Keeping The City

"Unless the Lord keepeth the city, the watchman guardeth in vain" - John F. Kennedy's unspoken words in Dallas on November 23, 1963.

Once,
in August,
head on your chest,
I heard wings
battering up the place,
something inside trying to fly out
and I was silent
and attentive,
the watchman.
I was your small public,
your small audience
but it was you that was clapping,
it was you untying the snarls and knots,
the webs, all bloody and gluey;
you with your twelve tongues and twelve wings
beating, wresting, beating, beating
your way out of childhood,
that airless net that fastened you down.

Since then I was more silent
though you had gone miles away,
tearing down, rebuilding the fortress.
I was there
but could do nothing
but guard the city
lest it break.

I was silent.
I had a strange idea I could overhear
but that your voice, tongue, wing
belonged solely to you.
The Lord was silent too.
I did not know if he could keep you whole,
where I, miles away, yet head on your chest,
could do nothing. Not a single thing.

The wings of the watchman,
if I spoke, would hurt the bird of your soul
as he nested, bit, sucked, flapped.
I wanted him to fly, burst like a missile from your throat,
burst from the spidery-mother-web,
burst from Woman herself
where too many had laid out lights
that stuck to you and left a burn
that smarted into your middle age.

The city
of my choice
that I guard
like a butterfly, useless, useless
in her yellow costume, swirling
swirling around the gates.
The city shifts, falls, rebuilds,
and I can do nothing.
A watchman
should be on the alert,
but never cocksure.
And The Lord -
who knows what he keepeth?

Author: Anne Sexton

<b>Keeping The City</b><br /><br /><i>"Unless the Lord keepeth the city, the watchman guardeth in vain" - John F. Kennedy's unspoken words in Dallas on November 23, 1963.</i><br /><br />Once,<br />in August,<br />head on your chest,<br />I heard wings<br />battering up the place,<br />something inside trying to fly out<br />and I was silent<br />and attentive,<br />the watchman.<br />I was your small public,<br />your small audience<br />but it was you that was clapping,<br />it was you untying the snarls and knots,<br />the webs, all bloody and gluey;<br />you with your twelve tongues and twelve wings<br />beating, wresting, beating, beating<br />your way out of childhood,<br />that airless net that fastened you down.<br /><br />Since then I was more silent<br />though you had gone miles away,<br />tearing down, rebuilding the fortress.<br />I was there<br />but could do nothing<br />but guard the city<br />lest it break.<br /><br />I was silent.<br />I had a strange idea I could overhear<br />but that your voice, tongue, wing<br />belonged solely to you.<br />The Lord was silent too.<br />I did not know if he could keep you whole,<br />where I, miles away, yet head on your chest,<br />could do nothing. Not a single thing.<br /><br />The wings of the watchman,<br />if I spoke, would hurt the bird of your soul<br />as he nested, bit, sucked, flapped.<br />I wanted him to fly, burst like a missile from your throat,<br />burst from the spidery-mother-web,<br />burst from <i>Woman</i> herself<br />where too many had laid out lights<br />that stuck to you and left a burn<br />that smarted into your middle age.<br /><br />The city<br />of my choice<br />that I guard<br />like a butterfly, useless, useless<br />in her yellow costume, swirling<br />swirling around the gates.<br />The city shifts, falls, rebuilds,<br />and I can do nothing.<br />A watchman<br />should be on the alert,<br />but never cocksure.<br />And The Lord -<br />who knows what he keepeth? - Anne Sexton




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