Reciting
“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”
The first time I heard that poem
was
on the old Rocky and Bullwinkle Show,
hilarious
cartoons about a flying squirrel
and
his pal, a dim, lovable moose.
The
show wasn’t really for kids,
with
satire skits on the Cold War,
the
space race, and puns so rarified
they
flew over my head like Rocky
zooming
into the stratosphere,
before
he’d alight on Bullwinkle’s antlers
I’d
watch with my dad, laugh-tears
runneling
his jaws at sly references
more
tart than lemonade.
The
one segment I did get, Bullwinkle
reciting
poetry: “Stopping by Woods
on
a Snowy Evening” the one I remembered
and
could recite, but only in his reedy-poet voice.
Otherwise,
the words fled me, like the court
beauties
who dallied with Elizabethan poet,
Thomas
Wyatt, before he committed
something
unpardonable in the game
of
courtly amours.
Years
later, I’d recite the poem at parties
in
Bullwinkle’s voice, to friends’
stomping
approval, and recalled
my
dad’s happy tears at the Cold War
connivings
of Boris and Natasha,
the
mischief of Martians Gibney and Cloyd:
Dad’s
laughter still ringing.
Chekhov’s
Gun
“Chekhov’s Gun” postulates:
if
there’s a gun in a play’s first act,
it
must be fired by the end of the second,
or
don’t show or mention the weapon at all.
Beth
and I used to love Kung-Fu,
a
70’s TV series featuring a banished
shaolin
monk wandering the Old West,
spouting
Hollywood-Taoist wisdom,
saving
the innocent and reluctantly
fighting
bad men with guns,
who
never stood a chance against
his
choreographed martial arts razzle-dazzle.
Alas,
in real life, the bad guys with guns
always
win, when they shoot up
supermarkets,
houses of worship, schools:
anywhere
people congregate in large,
targetable
numbers: the killers leaving trails
of
blood and body parts that Chekhov,
who
trained as a doctor, would’ve been
so
horrified by, he might’ve said instead,
“Never
show a gun, never, never:
good
drama doesn’t require one.”
A
Game of Chess
In Bergman’s The Seventh Seal,
a
Knight—a visual pun on the chess piece
that
can move in devious patterns—
returns
disillusioned from the Crusades
and
plays a game of chess with Death,
partly
to try to escape the fate
he’s
been summoned to,
partly
to give his wife, squire,
and
new friends—a woodcutter,
his
cheating wife, the head
of
a troupe of traveling actors,
the
company’s acrobat, his delectable wife,
and
their adorable child—a chance to elude
the
Hooded Angel’s fatal patience.
The
Knight loses, but his delaying tactics
save
that holy family of strolling players.
A
buddy and I were once so transfixed
by
American Bobby Fischer beating
the
Soviet grandmaster, Boris Spassky,
we
took a chess set to the park.
One
game proved how hopeless I was:
far
more adept, these days, at arranging
the
vials of meds I’m forced to take
for
more maladies than I can remember:
popping
the pills with glasses of water,
turning
the bottles upside down, not
to
resign the game, but so I know
I’ve
taken my daily dosage; even if,
they’ll
prove as futile
as
that overmatched Knight’s gambits
in
my own endgame.
Writing
the Great American Novel
Every morning for the past two weeks,
Tom
wakes with a ballpoint pen
on
his chest, and wonders if space
aliens
had dropped them there.
Or
if a crossword-purist ghost
was
taunting that his using a pencil
was
an act of cowardice.
Last
night, the mystery was solved:
when
Tom staggered to the bathroom
a
few hours after a second glass
of
good white wine
with
his wife over dinner.
Their
cat was padding up the stairs,
a
pen in her mouth as if a dead bird
or
mouse love-gift.
“Ah,”
Tom bent and took the pen,
and
wondered if it was just that
she’d
seen him writing checks
and
thought he wanted to cherish
that
cylinder, as she might a litter,
if
she could.
Or
maybe, Tom thinks, while alcohol
streams,
then dribbles, out of him,
she
wants him to write
the
Great American Novel,
and
he remembers the carton—
still
in the basement—he’d filled
in
college with character sketches,
scenes,
but never wrote that book.
“What
else,” he asks himself,
“is
there to do in retirement?”
the
crosswords, even Saturday’s
labyrinths,
too easy.
Robert Cooperman's latest collection
is BEARING THE BODY OF HECTOR HOME (FutureCycle Press). Forthcoming from
Kelsay Books is HELL AT COCK'S CROW, a sonnet sequence about pirates.
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