Flow Chart: A Poem

Flow Chart: A Poem by John Ashbery Page B

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Authors: John Ashbery
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write my diary
    by street-light, because it’s better that way; I may not have to look too closely
    at my handwriting, yet I can feel it, all around and on me
    like a garment or a sheet, and this too seems like a good idea. Well, doesn’t it?
    It does. But remember, one isn’t obliged to love everything
    and everybody, though one ought to try. One way is to accept the face they
    present to you, but on consignment. Then you may find yourself falling in love
    with the lie, sinister but endearing, they fabricated to win acceptance
    for themselves as beings that are crisp and airy, with an un-self-conscious note of rightness
    or purpose that just fits, and only later take up the guilt behind the façade
    in the close, humid rooms of whatever goes down in their struggle (or hundreds
    of struggles) against fate, and perhaps buy that too someday
    when their manners are out of the way. I have obtained gratifying results in both instances
    but I know enough not to insist, to keep sifting a mountain of detritus
    indefinitely in search of tiny yellow blades of grass. Enough
    is surely enough, in spite of what religion teaches us. I’m happy to be back with others
    at the fairgrounds, without disparaging them too much, and when someone asks me
    what I think of him or her, reply without false naïveté that I really love them
    very much, but it might be time to take other factors into account, my own
    well-being, for example, and how far along the path to survival my unselfish
    instincts have moved me. Usually it’s both farther and not as far as we imagine,
    i.e., taking a wrong turning and then after a fretful period emerging in some nice
    place we didn’t know existed, and would never have found without being misled
    by the distracted look in someone’s eyes. It’s mostly green then; the waves are peaceful;
    rabbits hop here and there. And the landscape you saw from afar, from the tower,
    really is miniature, it wasn’t the laws of perspective that made it seem so,
    but for now one must forgo it in the interests of finding an open, habitable space,
    which isn’t going to be easy. In fact it’s the big problem one was being led
    up to all along under the guise of being obliged to look out for oneself
    and others: the place isn’t hospitable, though it can support itself and one or two
    others, but really it would be best to start all over again from the beginning
    and find some really decent area that reflects a commitment to oneself.
    But where? In a bubble under the surface of the ocean? Isn’t it all going to be a fiction
    anyway, and if so, what does it matter where we decide to settle down?

III
    That was the first time you washed your hands,
    and how monumental it seems now. Those days the wind blew only from one quarter;
    one was forced to make snap judgments, though the norms unfolded naturally enough,
    constructing themselves, and it wasn’t until you found yourself inside a huge pen
    or panopticon that you realized the story had disappeared like water into desert sand,
    although it still continued. I guess that was the time I understood enough
    to seize one of the roles and make it mine, and knew what I heard myself saying,
    but not whose yellow hair it was. Mélisande? Oh, I’d
    come before to let you in, and saw only a chipmunk, and so…But now it’s nice
    to sing along, and read the newspapers together, and try on funny hats: only
    be aware that at daybreak there must be no trace of you, or the cock might not crow
    and there’d be hell to pay. Besides, you wouldn’t wish it
    even if we were together, as someday we may be. I say “someday”
    for the sound of it, like a drop of water landing, but I also meant it, but now I’m
    standing just outside unafraid, listening. So much is wrapped in soot,
    that now I’m no longer blind
    and can denounce any aggressor, but I won’t, because I’m afraid to, and besides,
    what if the attic door slammed shut? Much remains unknown
    in these calm countries. A bridge

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