Silver Jews’ David Berman Recites A Poem From Third Man Books’ Frank Stanford Collection
Jack White’s Third Man Records has become something of a haven for all kinds of special releases — vinyl or otherwise — and today they’ve shared a video of Silver Jews’ David Berman reciting a poem by Frank Stanford. The poem is from a recent Third Man Books release called Hidden Water: From The Frank Stanford Archives, a collection of Stanford’s “unpublished poems, facsimiles, artwork, photos, handwrtten drafts, and letters.” The poem is called “Untitled (I Bought A Ticket To Russia So I Could Do That Dance In The Snow), and Berman carries it off with a dry, sardonic delivery that highlights the opaque depression and hope in the piece. Listen below.
Here’s the full text of the poem:
U N T I T L E D (I BOUGHT A TICKET TO RUSSIA SO I COULD DO THAT DANCE IN THE SNOW)
I bought a ticket to Russia so I could do that dance in the snow
I saw a calf of miasmas run into barbed wire
I saw a child hang himself at a certain angle
So he could see his shadow a thousandfold
When I was seven I wrote a novel of apples and milk
That lamented the passing of a moonlike character one certain Debureau
And his coughing sidekick the Beast of ice
At night I rowed a blue guitar with swords through the bay
I made my way the gills turning pink in my shoes
Up the fearful symmetry of that stretch of anonymous water
I lent out my broom to the clandestine pollen
I laid my head in the prostitute’s lap
I interpreted the dementia of the cheerleader’s waist
Going to sleep in the dust was my only accomplishment my destiny
Drenched in the garden of slime and mistrusted mystery
I was accused of the odor of vengeance
The only friend I had I could trust froze in the clover
Through the valleys through the shadowy doorways through the merchandise
Of schoolrooms I go luminous a walking disaster
Forever fighting off dribbling flies that smell of mayonnaise and pencils
That whistle like officers of the law
Through the duration I made myself bleed in a gallop
I listened to the noise in the thistle of the dark
I kept moving undiminished and scorched
Holding a light to the egg
Slashed and weaving I pursue the murmuring cinders
I stagger through the familiar juices of the moon
As if I earned my living in a rodeo I ride down each tear
I pierce the ooze with a submerged kiss dug under contempt and despair
I assume the span of the figurehead’s breasts ravished to smithereens
I pass my time in Emily Dickinson’s outhouse
I pace through the dishevelment of the recluse’s lacuna
I scrawl on the mirror and peel oranges in the shepherd boy’s confessional
In the fall of the year I watch the meadows
Shivering like so many sorrel mares in heat
I lurk behind the canvas of the traveling picture show
Smelling of sardine’s Sara Bundy’s boiled coffee
Black is the color of the school marm’s hems pulled up like drapes
I wait my ticket the knife like a Pre-raphaelite suicide
Drunk on the ruined records of Dixie Hummingbirds
The black discs the Negroes sail over the levee
And shoot out of the sky with a hair triggered shotgun
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Get Hidden Water here via Third Man Books.