The Circus
                        
                            By Kenneth Koch
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            I remember when I wrote The Circus
 I was living in Paris, or rather we were living in Paris
 Janice, Frank was alive, the Whitney Museum
 Was still on 8th Street, or was it still something else?
 Fernand Léger lived in our building
 Well it wasn’t really our building it was the building we lived in
 Next to a Grand Guignol troupe who made a lot of noise
 So that one day I yelled through a hole in the wall
 Of our apartment I don’t know why there was a hole there
 Shut up! And the voice came back to me saying something
 I don’t know what. Once I saw Léger walk out of the building
 I think. Stanley Kunitz came to dinner. I wrote The Circus
 In two tries, the first getting most of the first stanza;
 That fall I also wrote an opera libretto called Louisa or Matilda.
 Jean-Claude came to dinner. He said (about “cocktail sauce”)
 It should be good on something but not on these (oysters).
 By that time I think I had already written The Circus
 When I came back, having been annoyed to have to go
 I forget what I went there about
 You were back in the apartment what a dump actually we liked it
 I think with your hair and your writing and the pans
 Moving strummingly about the kitchen and I wrote The Circus
 It was a summer night no it was an autumn one summer when
 I remember it but actually no autumn that black dusk toward the post office
 And I wrote many other poems then but The Circus was the best
 Maybe not by far the best Geography was also wonderful
 And the Airplane Betty poems (inspired by you) but The Circus was the best.
 Sometimes I feel I actually am the person
 Who did this, who wrote that, including that poem The Circus
 But sometimes on the other hand I don’t.
 There are so many factors engaging our attention!
 At every moment the happiness of others, the health of those we know and our own!
 And the millions upon millions of people we don’t know and their well-being to think about
 So it seems strange I found time to write The Circus
 And even spent two evenings on it, and that I have also the time
 To remember that I did it, and remember you and me then, and write this poem about it
 At the beginning of The Circus
 The Circus girls are rushing through the night
 In the circus wagons and tulips and other flowers will be picked
 A long time from now this poem wants to get off on its own
 Someplace like a painting not held to a depiction of composing The Circus.
 Noel Lee was in Paris then but usually out of it
 In Germany or Denmark giving a concert
 As part of an endless activity
 Which was either his career or his happiness or a combination of both
 Or neither I remember his dark eyes looking he was nervous
 With me perhaps because of our days at Harvard.
 It is understandable enough to be nervous with anybody!
 How softly and easily one feels when alone
 Love of one’s friends when one is commanding the time and space syndrome
 If that’s the right word which I doubt but together how come one is so nervous?
 One is not always but what was I then and what am I now attempting to create
 If create is the right word
 Out of this combination of experience and aloneness
 And who are you telling me it is or is not a poem (not you?) Go back with me though
 To those nights I was writing The Circus.
 Do you like that poem? have you read it? It is in my book Thank You
 Which Grove just reprinted. I wonder how long I am going to live
 And what the rest will be like I mean the rest of my life.
 John Cage said to me the other night How old are you? and I told him forty-six
 (Since then I’ve become forty-seven) he said
 Oh that’s a great age I remember.
 John Cage once told me he didn’t charge much for his mushroom identification course (at the New School)
 Because he didn’t want to make a profit from nature
 He was ahead of his time I was behind my time we were both in time
 Brilliant go to the head of the class and “time is a river”
 It doesn’t seem like a river to me it seems like an unformed plan
 Days go by and still nothing is decided about
 What to do until you know it never will be and then you say “time”
 But you really don’t care much about it any more
 Time means something when you have the major part of yours ahead of you
 As I did in Aix-en-Provence that was three years before I wrote The Circus
 That year I wrote Bricks and The Great Atlantic Rainway
 I felt time surround me like a blanket endless and soft
 I could go to sleep endlessly and wake up and still be in it
 But I treasured secretly the part of me that was individually changing
 Like Noel Lee I was interested in my career
 And still am but now it is like a town I don’t want to leave
 Not a tower I am climbing opposed by ferocious enemies
 I never mentioned my friends in my poems at the time I wrote The Circus
 Although they meant almost more than anything to me
 Of this now for some time I’ve felt an attenuation
 So I’m mentioning them maybe this will bring them back to me
 Not them perhaps but what I felt about them
 John Ashbery Jane Freilicher Larry Rivers Frank O’Hara
 Their names alone bring tears to my eyes
 As seeing Polly did last night
 It is beautiful at any time but the paradox is leaving it
 In order to feel it when you’ve come back the sun has declined
 And the people are merrier or else they’ve gone home altogether
 And you are left alone well you put up with that your sureness is like the sun
 While you have it but when you don’t its lack’s a black and icy night. I came home
 And wrote The Circus that night, Janice. I didn’t come and speak to you
 And put my arm around you and ask you if you’d like to take a walk
 Or go to the Cirque Medrano though that’s what I wrote poems about
 And am writing about that now, and now I’m alone
 And this is not as good a poem as The Circus
 And I wonder if any good will come of either of them all the same.
                
                    
                        Kenneth Koch, “The Circus” from The Collected Poems of Kenneth Koch, published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Copyright © 2005 by The Kenneth Koch Literary Estate.  Used by permission of  Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved. 
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Collected Poems of Kenneth Koch
                                                                                                                                                                    (Alfred A. Knopf, 2006)