Civilization

Carl Phillips

 
There's an art
   to everything. How
the rain means
   April and an ongoingness like
   that of song until at last
it ends. A centuries-old
   set of silver handbells that
once an altar boy swung,
   processing...You're the same
   wilderness you've always
been, slashing through briars,
   the bracken
of your invasive
   self. So he said,
   in a dream. But
the rest of it—all the rest—
   was waking: more often
than not, to the next
   extravagance. Two blackamoor
   statues, each mirroring
the other, each hoisting
   forever upward his burden of
hand-painted, carved-by-hand
   peacock feathers. Don't
   you know it, don't you know
I love you, he said. He was
   shaking. He said:
I love you. There's an art
   to everything. What I've
   done with this life,
what I'd meant not to do,
 or would have meant, maybe, had I
understood, though I have
 no regrets. Not the broken but
 still-flowering dogwood. Not
the honey locust, either. Not even
   the ghost walnut with its
non-branches whose
   every shadow is memory,
   memory...As he said to me
once, That's all garbage
   down the river, now. Turning,
but as the utterly lost—
   because addicted—do:
   resigned all over again. It
only looked, it—
   It must only look
like leaving. There's an art
   to everything. Even
   turning away. How
eventually even hunger
   can become a space
to live in. How they made
   out of shamelessness something
   beautiful, for as long as they could.
 
Copyright © 2011 by Carl Phillips. Reprinted from Double Shadow with the permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Poems by This Author

And It Begins Like This by Carl Phillips
Aubade: Some Peaches, After Storm by Carl Phillips
So that each / is its own, now--each has fallen, blond stillness.
Cloud Country by Carl Phillips
If a Wilderness by Carl Phillips
Then spring came
Leda, After the Swan by Carl Phillips
Perhaps, / in the exaggerated grace
Passing by Carl Phillips
When the Famous Black Poet speaks,
Porcelain by Carl Phillips
As when a long forgetfulness lifts suddenly, and what
Surrounded as we are, unlit, unshadowed by Carl Phillips
Squalor of leaves


Further Reading

Poems about Ambition
Essay on Man, Epistle II
by Alexander Pope
All those Attempts in the Changing Room!
by Anne Stevenson
Failing and Flying
by Jack Gilbert
Famous
by Naomi Shihab Nye
Fisherman
by Kurt Brown
George Gray
by Edgar Lee Masters
See It Through
by Edgar Guest
That Everything's Inevitable
by Katy Lederer
The Ecstasy
by Phillip Lopate
To You
by Walt Whitman
Untranslatable Song
by Claudia Reder