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Poetry by Carl Selph

Page 8

"The pacing to and fro on polished floors Amid great chambers and long galleries, lined With famous portraits of our ancestors..." -- W.B.Yeats
 

 

The Historian

 
"I trust my interests are profound," he says.
"Professionally speaking, they are not wide,
I know -- not wide, decidedly."
      
 
He's very old, with freckled skin, dark eyes
gone blue, red eye-rims, little hair, long nails
and yellow teeth.  He smells of cigarettes and age.
      
 
His cluttered rooms are piled with books.  The walls,
unpainted for a century, are filled 
with sepia-colored photographs and cracked
dark paintings hung askew.
      
 
He had a wife--
so long ago no one remembers her.
The old cat died, was not replaced.
      
 
He knows, it seems, most languages,
though in his mouth all sound Italianate.
In his still-beautiful deep voice he says,
      
 
"I am constantly being moved
by the successes of imperfect love,
the enduring fragility of its partial glories."
      
 
His face is so attentive, kind,
his courtesy so exquisite, so genuine,
they disconcert.
      
 
"Stavo bene;  per star meglio, sto qui, '"
he said the other day.
"Is not that wonderfully plain -- and fine?"
      
And added, "Boswell says
that Dr. Johnson quoted that from Addison.
Those eighteenth-century Englishmen
knew their Italian!
Where Addison had found it, no one knows."
      
© Carl Selph, 1999
      
The American Professor
   
   
The facade's in every history of architecture
Important stylistically, transitional
between early and later Renaissance.
Note the ground floor: rusticated stone.
First floor: stone more finely dressed, 
Ionic pilasters, more graceful window treatments.
Second floor: smooth stone, Corinthian details.
And then the cornice: really marvelous. Too bad
it was never finished all the way around.
The family that built it's lived here ever since.
Some tourist rang the bell a while back--
thinking it was a public museum I guess--
and got the back of the hand from an ancient butler.
      
The last of the direct line was killed
a hell of a long time ago.
The old Marchesa, so I hear, is still hanging on.
      
© Carl Selph, 1993
    (excerpted from "Una Nobildonna",
      published in its entirety in Bellowing Ark)
      
      
      

Il Maggiordomo

   
Great rooms with chestnut beams, carved  pietra serena,
Antique brocade and damask, faded, rubbed,
Have been the stages for her rituals.
At five the majordomo closes the shutters
And lights the lamps; the curtains drawn, he stirs
The embers in the polished grate to flame.
A Kentish grandmother's wheeled altar bears
The shining pot, the holy grails, the cake,
The scones, the thin, thin tasteless sandwiches.
Firelight suffuses the eggshell porcelain,
Glows through her spotted, manicured old hand.
      
                    *    *    *
      
This is a well-run house,
no matter the Marchesa is alone now sixty years.
When she goes -- and I pray nightly she goes first --
then I'll go, too.  But until then
I polish silver, answer bells. The books, all bound
in fine morocco with the family's crest in gold,
are oiled once a year.  It takes a week.
With only four of us in service now I have unbent
somewhat.  I clean my lady's shoes.
Luncheon is still five courses with two wines
when we have guests. I wear white gloves.
Pina puts on a lacy apron and gray silk
and helps me in the dining room.
We haven't any footmen nowadays.
No one is invited here for dinner any more.
The poor Marchesa comes down all alone
in garnet velvet, wearing the diamonds,
and sits at the head of that endless board,
as if her friends were there, and eats her soup.
She sits so straight! I stand just to her right.
      
Sometimes she talks with me.
      
© Carl Selph, 1993
    (excerpted from "Una Nobildonna",
      published in its entirety in Bellowing Ark)
      
      

Entering the Palazzo

    
A desiccated Tuscan nobleman
his bald head splotched as tortoiseshell
now totters in clutching the arm
of his Marchesa, an American--
      
 
she silvery gray and brash
and busty as a pigeon pecking corn
from a plebeian tourist's hand
before the Gates of Paradise.
      
© Carl Selph, 1989
    First published in the San Miguel Writer
      
      
Nobiltà Obbliga
 
A great-many-ways-and-times-grandpa,
of the  Rinascimento  a true sire,
bought, rebuilt, and bequeathed the ancient pile.
Old Nick lived just across the street.
A house away, the Pitti were always good
for a cup of florins, till the Medici
moved in;  even they, for the Vasari corridor in need
of a sizeable swathe of the garden,
paid for their right of very eminent domain
with a nice gesture:  water, free-flowing still
from the Boboli right down the centuries.
      
 
Remember Andy Gump?  The present heir gets by
on name and rents, the big Chianti farm,
the pleasure Contract-playing countesses
find in his company....  Young men he plies
with tea and English biscuits, and some few
with brief but pleasant trips to Amsterdam,
and offers dips in a mossy pool designed
for photo-ops.  The bright, memorial snaps,
neatly entombed in mausoleum ranks
of albums, now and then are visited
by the photographer and fellow-feeling friends.
When young the Count took up for a while
a farm boy from the family lands.
Depending now from the arm of that boy's son,
he finds the past, if nudged, can live again.
      
© Carl Selph, 1999
      
      
      

All text on this page is copyrighted by Carl Selph and appears here by permission. All rights reserved. It may not be archived beyond one personal electronic copy for offline reading; such a copy must include the entire text of the present notice and the author's name. It may not be printed, posted on a web-site, distributed publicly or privately, used or quoted in whole or in part, or published in any manner or form whatsoever without the author's explicit permission. E-mail Wordreign to contact Carl Selph and your request will be promptly forwarded.

 

 
 
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