Poems
BY LAUREN CAMP
The Sighing of the Kit Carson Cemetery
(where Mabel Dodge Luhan is buried)
On my way into town, in a hurry, in a hat,
I pass the cemetery. The sun is brimming
with piled-on heat. I enter into the buried, the bandits.
Around me, names extracted from books.
I have stopped going to town, and now I am standing
under the eternal body of sky
in an architecture of mountains in territory
deepened with weeds. Nothing trembling.
In the park amphitheater, women drum and dance,
raising hands as if measuring elevation. As if they see
past ravens, past leaves interlocked to cottonwood tops,
see over clouds. I step, no longer elsewhere,
but etched in the graveyard. At the back corner,
a lumped stone and a small altar. And still the throat
of the drum. On Mabel’s small grave,
synthetic petals, all purple, some pinecones, a dingy
lace doily, a button, a dime,
a necklace (—no, two, or three), and pieces of glass,
a bottlecap, whatever is human, available.
Someone’s slightly curled painting.
I sit next to her bones. The music continues: tassels
and boots, some stomping. Sitting like this
on the ground, under the mutable smell
of locust and desert, I am taller than the small
monument. Also on the altar, a dried thistle, thorny.
Women pace a circle, turn around. The drum releases
its wisdom. Mabel’s in the corner, in the morning,
the evening, forever, the grass shaggy and limp
beside her. Wires cross wires in loops as a fence.
The air is a blanket colored four ways,
then reversed. Now the women are chanting.
Beats lift out of ashes. They’re not very good,
but I like their wide distension
resting on history. Where I am, no one exhales,
and I haven’t said a word, but I believe
she is grateful for a salon again,
for someone to need her. When I rise, the sun flattens
its feathers on ground. On my way out, I notice
double hollyhocks, pink and inevitably alert,
looking both ways, as if responding to many questions.
Temple of Lawrence
– The D. H. Lawrence Ranch, San Cristóbal, New Mexico
On the road up, a right, and a right. I followed
“keep out” signs, expecting human clamors
and ripening. Clouds firmly said enter,
persevere! In those days, he was only a man,
and he needed medicine. His skin took in
the clear air. Sentences hardened and were swallowed,
defied. The house, nearly permeable,
looks on O’Keeffe’s immense ponderosa
with its aura of needles. His words fell on desert,
minimal, worn. Finger, ink, a furious wind. Nothing spotless.
. . . all these great, dynamic words were half dead now
or maybe more living, landscaped
before the actual dying. The ranch has lapsed
into drought. Such a plain day, unwrapped and refracted. Yellow
sharp-elbowed sun. At the shrine, in the concrete,
how silent the body. In the cool room, inverted
hard-dot hemispheres painted an overzealous
yolk-yellow. Those walls cried out, high-keyed,
gleaming, unchaste. What in this periphery
is precisely remembered? what is written, repressed?
On the return, I passed through a gesture
of downed cottonwoods and apprised the strange gods
once more. The caretaker latched the gate after me.
Everything folded up, closed. But the road was ready to take me
to the curve of the loins of the mountains, such a vast opening
of light, the view an involuntary demand on the eye
. . . helplessly desirous . . . the intense movement . . .
the warm soft body of clouds. I was euphoric—so close.
And completely unknown.
Note: Italic phrases were drawn from D. H. Lawrence’s novels Kangaroo (1923) and Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1928).
The D. H. Lawrence Memorial at the D. H. Lawrence Ranch. Photograph courtesy Taos Community Foundation
Feathers and Mountain
(for Tony Luhan)
In the upstairs low bedroom
with its odorless space: walls
and cracks asking
back, Tony wrote
plumage. His large hands caused birds
in all corners,
in ridges, dabbed grace
in tangible places. He stood
slow on the overhung
porch in wool blanket where
layers of stars
etched into sky. No
objective. He nodded, patient,
accruing the heaven, its noises. Sky despaired
of color, this land
at the rim of the pueblo
noosed now
by winter. Each night,
he turned again
to feathers and wing, everything
familiar. In the distance, long count
of hills, horse hair,
blood. He looked down
the balcony to tanagers
and magpies mistaking
the dawn. He knew
the cartilage of the house, the heavy
physical body of silence. Tony kept standing
still, kept picturing
birds lift from his large hands
to the rooms, then only the wind
as it slid down the mountain.
The Half Measure to Pleasure and Phrases
(for Mabel Dodge Luhan)
The sun moved across the valley all day long, circling the house that was the new center of my life; and fell early, with blinding rays of purple and red.
– Mabel Dodge Luhan (from Edge of Taos Desert: An Escape to Reality)
How I craved a muse that couldn’t escape, that would wake
to the dust-blaze of letters. I invited
compassion and had instead the heavy edges
of friends with their dark reactions. Maybe that’s not right. I had
what I wanted—gardens,
the salted long walls, the invention
of fragments and titles, a buttress,
brocade. As a girl I licked wallpaper
so the flocked roses could touch me. Everyone who came
was a dreamer. I gave each a bed. Night
clenched us, and Lawrence’s strange stories leaked
into the sitting room where they kept me
unending. I preferred the opposite
side of the puritan center. I was ruthless, but breaking—
or broken on the lip of each interaction. I loved the closed
doors, the tables, the margins. I made a room
of each memory. And another, another. Filled with my icons:
our amateur gods—their stories
and verses. Each evening, I climbed stairs
to see Pueblo land penetrate into refraction.
The light couldn’t say what it saw. The town practiced
squinting. Called Tony savage,
and me. So we married. A life begun in landscape
flecked with ravens. Now each crowd
of tourists gathers under a sky that has stayed
at the windows. They can’t stop talking, waving their hands.
What do they know, scavenging my details?
They can buy all the tomahawks
they please; they’ll still be drifting in my front door.
At night I’ll walk past, shaking my skirts,
one arm in someone else’s. Oh—and one other thing:
Jung didn’t sleep here. Only his dreams.
Lauren Camp—poet, artist, and radio DJ—is the author of two books, most recently The Dailiness, winner of the National Federation of Press Women 2014 Poetry Book Prize and a World Literature Today “Editor’s Pick.” Her third book, One Hundred Hungers, was selected for the Dorset Prize (Tupelo Press, 2016). She began these four poems while she was writer-in-residence at the Mabel Dodge Luhan House in Taos.