A Sum of Destructions

The amities of morning
and the buxom habits of birds   
that swing a bell-bright city   
in their intelligent wings;

last night’s squall has
drawn off like anger’s tide,
the remote and muffled waters   
beating solitudinous rocks

and murmurous
in the hidden parts, ebbing   
and beating, of the mind
as some half-forgotten name . . .

the rain has withdrawn
like the tents and the Greeks,   
like the hard-to-believe-
in days of our childhood.

Light moves, the whole
massed flotilla of morning, kin   
to the upward flight of birds   
returning;
                and brutality,
the hungers and the hatreds   
seem fabulous, seem members;   
the gouty rat and straggly

root collaborate. Earth
in wounds, deaths, decays—
past hours its rutted crusts—
with the billowy sky

is the field-
upon-field, and all one,   
of one master observing   
the various fruits:
                              somewhere
a child in a cage, inferior   
bodies making a passable   
road, a girl passionate

with pain, an old man   
watching the earth escape   
like his once endless
strengths, his poems head-

long. And one fills
with awe—as the town
with morning, every cranny,   
the birds brimming fire-

escapes and broken windows—
that the earth like some wise   
breath never balked, a many-
membered bird-flight,

should include all,
must be a terrible good.   
The eyes passing,
contracted from night

and war the stars
undertook, finally emerge   
the topgallant of morning,   
and those eyes roam

free as the Greeks:
wherever a drop of water   
is, spindrift city of water   
gleaming, there is home.

Copyright Credit: Theodore Weiss, “A Sum of Destructions” from Selected Poems, published by TriQuarterly Books/Northwestern University Press, 1995. Copyright © 1995 by Theodore Weiss. All rights reserved; reprinted with the permission of Northwestern University Press, www.nupress.northwestern.edu.
Source: Selected Poems (1995)