Quartet for Voices
David Capps
February 2023
Quartet for Voices (to be performed with one human voice reading each section, simultaneously)
I A Voice from No Time in Particular
A halo of trees
rests in darkness,
life and laughter
arise in far hills,
campfire ablaze,
ashen faces ask
what does this
poem know—
Yet say bells
ring, and we
are universe,
and when light
goes out, and body
dies, intermure
mists, and cabin
overgrown
with moss. A pool
table. Green. Deer
leap in the kitchen
no longer kitchen
antlers felt light
switch. This house,
one body, One
among many.
A halo of trees
in darkness. All.
All this means—
a drawing of shades,
and paintings fallen
off the hook. Verse
as dust in layers
microbes feasting,
treffen und du frisst.
Yet this light resists.
Bodies are rooms
in houses, crevices
in cabins where
shades are drawn,
upon what self? That
one exists in time
or outside time
exist, and still
experience time as if
a poem’s as if? Golden
leaf rustle—hoof
combing rug—As if I could
find it there.
Wild geese search
overhead, frogs
abandon pursuit.
This lake went dry
centuries ago. Remnants
of a lodge remain.
A pool table. Felt.
Smoldering, ashen faces,
days as an integers
along the line
of natural numbers—
endless, isn’t it?
Streaming sunshine.
II A Past Voice
Do you want to be
stripes or solids?
asked an angling cue
in dim lamp light.
What do you want
to be? Then that is
what you will be:
a solid something
in the shadows of
the forest king,
a striped someone
celebrated in light
of the hall. True, a hall
itself in transition
from being to being
something other,
a shape coming into
focus the way a cue
sharpens on chalk,
and all unconscious
decisions you make
are made.
III A Voice that is No Where
The real genuflects,
backing its way
out cautiously I
that is the I tries I
and to see itself
recovering senses
in attempt to make
a room from the past:
steps from cinder,
green felt from moss.
The strange thing is,
I keep picturing
a hotel of separate
rooms, infinitely
many, whose lights
never turn off,
and I glimpse the
rooms facing mine,
as I look out across
a square courtyard,
rooms identical,
whose curtains close
with a pull when I
look up and yet
the light remains on,
tuned to experience
“eternal life” muttered
beneath its breath,
and my perception
swings there, as from
a lamp hanging over
the table, a soft Louis
XV green, malachite
of a public house.
IV A Voice Closer to the Present
Drifting back, I find
murmurs of thistles.
Rain pours, and earth
lets loose a groan,
as if to ask who
lived here, should
I know. No one,
a member. A race.
Qualitative identity.
Once, someone set
a hammock. One
wrote a four part
fugue. Showing more,
surely. Quaff of
ideologues. Still,
even speech goes
to seed, Bach rot
infests the vine—then
can we salvage divine?
In thick white terror
flows a river.
Identity. Selves
self off, cobwebs
spun so gently mount
in attics. Others.
But song, fire, winds
esophageal, allergic
to the divine.
Reasons spill
severally, pine trunks
marred for the task,
and there I am,
seated in darkness
debilitating, the way
I began, and you,
present before void
and for birth yearning—
what stages—
I pause. For beyond
evolution, a state
of all times. Red
coral forming, tendrils
foraging, in provision.
◊
David Capps is a philosophy professor and poet who lives in New Haven, CT. He is the author of four chapbooks: Poems from the First Voyage (The Nasiona Press, 2019), A Non-Grecian Non-Urn (Yavanika Press, 2019), Colossi (Kelsay Books, 2020), and Wheatfield with a Reaper (Akinoga Press, forthcoming).