Stephen LewisGulls, Page 1

THE GULLS’ SWEETLY BANKED FLIGHT

A time ago, the parachute ride

presided over the summer swirl

of pastel yellows and purples that rose

from the shirts and shorts of those

seeking salt cool breezes at Coney Island.

They rode the roller coaster

through the black sky

charged with pink cotton candy,

and they waltzed the Ferris wheel

to the rhythms of the surf.

The parachute dwarfed these,

with its improbable structure,

like a giant steel mushroom

growing out of the sand,

its cables climbing to its cap

higher than the swoop of gulls,

or, even, the very moon at midnight.

There, sitting on the narrow seat

afloat between the wires,

I would climb forever

only to plummet for one long breath

toward the crowd that pulsed the boardwalk

and clogged the stall-lined streets

with life that has fronted death.

The oldest pressed flower in Brooklyn

lies between the pages of a farmer’s ledger

in the living room of a brownstone on Sackett Street.

That flower greeted the morning sun

a century ago in a Michigan field

where a young woman on her way

to tend the patient cows,

their udders pressed full,

paused for a moment's reflection

about the man she might have wed,

the hired hand paid by her father

more in lodging than wages.

But he could not abide

planting his hopes in the soil,

exposed to the whimsy of sun and rain.

She had marked how the wonder in his eyes

argued against the callouses on his hands

while he spoke his dreams,

and she would not tell him what she knew

would stay his leave.

She only stood with her back stiff

against the ivy covered post on her father's porch

listening to his invitation

to ride steel rails to streets

of stone and walls of brick,

knowing that her feet

must feel the moist grass,

her hair the wind before a summer's rain.

And so she knelt this August morning

while the cows snapped their tails,

hating the swell of her own belly,

her knees pressed into the black soil.

She studied the delicate purple flowers

atop the swollen pods,

and she imagined the seeds feather borne

on east blowing winds.

Her fingernail split the topmost pod,

and it dropped its thick milk over her hand.

She ran her fingers down the stalk,

closed them tight, and pulled just once.

She left the stalk with its crushed blossom

to wither among the numbers

that recorded a month's lodging and pay,

inscribed in the ledger on a page headed

"Cash Paid Out."

The man boarded the train,

and sat unblinking for a thousand miles

until the locomotive locked its wheels

on the new track of the terminal,

glass faced and steel bright.

He had chased his star's dream,

only to find himself working

beneath the waters of the black river,

scraping against the earth's crust

with pick and squared fingernails

as once he had furrowed its surface,

now planting a bridge

instead of rows of corn.

He had left the constellations

above the green fields

to lodge on the top floor

of a Brooklyn brownstone

where he dragged his body each night

to sleep a dreamless sleep,

indifferent to the coruscating life

across the waters,

the bright lights shut from him

behind his heavy lids.

One day he found his sturdy body

racked as though his very sinews

would crack and separate,

and he could labor no more.

He lay in his agony

as another summer's heat

pressed down through the soft tar

on the flat roof above his room,

and he thought of her that morning,

more unyielding as she stood before him

than the granite beneath the river.

He could sometimes still see

the gulls riding the currents

above the ploughed waves,

describing circles

that seemed to find him

the unmoving, and then,

unthinking center.

That desiccated flower

traveled the same tracks

the man had ridden a century before,

and as though governed by a private deity

whose sense of order, or humor,

demanded such patterning

of random circumstances,

the steps of their granddaughter

climbed the worn wooden stairs

of the house on Sackett Street

to the topmost apartment

where a ceiling fan now stirs the air

into small eddies over the open pages

of a farmer's account book that holds

the dust of a long forgotten blossom.

Drawn, as if by the gulls' graceful arc,

the young woman finds the old locus

of pain and aspiration

at the bottom of the great tower

whose twinned arches

frame the discordant skyline,

and order the jumble of shapes

like a cunning picture frame

over a collage of sky, stars,

and square patches of yellow light.

In the shadows at the river's edge,

where for a hundred years the water

has lapped the stubborn stone,

she encounters a waif

raised from the deep currents

who speaks to her the images

that teem in his swollen brain

and demand to splash on the quiet shore

of the night beneath the bridge.

He tells her of his conversations

with the broken shades of the men

on whose backs the bridge had risen.

She sees how his words ride the breezes

lifted from the river

seeking a place in the cracks

of the aspiring arches,

only to be scattered with the other debris

upon the surface of the water

to form another generation's precipitate,

unresolved among the ocean's waves,

far from the gulls' hoarse cries

and their sweetly banked flight.

From that height,

paused before the sudden fall,

and wrapped in the night's black blanket,

I discovered points of color

on the distant streets,

as though a giant box of crayons

had spilled from the heavens

and the shards of wax had fused

with the steaming asphalt.

Even the neon signs,

so blatant at ground level

appeared slashes of pastel

washed by the mist

that rose from the beach

to where I sat,

just a reach away

from white stars and yellow moon.

The drop sent death in a rush

to strip the blanket from me

as the bench plummeted.

Each time I knew that I would die,

but then the slide down slowed

and just before I landed,

I would find a face

with eyes struck open in wonder.

I would smile and tell myself

that I was alive.

In Brooklyn, borough of churches

and young men in undershirts,

I found her sending spiritual runners

over the sidewalks seeking the crevice

that would open the city to her,

and my feet, too, felt the throb

of the familiar terrain.

At night, she murmurs,

sleep, make love, smoke cigarettes,

her words whispered warm against my cheek,

her arms tight around my back,

the red glow from our fingers

stabbing the anarchic night at our window

to light the way to the street below

electric with adolescent obscenities,

Hey, Jesús, up yours, you mutha!

voices swallowed in the roar of trucks

and the rumble of the F train

beneath Smith Street.

We call out the window for Jesús,

the little street kid, the recylcer of hubcaps,

whom we imagine a wine bearer whose goblets

gather the sounds of the street

into a reification of that startling life

so near to our quiet bed,

a metaphor we can bend to our wishes,

knowing that its taut spring

will snap us together,

unresisting prisoners of the pulse

that sets the early summer stillness

into subtle movements

that rock the street to sleep

at dawn’s edge.

We lean our bare backs against the wall

to witness the performance,

sun and earth aligned to blacken the moon.

The bright yellow ebbs before the dark tide,

our view framed by our empty glasses

on the ledge next to the mattress.

A maple casts its shadow

over the still street, the quiet wrinkled

only by the breeze that ruffles the docile leaves.

Clouds hang like chiseled white rocks,

hewn from a giant and invisible mountain.

We watch the shadows cover the moon,

and then draw the blanket over us

as though the darkness

has chilled the sultry air.

Perhaps it is our recognition

of what the black portends

that moves us to hold each other into sleep,

or maybe it is the only the persistent breathing

that yawns up from the pavement,

inarticulate but just as hauntingly real

as the fleeting convergence

in time and space

of patterns beyond measure,

yet simple as a whispered embrace,

sleep, make love, smoke cigarettes.

The traffic beneath the promenade

quivers the bench on which we sit,

each shockwave a reminder of the metal river

that flows over the asphalt

and runs along the flank

of its mate, the river,

now burdened more by its past

than its present,

days when tallmasted ships

paused at wharves to relieve

the bulging warehouse on South Street,

and then cut their way to the ocean,

carrying something of the city’s ebullience,

and a little of its mystery,

leaving a ghostly wake of commerce

on the surface of the indifferent river.

A breeze passes through the cabled web

without ruffling the motionless lines,

and then reforms itself

beneath a drifting cloud

where a man and a woman,

sitting on a stone bench,

can join themselves

like the tension

between the huge towers,

each rooted in a separate past,

finding their soul’s core

in the finely ordered chaos

that is the city,

the random junctures

most truly expressed

in the charged stillness

of the bridge,

and in the inchoate feelings

that rise, as if bidden,

by the gentle June winds

to ride the currents of the river.

Then and now,

it would be simple to say,

becomes life and death,

but since the mitosis

of a simple cell

produces a globular mass,

the anlage of passion and reason,

we know that simple terms

will not suffice

to explain why the parachute

now stares blankly

over barren beaches

littered in wintertime

with a summer’s refuse

of beer cans and shards of glass,

or why the crowds

no longer seek the brisk breezes

of an August evening at Coney Island,

or why the gulls still circle

the ancient bridge at sunset,

their cries as unchanged

as the surf that crashes

against the damp shores,

against the empty echoes

of excited laughter,

still audible,

in the early morning hours

beneath the parachute,

a time ago.