The Painter
                        
                            By John Ashbery
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            Sitting between the sea and the buildings
 He enjoyed painting the sea’s portrait.
 But just as children imagine a prayer
 Is merely silence, he expected his subject
 To rush up the sand, and, seizing a brush,
 Plaster its own portrait on the canvas.
 So there was never any paint on his canvas
 Until the people who lived in the buildings
 Put him to work: “Try using the brush
 As a means to an end. Select, for a portrait,
 Something less angry and large, and more subject
 To a painter’s moods, or, perhaps, to a prayer.”
 How could he explain to them his prayer
 That nature, not art, might usurp the canvas?
 He chose his wife for a new subject,
 Making her vast, like ruined buildings,
 As if, forgetting itself, the portrait
 Had expressed itself without a brush.
 Slightly encouraged, he dipped his brush
 In the sea, murmuring a heartfelt prayer:
 “My soul, when I paint this next portrait
 Let it be you who wrecks the canvas.”
 The news spread like wildfire through the buildings:
 He had gone back to the sea for his subject.
 Imagine a painter crucified by his subject!
 Too exhausted even to lift his brush,
 He provoked some artists leaning from the buildings
 To malicious mirth: “We haven’t a prayer
 Now, of putting ourselves on canvas,
 Or getting the sea to sit for a portrait!”
 Others declared it a self-portrait.
 Finally all indications of a subject
 Began to fade, leaving the canvas
 Perfectly white. He put down the brush.
 At once a howl, that was also a prayer,
 Arose from the overcrowded buildings.
 They tossed him, the portrait, from the tallest of the buildings;
 And the sea devoured the canvas and the brush
 As though his subject had decided to remain a prayer.
                
                    
                        John Ashbery, “The Painter” from Some Trees. Copyright © 1956 by John Ashbery. Reprinted with the permission of Georges Borchardt, Inc. on behalf of the author.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Mooring of Starting Out: The First Five Books of Poetry
                                                                                                                                                                    (Ecco Press, 1997)