James McCorkle

Text / Image

 

Nine Windows. Winter, Rome

                                            —on Cy Twombly’s Nine Discourses of Commodus

 

1.

 

“There isn’t anything to the paintings” (Donald Judd)

 

Winter of 1963—

 

The background for each is a uniform

battleship gray

hard as the winter sky, Piazza del Biscione in Rome               (composition)

 

such gray tyranny, stepchild

to chaos

 


2.

 

Drawn and quartered

 

In the colosseum         the arena       a line drawn

down the middle

bodies pulled apart        impastos of white, red, fatty yellows

 

(“If they do the chant, we'll see what happens, I don’t know that you can stop people”)

 

Drips, scruffs, scribblings

 

matter, material, scab, fecal, famine, pestilence

 

“the rule of law”

 

3.

 

Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire:

“It was on the night of the 27th of June 1787, between the hours of eleven and twelve, that I wrote the last line of the last page in a summer-house in my garden. After laying down my pen, I took several turns in a berceau, or covered walk of acacias. I will not dissemble the first emotions of joy on the recovery of my freedom, and, perhaps the establishment of my fame. But my pride was soon humbled, and a sober melancholy was spread over my mind by the idea that I had taken an everlasting leave of an old and agreeable companion, and that whatsoever might be the future fate of my history, the life of the historian must be short and precarious.”—Gibbon, Autobiography

 

 

4.

 

Floating across the panels

 

a square, penciled, a grid       such precision        tenuous, fragile, an icy crystal

compass flower    rose, five points (cardinal, and one toward the heart, the interior,

                                                              blood and soul, the red disc hummingbirds lift from)

 

(In each of the nine panels a progression

from titanium white, scrubbed clouds          (the divinities disappearing, retreating

 

were they ever here, in the waves, sky, moist earth?             will they return, to pray for us?)

toward a bolus of cadmium red, a renting apart, what spills forth

from a body

 

left unburied, in the middle of     

a gray expanse).

 

No photographs allowed.

 

 

5.

 

In Saigon, on June 11, 1963, Thích Quảng Đức burned himself to death.

 

Tied to his brother, both shot in the back of the head

Ngô Đình Diệm, president of Viet Nam,

 

Ngô Đình Diệm who brutalized Buddhist monks—or, be honest,

at least 1400 disappeared in purges in August 1963 as part of Diệm’s anti-Buddhist agenda

 

Ngô Đình Diệm was assassinated by his generals on November 1, 1963

weeks before JFK

 

Lodge and Harriman washed their hands of the affair, having no use for Diệm

and the generals promised short work of the Việt Minh

 

(who were the resistance to Japanese and French colonialism)

 

(I watched fighters practicing landing at MacDill AFB, deployments were expected

the war that was not a war that consumed

like napalm and teargas)               While in Rome

 

Cy Twombly was painting madness

 

That in 1964, his gallery in NYC hung the nine panels out of order declaring them

precocious and Europeanized irrelevance

 

from the cottony whites

 

the mass, excised, bloody, cadmium red was thrown on to the steel gray examination table

 

 

6.

 

Context is everything.

 

7.

 

Where I saw the 9 Discourses

in another room

angels’ wings

hundreds of human scapulae arranged         near a wall, a pile, three feet high

of femurs and mandibles, human, were placed           in part, the artist, Jenny Holzer

was referencing the Balkan war      the Syrian war      the holocausts     the tyrannies

that orchestrated ethnic cleansings and the feminicide of each, re/current tyranny

 

(later, I dreamt I was watching the arrest of Lorca

the soldiers kept shouting

where is the school teacher, where is he

as they pushed past small men in the building mending their clothes

heavy-breasted women bathing

clambering toward an attic room, pushing Lorca up the stairs—

but of course there was no school-teacher in the house Lorca was living in,

he would be thrown into the same car as Lorca

and taken into the dry foothills

and executed alongside the poet who sang of angels)

 

only art allows us to live past exterminations

 

all the derelictions, of

 

mind or spirit, of imagination, the gray wrapping sheets

covering each

 

 

8.

 

There is nothing delicate here, instead the violence of application

paint heaped and smeared on

 

or the flatness of the gray, the sureness of line, taut as piano wire

as what cuts you in or out, life or that side

 

(drunk, dull with poison

your whore will smuggle in a slave to strangle you, Commodus:

too fouled to struggle, your body dragged out, dumped)

 

 

9.

 

Are there nine only because after the ninth, time had run out?

 

That after the ninth, there was no more paint?

That silence fell on the tenth panel, a gray sheet,

 

that silence offers no discourse, only its end. It is

 

the conclusion of tyranny. God has turned away

 

long ago, that story is in the third panel’s

paint, where there was no time or space, only that what was there.

 

Perhaps, after the ninth panel the painter

was no longer sure that titanium white could belong alongside vermillion,

that the painter was no longer certain he would wake up

 

next to who he loved, next to the world outside his window,

the birds of dawn in Rome, in (what I imagine are cypress trees) singing at the break

of light, that he would wake as a painter, or human, or being.


 

Oncoming Front

like a cliff, falling

barometrics, sparrows in the dozens

 

Starlings in the Norwegian maple, a dozen

 

driven out: the happiness-birds, before the storm set in, a

 

hawk

has been here two days in a row

 

the hawk

dove into the boxwood

after a sparrow, the sparrow

flew through the bush to the other side

 

When does one become old? Another war, forecast, troops

on one border, others always on another

 

when your hands are full you are old

old crow in the horse chestnut talking to you, you think

pulling out a shiny coin

 

holding it in your empty hand, she (or he?) makes off with it

your hand more empty now

 

except for counting the wars the crow won’t touch

 

cold front, snow wrapping the west-side of trees

in a few hours roads will close

 

in the woods, a quick walk from here, dead wood caught

in upper branches sigh, limbs wind-rubbed

chapped

 

To be alive at the end of an empire here

is no different than

any other day, the clouds have lowered their curtains of snow across the lake

trellises X the white hillsides of vineyards, like concertina

wire stretched along the front

 

who will be starving a week or a month from now,

someone always does even if they go uncounted

 

as they do, always by the millions, some

 

will return, never to say a word of what was seen

 

sparrows, then starlings swarm the feeders

so little

time they say, so little to go round,

they burst into the air, gone

 

attending to the air’s carried shadow

 

Days ago a fox bounded across the road, I tell my dog

 

you missed it

she is snout deep in the snow          something breathing below

warm as mud or fresh shit or a river egrets white as snow drift over

 

a fox I say a fox

Hands tied. Circles mark the spot bodies lie

 

Satellite photographs of

bodies left

 

Bodies are left as a sign of the state’s disregard

Bodies are left as a warning for anyone coming this way

Bodies are left for the crows

Bodies are left to taunt you to bury them

Bodies are left to disrupt memory, to be remembered only by the flies when spring arrives

Bodies are left before the cave of songs, to keep beauty from returning to the world

Bodies are left to be counted until the numbers are exhausted, to return to nothing, the starting  

       point, zero, O

God doesn’t need what you may give—

 

the snow didn’t stick, along the edge

of sidewalks mud, a fresh print of dog,

 

the day is already wasted, if you think about it

too long, but I won’t let you

answer, on the other side of all this, you

 

how many or only one, just you

 

and lovely, here you are, if here, listening

 

the snow a comforter we might have fallen into, had it stayed

through the long afternoon, into evening

 

after the swarm of starlings disappeared

 

into their own night’s enwrapping primaries

and secondaries, coverts, bluebirds, sparrows

packed away in the line of arborvitae

 

deer out of hunger or greed, the same

perhaps, have gnawed the lower branches

bare, wind has picked up, carrying

us with what little is left, across fields

 

waiting for wheat, the spindles of time’s fire

thin as glass stems stitching us

 

one to one, for the time being.