Saturday, 8 September 2012

Frank O'Hara: Cantata ("loyal tawny and apt")


.


Kip the cat: photo by historique (K M), 1 July 2012




How could I be so foolish as to not believe
that my great orange cat Boris (Armed with Madness)
Butts loves me when he rises to the door like a dog
each night when I come home from work and
probably isn't even particularly hungry
...............................................or lays
his conspicuous hairs on my darkest clothes
out of pure longing for my smell which they do have
because he looks like my best friend my constant lover
hopelessly loyal tawny and apt and whom I hopelessly love



 
Frank O'Hara (27 March 1926-25 July 1966): Cantata, 18 February 1965, from Collected Poems, edited by Donald Allen, 1971

"He began to change, beautifying himself, scrupulously and elaborately as a cat."

"Birth and ruin and exile, and a name not like green hills, but a wild, snow-crested tree. He would take Boris away. He would go back into Russia with Boris."

-- Mary Butts: from Armed with Madness, 1928




File:Cat blending in.jpg

Tabby cat blending in with its surroundings
: photo by Clavecin, 18 May 2007

16 comments:

  1. love the independence of cats...!

    ReplyDelete
  2. In the ancient gaze of the cat deities, one falls back -- so near and yet so very very far.

    ReplyDelete
  3. hail the little household gods

    ReplyDelete
  4. Scorpio, I miss you, butterscotch swirl.

    You, in the raspberries
    waiting for them to drop
    during your tenure
    at Nonpareil University.
    You took note of the rows.
    Figured the horoscopes.

    They miss you, too, and are now
    just starting to come back.
    Loyal, like the cedar.
    Like your rounds up the fence
    behind the lilacs and over
    to the other roses then
    back to the garden. Daisy
    jealous. Lily could have
    cared less. Mimi short-sighted.
    Hypnotized by thousands of years
    an ancient command
    carried out by rulers
    or their mummies
    Live, Love, Kill.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Mr. Frank O'Hara
    a man surrounded
    art music
    people those upside down
    possible anger humor city
    exasperatingly alive

    ultimately
    what he sinks
    his face into
    night after night
    is Boris Butts' fur
    intoxicating
    lazy
    an animal smell

    ancient
    buried beneath
    a triangular construction
    half asleep but listening
    listening to the creak
    of stones as they
    are moved aside
    in the name of science
    of discovery
    all for the sake
    of modern citizens
    who pretend
    they forgot
    the ancient command.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Don't bother looking directly
    into their cat eyes
    they are already hypnotized
    already dreaming of movement
    alive life beauty

    their training taking place
    under our very noses!
    Infiltrating our senses. They steal. We steal their time.
    They are so busy! Don't bother them. Doctors of landscape. The perfect grammar of their tails.
    Explict ears, punctuation by claw.

    Like that guy's book about his dog
    watching car races on TV
    and everything
    with him--
    I will meet you,
    Aries, Scorpy, Daisy, Moonshine, Auden, Shumagin--
    when I catch you
    reading Recollections
    of Gran Apacheria.

    ReplyDelete
  7. If I sleep in the green jungle
    pretending to sleep
    I will dream myself
    not miniature any more
    but larger in my loneliness
    the infamous green idea
    previously studied
    friendly tawny loyalty
    with pink or blue
    somewhere purple and cream.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Frank O'Hara, Frank O'Hara
    the jazz den calls
    out to neon
    streaming
    down Zeitgeist cheeks
    with the blue note

    they noticed
    cat-eyes
    shiny reflections
    beehive Wolkenkratzers
    plastics still brand new
    not quite so suspect
    true true.

    ReplyDelete
  9. As an O'Hara fan from way back, and a Butts fan from just the past month or so, you know how I feel. Maybe better than I do.

    I'm not alone in the house, of course.
    Not to mention all the insects
    who find the windows open doors:
    the new black cat such a friendly kitten
    on a kitchen chair a-sittin',
    now lyin' with a foot a-twitchin',
    now quiet as she can be, next to me.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Frank’s always been one of my favorites; thanks for posting this little gem that illustrates why.


    ReplyDelete
  11. Aries, Scorpy, Daisy, Moonshine, Auden, Shumagin, Boris Armed with Madness Butts -- let them all come alive again in the mind now, even as the three clamouring senior felines here are rewarded for their continuing dependent independence by receiving their pre-matutinal ration of one-third of a small can of wet food, per head.

    ReplyDelete
  12. oh, Tom ! you splendid cat. Got me purring with thanks, Donna

    ReplyDelete
  13. A tawny fur-lined thank you, Donna. (And I'm sure Frank would have wanted to thank you, too.)

    ReplyDelete
  14. Ah, Tom, I googled that poem to send to a friend in Paris with a sick cat (named Marley), hoping not to have to prop up The Collected O'Hara to type it out, and voila! Thanks! How fresh... and then there's those cats of Baudelaire! What a range of felinity... infinite felinity! Best to you after all these years (you were leaving Santa Barbara when we arrived...)

    ReplyDelete
  15. Great to hear from you, Daniel.

    That O'Hara Collected is a magnificent thing, but it's not easy to breathe when under it.

    ReplyDelete