| David Baker_____
 
 Horse Madness
 
 
 
 
 
 1.
 
 means fury; means heat.
 From Hippomanes,
 in Ferry’s rendering
 of Virgil’s third georgic:
 is slick with froth; is blood-
 lipped; is spring-wild.
 I see it in your eyes.
 The horse is meant,
 like us, for madness.
 It must be held in halter
 
 lest it rear or run.
 It must be scanted of
 leafy foods come
 spring, to make it lean,
 make it less familiar.
 These things Virgil knows.
 Yet it may run or rear
 or with alarm
 betray your presence,
 despite your care.
 
 The eyes go everywhere.
 The eyes are orbital, animal;
 they reflect both worlds.
 So Jackanappes-
 on-horsebacke
 —weed we hold
 as common marigold—
 wraps a sun inside
 its petal before
 the sun starts down . . .
 
 
 2.
 
 Their eyes were my clock.
 Thus the oval eyes
 of goats and sheep
 turn rounder as their day
 goes down. Turn round to see,
 in thirst, in pain or panic,
 what gallops near, whatever
 holds itself away, grinding
 in the brooding dust.
 What makes Virgil
 
 so compelling, beyond
 the grace of verse, is
 farmer knowledge.
 Thus the shepherd sings
 he finds his likeness
 in their eyes; his judgment
 grows of patience, as
 practice grows of prudence.
 As goats deserve
 no less than sheep deserve . . .
 
 
 3.
 
 Means burning-in-the-
 marrow; means as-they-
 rush-into-the-fire. Meaning
 all of us. I look at you
 and see—what? Mythology,
 song. Thus slaughter begins,
 among the bullocks,
 when bees are lost
 and must be raised again.
 The nose is stopped
 
 (who devised an art
 like this?) and the body
 beat until its innards fall.
 Then—with marjoram—
 a ferment. Then the offal
 seeds with bees, and up
 they may be gathered.
 Meaning madness
 is its own mythology.
 
 The horse begins
 to tremble. The body
 shivers; nor whip, nor reins,
 nor wide opposing river,
 whose rising can bring down
 mountains, may hold one back.
 These things Virgil knows.
 I see it in your eyes. Means
 the face I see is not,
 my love, my face.
   |