In a dark hour, tasting the Earth.   
   
As I lay on my couch in the muffled night, and the rain lashed my window,   
And my forsaken heart would give me no rest, no pause and no peace,   
Though I turned my face far from the wailing of my bereavement....   
Then I said: I will eat of this sorrow to its last shred,          
I will take it unto me utterly,   
I will see if I be not strong enough to contain it....   
What do I fear? Discomfort?   
How can it hurt me, this bitterness?   
   
The miracle, then!   
Turning toward it, and giving up to it,   
I found it deeper than my own self....   
O dark great mother-globe so close beneath me...   
It was she with her inexhaustible grief,   
Ages of blood-drenched jungles, and the smoking of craters, and the roar of tempests,   
And moan of the forsaken seas,   
It was she with the hills beginning to walk in the shapes of the dark-hearted animals,   
It was she risen, dashing away tears and praying to dumb skies, in the pomp-crumbling tragedy of man...   
It was she, container of all griefs, and the buried dust of broken hearts,   
   
Cry of the christs and the lovers and the child-stripped mothers,   
And ambition gone down to defeat, and the battle overborne,   
And the dreams that have no waking....   
   
My heart became her ancient heart:   
On the food of the strong I fed, on dark strange life itself:   
Wisdom-giving and sombre with the unremitting love of ages....   
   
There was dank soil in my mouth,   
And bitter sea on my lips,   
In a dark hour, tasting the Earth.
Barely tolerated, living on the margin
 In our technological society, we were always having to be rescued   
 On the brink of destruction, like heroines in Orlando Furioso
 Before it was time to start all over again.
 There would be thunder in the bushes, a rustling of coils,   
 And Angelica, in the Ingres painting, was considering
 The colorful but small monster near her toe, as though wondering whether forgetting
 The whole thing might not, in the end, be the only solution.   
 And then there always came a time when
 Happy Hooligan in his rusted green automobile
 Came plowing down the course, just to make sure everything was O.K.,   
 Only by that time we were in another chapter and confused   
 About how to receive this latest piece of information.   
Was it information? Weren’t we rather acting this out   
 For someone else’s benefit, thoughts in a mind
 With room enough and to spare for our little problems (so they began to seem),
 Our daily quandary about food and the rent and bills to be paid?   
 To reduce all this to a small variant,
 To step free at last, minuscule on the gigantic plateau—
 This was our ambition: to be small and clear and free.   
 Alas, the summer’s energy wanes quickly,
 A moment and it is gone. And no longer
 May we make the necessary arrangements, simple as they are.   
 Our star was brighter perhaps when it had water in it.   
 Now there is no question even of that, but only
 Of holding on to the hard earth so as not to get thrown off,   
 With an occasional dream, a vision: a robin flies across   
 The upper corner of the window, you brush your hair away
 And cannot quite see, or a wound will flash
 Against the sweet faces of the others, something like:   
 This is what you wanted to hear, so why
 Did you think of listening to something else? We are all talkers   
 It is true, but underneath the talk lies
 The moving and not wanting to be moved, the loose
 Meaning, untidy and simple like a threshing floor.
 These then were some hazards of the course,
 Yet though we knew the course was hazards and nothing else   
 It was still a shock when, almost a quarter of a century later,   
 The clarity of the rules dawned on you for the first time.   
They were the players, and we who had struggled at the game   
 Were merely spectators, though subject to its vicissitudes
 And moving with it out of the tearful stadium, borne on shoulders, at last.
 Night after night this message returns, repeated
 In the flickering bulbs of the sky, raised past us, taken away from us,   
 Yet ours over and over until the end that is past truth,   
 The being of our sentences, in the climate that fostered them,   
 Not ours to own, like a book, but to be with, and sometimes   
 To be without, alone and desperate.
 But the fantasy makes it ours, a kind of fence-sitting
 Raised to the level of an esthetic ideal. These were moments, years,   
 Solid with reality, faces, namable events, kisses, heroic acts,   
 But like the friendly beginning of a geometrical progression
 Not too reassuring, as though meaning could be cast aside some day   
 When it had been outgrown. Better, you said, to stay cowering   
 Like this in the early lessons, since the promise of learning   
 Is a delusion, and I agreed, adding that
 Tomorrow would alter the sense of what had already been learned,   
 That the learning process is extended in this way, so that from this standpoint
 None of us ever graduates from college,
 For time is an emulsion, and probably thinking not to grow up   
 Is the brightest kind of maturity for us, right now at any rate.
 And you see, both of us were right, though nothing
 Has somehow come to nothing; the avatars
 Of our conforming to the rules and living
 Around the home have made—well, in a sense, “good citizens” of us,   
 Brushing the teeth and all that, and learning to accept
 The charity of the hard moments as they are doled out,
 For this is action, this not being sure, this careless
 Preparing, sowing the seeds crooked in the furrow,
 Making ready to forget, and always coming back
 To the mooring of starting out, that day so long ago.
 
 
 
 
 
