful;
 The feeling of the future, and its disappointments; the trajectory of a life,
 That always brought me back to time and memory (I’d finished Proust by then),
 And brings me back to this. John finally moved downtown himself,
 Into a two-story apartment at Twenty-fifth and Tenth, with a spiral staircase 
 Leading to a library, the locus of the incident of Susan, Alydar and John 
 And the pitcher of water (I’ll draw a veil over it), and Jimmy Schuyler sighing
 “It’s so beautiful,” as Bernadette Peters sang “Raining in My Heart” from Dames at Sea.
 The poetry still continued—mine and everyone’s. I’d added Jimmy 
 To my pantheon (as you’ve probably noticed), but the night in nineteen sixty-six 
 Seemed more and more remote: I never saw Kenneth anymore,
 And there were new epicenters, with new casts of characters, like Madoo, 
 Bob Dash’s garden in Sagaponack, and Bill and Willy’s loft in Soho.
 John moved again, to Twenty-second Street, and Susan and I moved to Milwaukee,
 Where our son was born. I stopped coming to New York, and writing poems, 
 For several years, while I tried to dream enough philosophy for tenure.
 One afternoon in May I found myself at Ninth and Twenty-second,
 And as though on cue two people whom I hadn’t seen in years—David Kalstone, 
 Darragh Park—just happened by, and then I took a taxi down to Soho
 To the loft, and then a gallery to hear Joe Brainard read from I Remember,
 Back to John’s and out to dinner—as though I’d never been away, 
 Though it was all too clear I had. Poems were in the air, but theory too, 
 And members of the thought police department (who must have also gotten tenure) 
 Turned up everywhere, with arguments that poetry was called upon to prove.
 It mattered, but in a different way, as though it floated free from poems
 And wasn’t quite the point. I kept on coming back, as I still do.
 Half my life was still to come, and yet the rest was mostly personal:
 I got divorced, and Willy killed himself, and here I am now, ready to retire.
 There was an obituary in the Times last week for Michael Goldberg,
 A painter you’ll recall from Frank O’Hara’s poems (“Why I Am Not a Painter,”
 “Ode to Michael Goldberg (’s Birth and Other Births)”). I didn’t know him,
 But a few months after the soiree on Ninety-fifth Street I was at a party
 In his studio on the Bowery, which was still his studio when he died.
 The New York art world demimonde was there, including nearly everyone
 Who’s turned up in this poem. I remember staring at a guy who
 Looked like something from the Black Lagoon, dancing with a gorgeous
 Woman half his age. That’s my New York: an island dream
 Of personalities and evenings, nights where poetry was second nature
 And their lives flowed through it and around it as it gave them life.
 O brave new world (now old) that had such people in’t!
*     *     *
 “The tiresome old man is telling us his life story.” 
 I guess I am, but that’s what poets do—not always 
 Quite as obviously as this, and usually more by indirection
 And omission, but beneath the poetry lies the singular reality 
 And unreality of an individual life. I see it as a long,
 Illuminated tunnel, lined with windows giving on the scenes outside—
 On Ninety-fifth Street forty years ago. As life goes on
 You start to get increasingly distracted by your own reflection
 And the darkness gradually becoming visible at the end. 
 I try not to look too far ahead, but just to stay here— 
 Quick now, here, now, always—only something pulls me
 Back (as they say) to the day, when poems were more like secrets,
 With their own vernacular, and you could tell your friends 
 By who and what they read. And now John’s practically become 
 A national treasure, and whenever I look up I think I see him 
 Floating in the sky like the Cheshire Cat. I don’t know
 What to make of it, but it makes me happy—like seeing Kenneth 
 Just before he died (“I’m going west John, I’m going west”) 
 In his apartment on a side street near Columbia, or remembering
 Once again that warm spring night in nineteen sixty-six. 
 I like to think of them together once again, at the cocktail party
 At the end of the mind, where I could blunder in and ruin it one last time.
 Meanwhile, on a hillside in the driftless region to the west,
 A few miles from the small town where The Straight Story ends,
 I’m building a house on a meadow, if I’m permitted to return,
 Behind a screen of trees above a lower meadow, with some apple trees
 In which the fog collects on autumn afternoons, and a vista
 Of an upland pasture without heaviness. I see myself
 Sitting on the deck and sipping a martini, as I used to at Larre’s, 
 In a future that feels almost like a past I’m positive is there— 
 But where? I think my life is still all conversation,
 Only now it’s with myself. I can see it continuing forever,
 Even in my absence, as I close the windows and turn off the lights
 And it begins to rain. And then we’re there together 
 In the house on the meadow, waiting for whatever’s left to come
 In what’s become the near future—two versions of myself 
 And of the people that we knew, each one an other
 To the other, yet both indelibly there: the twit of twenty
 And the aging child of sixty-two, still separate
 And searching in the night, listening through the night
 To the noise of the rain and memories of rain
 And evenings when we’d wander out into the Renaissance,
 When I could see you and talk to you and it could still change;
 And still there in the morning when the rain has stopped,
 And the apples are all getting tinted in the cool light.
                                       Source: Poetry (July/August 2009)
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