FRANK O'HARA Ultimate Collection: 100+ Poems in One Volume. Frank O'Hara. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Frank O'Hara
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066399610
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he was

      there in the hall, flat on a sheet of blood that

       ran down the stairs. I did appreciate it. There are few

       hosts who so thoroughly prepare to greet a guest

       only casually invited, and that several months ago.

      To the Film industry in Crisis

       Table of Contents

      Not you, lean quarterlies and swarthy periodicals

       with your studious incursions toward the pomposity of ants,

       nor you, experimental theatre in which Emotive Fruition

       is wedding Poetic Insight perpetually, nor you,

       promenading Grand Opera, obvious as an ear (though you

       are close to my heart), but you, Motion Picture Industry,

       it's you I love!

      In times of crisis, we must all decide again and again whom we love.

       And give credit where it's due: not to my starched nurse, who taught me

       how to be bad and not bad rather than good (and has lately availed

       herself of this information), not to the Catholic Church

       which is at best an oversolemn introduction to cosmic entertainment,

       not to the American Legion, which hates everybody, but to you,

       glorious Silver Screen, tragic Technicolor, amorous Cinemascope,

       stretching Vistavision and startling Stereophonic Sound, with all

       your heavenly dimensions and reverberations and iconoclasms! To

       Richard Barthelmess as the 'tol'able' boy barefoot and in pants,

       Jeanette MacDonald of the flaming hair and lips and long, long neck,

       Sue Carroll as she sits for eternity on the damaged fender of a car

       and smiles, Ginger Rogers with her pageboy bob like a sausage

       on her shuffling shoulders, peach-melba-voiced Fred Astaire of the feet,

       Eric von Stroheim, the seducer of mountain-climbers' gasping spouses,

       the Tarzans, each and every one of you (I cannot bring myself to prefer

       Johnny Weissmuller to Lex Barker, I cannot!), Mae West in a furry sled,

       her bordello radiance and bland remarks, Rudolph Valentino of the moon,

       its crushing passions, and moonlike, too, the gentle Norma Shearer,

       Miriam Hopkins dropping her champagne glass off Joel McCrea's yacht,

       and crying into the dappled sea, Clark Gable rescuing Gene Tierney

       from Russia and Allan Jones rescuing Kitty Carlisle from Harpo Marx,

       Cornel Wilde coughing blood on the piano keys while Merle Oberon berates,

       Marilyn Monroe in her little spike heels reeling through Niagara Falls,

       Joseph Cotten puzzling and Orson Welles puzzled and Dolores del Rio

       eating orchids for lunch and breaking mirrors, Gloria Swanson reclining,

       and Jean Harlow reclining and wiggling, and Alice Faye reclining

       and wiggling and singing, Myrna Loy being calm and wise, William Powell

       in his stunning urbanity, Elizabeth Taylor blossoming, yes, to you

       and to all you others, the great, the near-great, the featured, the extras

       who pass quickly and return in dreams saying your one or two lines,

       my love!

       Long may you illumine space with your marvellous appearances, delays

       and enunciations, and may the money of the world glitteringly cover you

       as you rest after a long day under the kleig lights with your faces

       in packs for our edification, the way the clouds come often at night

       but the heavens operate on the star system. It is a divine precedent

       you perpetuate! Roll on, reels of celluloid, as the great earth rolls on!

      Poem: "At night Chinamen jump"

       Table of Contents

      At night Chinamen jump

       on Asia with a thump

      while in our willful way

       we, in secret, play

      affectionate games and bruise

       our knees like China's shoes.

      The birds push apples through

       grass the moon turns blue,

      these apples roll beneath

       our buttocks like a heath

      full of Chinese thrushes

       flushed from China's bushes.

      As we love at night

       birds sing out of sight,

      Chinese rhythms beat

       through us in our heat,

      the apples and the birds

       move us like soft words,

      we couple in the grace

       of that mysterious race.

      Blocks

       Table of Contents

      1 Yippee! she is shooting in the harbor! he is jumping up to the maelstrom! she is leaning over the giant's cart of tears which like a lava cone let fail to fly from the cross-eyed tantrum-tousled ninth grader's splayed fist is freezing on the cement1 he is trowing up his arms in heavenly desperation, spacious Y of his tumultuous love-nervs flailing like a poinsettia in its own nailish storm against the glass door of the cumulus which is withholding her from these divine pastures she has filled with the flesh of men as stones! O fatal eagerness!

      2 O boy, their childhood was like so many oatmeal cookies. I need you, you need me, yum, yum. Anon it became suddenly

      3 like someone always losing something and never knowing what. Always so. They were fo fond of eating bread and butter and sugar, they were slobs, the mice used to lick the floorboards after they went to bed, rolling their light tales against the rattling marbles of granulations. Vivo! the dextrose those children consumed, lavished, smoked, in their knobby candy bars. Such pimples! such hardons! such moody loves. And thus they grew like giggling trees.

      Les Etiquette jaunes

       Table of Contents

      I picked up a leaf

       today from the sidewalk

       This seems childish.

      Leaf! you are so big!

       How can you change your

       color, then just fall!

      As if there were no

       such thing as integrity!

      You are too relaxed

       to answer me. I am too

       frightened