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    My Mother's Body

    Page 7
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    and the white wind is blowing in arabesques

      through us. The world wizens in the cold

      to a circle that stops beyond my mittens

      outstretched on which the white froth

      still dissolves. Up, north, left—

      all are obliterated in the swirl.

      The only color that exists clings to

      your face, your coat, your scarf.

      We ride the feathered back of a white goose

      that flies miles high over the Himalayas.

      Where yesterday houses stood of neighbors,

      summer people, scandals still smouldering—

      heaps of old tires that burn for days—

      today all is whited out, a mistake

      on a typed page. My blood fizzes in my cheeks

      like a shaken soda waiting to explode.

      Into any haven we reach we will carry

      a dizziness, a blindness that will melt

      slowly, a sense of how uneasily we inhabit

      this earth, how a rise or drop of a few degrees,

      a little more water or a trifle less, renders

      us strange as brontosaurus in our homeland.

      We are fitted for a short winter and then spring.

      We stagger out of the belly of the snow

      plucked of words naked and steaming.

      The clumsy season

      I keep cutting off bits of my fingers or banging

      my knee hard. I am offering pain and blood

      like a down payment on myself withheld.

      Don’t leave me because I am wasting words,

      pissing them out like bad wine swallowed

      that leaves the skull echoing and scraped.

      Don’t let the words rise up and leave me

      like a flight of dissatisfied geese.

      I am waters waiting to be troubled again.

      I am coming back and I will enter quiet

      like a cave and crouch with my knees drawn up

      till you birth me into squabbling bliss.

      I promise to relearn stillness like a spider.

      I will apprentice myself to pine trees.

      I will study the heron waiting on one foot.

      Only do not leave me empty as the skin

      the snake has cast on the path, ghostly

      colors fading and the sinuous hunter gone.

      Fill me roaring with your necessary music.

      Loose upon me your stories screaming for life,

      ravenous as gulls over a fishing boat.

      Or send the little dreams like gnats into my hair.

      Tease me with almost vision, flashes, scents

      that dangle barbs into the dark currents

      of memory. Use me however you will but

      use me. These little accidents are offerings

      to that Coming never accidental.

      Silk confetti

      Apple blossom petals lay on asphalt

      fallen from the tree at the road’s turn

      white as the flesh of the apple

      will be, flushed pink

      with the same blush

      tender and curved as cheeks;

      soft on hard; soon

      to be bruised to vague stains.

      Our best impulses often drop so

      and vanish under traffic. We will

      not know for months

      if they bore fruit.

      And whose creature am I?

      At times characters from my novels swarm through me,

      children of my mind, and possess me as dybbuks.

      My own shabby memories they have plucked and eaten

      till sometimes I cannot remember my own sorrows.

      In all that I value there is a core of mystery,

      in the seed that wriggles its new roots into the soil

      and whose pale head bursts the surface,

      in the dance where our bodies merge and reassemble,

      in the starving baby whose huge glazing eyes

      burned into my bones, in the look that passes

      between predator and prey before the death blow.

      I know of what rags and bones and clippings

      from frothing newsprint and poisonous glue

      my structures are built. Yet these creatures

      I have improvised like golem walk off and thrive.

      Between one and two thirds of our lives we spend

      in darkness, and the little lights we turn on

      make little holes in that great thick rich void.

      We are never done with knowing or with gnawing,

      but under the saying is whispering, touching

      and silence. Out of a given set of atoms

      we cast and recast the holy patterns new.

      In praise of gazebos

      Trellises bear the weight of roses,

      pole beans, grape vines, wisteria,

      yet a stake or posts with wires

      strung between gives as good support.

      They are expressions of pleasure,

      garden jewelry, gestures

      of proportion in the winter,

      cascades of avid tangled greenery

      in the full clamor of summer.

      Benches under trees, cedar chairs

      that overlook the tomatoes or the marsh

      gradually ripening from green to sand

      to bronze, a settee and table

      on the grass, why do these furnishings

      seem Victorian? We go out to play,

      fiercely and with bats, with balls,

      with rackets. We go out to bash our flesh

      on the rough granite boulder of our will.

      To sit among the shrubs and contemplate,

      not for a tan, not for the body’s

      honing, oiling or toning, but just

      to feed the eyes and scalded ears,

      to let a gentle light into the brain,

      to quiet the media babble, without radio,

      Walkman, blast box, to let cool

      the open hearth furnaces of ambition,

      is to shape a space left open for calm

      as if that harmony could shine down

      like sunlight on the scalp. Perhaps

      you say these little structures which contain

      no real furniture, work or tools

      are secret traps for catching silence.

      Let outside and inside blur in the light season.

      Build us pergolas, follies, arbors, terraces.

      Let us make our gardens half artful

      and half wild, to match our love.

      The Faithless

      Sleep, you jade smooth liar,

      you promised to come

      to me, come to me

      waiting here like a cut

      open melon ripe as summer.

      Sleep, you black velvet

      tomcat, where are you prowling?

      I set a trap of sheets

      clean and fresh as daisies,

      pillows like cloudy sighs.

      Sleep, you soft-bellied

      angel with feathered thighs,

      you tease my cheek with the brush

      of your wings. I reach

      for you but clutch air.

      Sleep, you fur-bottomed tramp,

      when I want you, you’re in

      everybody’s bed but my own.

      Take you for granted and you stalk

      me from the low point of every hour.

      Sleep, omnivorous billy goat,

      you gobble the kittens, the crows,

      the cop on duty, the fast horse,

      but me you leave on the plate

      like a cold shore dinner.

      Is this divorce permanent?

      Runneled with hope I lie down

      nightly longing to pass

      again under the fresh blessing

      of your weight and broad wings.

      If I had been called Sabrina or Ann, she said

      I’m the only poet with the name.

      Can you imagine a prima ballerina named

      Marge? Marge Curie, Nobel Prize wi
    nner.

      Empress Marge. My lady Marge? Rhymes with

      large/charge/barge. Workingclass?

      Definitely. Any attempt to doll it up

      (Mar-gee? Mar-gette? Margelina?

      Margarine?) makes it worse. Name

      like an oilcan, like a bedroom

      slipper, like a box of baking soda,

      useful, plain; impossible for foreigners,

      from French to Japanese, to pronounce.

      My own grandmother called me what

      could only be rendered in English

      as Mousie. O my parents, what

      you did unto me, forever. Even

      my tombstone will look like a cartoon.

      The night the moon got drunk

      Up over the white shoulder of the dune

      the sand that scorched our soles

      now caresses our bare feet with cool compliance.

      The foundry of the sun is shut down.

      Where are the shallow caverns of shadow

      carved into the blinding desert light?

      Bowls of mist, pennons, traveling

      ghosts. Finally the moon floats belly

      up like a dead goldfish over the dune.

      Tonight it could not get free

      of the ocean wave but trails spume,

      White as salt, it seems to be dissolving.

      But it leers oddly. A tipsy moon

      wobbling, wavering over the sand

      as if it can’t find the way up.

      O drunken moon, you see too much

      peering down: mugging, stabbing, rape,

      the weak slipping into death,

      the abandoned raking the ceiling

      with the sharp claws of hunger.

      You watch lovers in every hamlet,

      in beds, in cars, in hammocks.

      You cross the cranky Atlantic

      and stuck up in the sky and lonely

      what do you see first but couples

      coupling on the Great Beach, among

      the shiny poison ivy leaves

      of the gentle slopes and sand tracks.

      No wonder you drink yourself tipsy

      on salt wine and go staggering now

      faded and crooked, still lecherous.

      Sweet ambush

      We all await the blackberries,

      stealthy as foxes, stopping by

      in August disguised as

      joggers, tourists, birdwatchers.

      They begin hard and green,

      baby hand-grenades. Slowly

      they blush. The red

      empurples like aging wine.

      The day they first glint

      with jet-bead shininess

      somebody pounces. Losers

      pick only the moldy and green.

      Blackberrying: the tiger

      hunting of scavenging.

      Tonight even before I take

      the pie from the oven,

      its crisp lattice steaming,

      my neighbor accuses, waving

      her fork like a weapon,

      You got blackberries today.

      My arms are scored

      as if by a lover too much

      in a hurry to bother

      with zippers and gentle tugs.

      Smug after a successful

      raid, I hold out arms

      etched with hieroglyphs.

      My mouth is purple inside.

      Blueberries are gentle.

      We squat among the bushes,

      picking, picking, picking.

      Only tedium limits our haul.

      With each berry in its season

      We wait to catch the very day

      its flavor petal by petal

      opens fully at last like a rose.

      The high arch of summer

      Light sharpens on the leaves

      of cotoneaster, just as it sparks

      off running water, shards of glitter

      ticking the eyes glad. As I go down,

      go down from the house, till it sinks

      setting behind the hill, even in pine

      woods the sun is hot to the bare sole

      on the white sand path. Resin

      thickens the air, invisible smoke.

      Here I am at peace eating handfuls

      of tart blueberries touched with bloom

      as the morning was coated with fog

      and huckleberries shiny and black

      as the last moonless night. Here I laze

      feeling the sun ripening my blood

      sweet as the tomatoes near the house

      in air that smells like air,

      by water that tastes of water.

      What we fail to notice

      The crimson and fragrant musk roses,

      the sweetest juicy blackberries,

      rake the arms with their brambles,

      slash the calves, but the small thorn

      that slides into the skin covertly

      unmarked by a bubble of blood

      causes the real trouble

      as the skin closes over

      and its thin red line of infection

      steals toward the heart.

      Tashlich

      Go to the ocean and throw the crumbs in,

      all that remains of seven years.

      When you wept, didn’t I taste your tears

      on my cheek, give you bread for salt?

      Here where I sing at full pitch

      and volume uncensored, I was attacked.

      The pale sister nibbled like a mouse

      in the closets with sharp pointy teeth.

      She let herself in with her own key.

      My trust garlanded her round. Indeed

      it was convenient to trust her

      while she wasted paper thin with envy.

      Here she coveted. Here she crept.

      Here her cold fluttering hands lingered

      on secrets and dipped into the honey.

      Her shadow fell on the contents of every drawer.

      Alone in the house she made love

      to herself in the mirror wearing

      stolen gowns; then she carried them home

      for their magic to color her life.

      Little losses spread like tooth decay.

      Furtive betrayals festered, cysts

      hidden in flesh. Her greed swelled

      in the dark, its hunger always roaring.

      No number of gifts could silence

      those cries of resentful hunger,

      not for the baubles, the scarves,

      the blouses she stole, but to be twenty

      and pretty again, not to have to work

      to live but merely to be blond and thin

      and let men happen like rain in the night

      and never to wake alone.

      On the new year my grandmother Hannah

      told me to carry crumbs to the water

      and cast them out. We are tossing

      away the trust that was too convenient

      and we are throwing evil from the house

      the rancid taint of envy spoiling the food

      the pricing fingers of envy rumpling the cloth

      the secret ill-wisher chewing from inside

      the heart’s red apple to rot it out.

      I cast away my anger like spoiled milk.

      Let the salty wind air the house and cleanse

      the stain of betrayal from the new year.

      This small and intimate place

      1.

      The moor land, the dry land ripples

      bronzed with blueberry. The precise

      small hills sculpted with glittering

      kinnikinnick broil under the sharp

      tack of the red-tailed hawk cruising

      in middle air. A vesper sparrow

      gives its repetitive shrill sad cry

      and the air shimmers with drought.

      The sea is always painting itself

      on the sky, which dips low here.

      Light floods the eyes tight and dry.

      Light scours out the skull

      like an
    old kitchen sink made clean.

      We are cured in sunlight like salt cod.

      2.

      We are cured in sunlight like salt cod

      stiffened and rot repellent and long

      lived, long lasting. The year-rounders

      are poor. All summer they wait tables

      for the tourists, clean the houses

      of the summer people, sell them jam, fish,

      paintings, build their dwellings, wait

      for the land to be clean and still again.

      Yet blueberries, black- and elderberries,

      beach plum grow where vacation homes

      for psychiatrists are not yet built.

      We gather oysters, dig clams. We burn

      oak, locust, pitch pine and eat much fish

      as do the other scavengers, the gulls.

      3.

      As do the other scavengers, the gulls,

      we suffer, prey on the tides’ rise and ebb

      of plenty and disaster, the slick that chokes

      the fisheries, the restaurant sewage

      poisoning mussels, the dump leaching

      lead into the water table; the lucky winter

      storm that tosses up surf clams or squid

      in heaps for food, fertilizer, future plenty.

      This land is a tablet on which each pair

      of heels writes itself, the raw scar

      where the dirt bike crossed, the crushed

      tern chicks where the ORV roared through,

      the dune loosed over trodden grasses.

      We are intimate with wind and water here.

      4.

      We are intimate with wind. Once

      this was a land of windmills flapping

      sails like a stationary race of yachts.

      We learn the winds on face and shingles,

      the warm wind off the Gulf Stream in winter,

      the nor’easter piling up snow and wrecks,

      the west wind that hustles the rain clouds

      over and out to sea, the cold northwest.

      We are intimate with water, lapped around,

      the sea tearing at the land, castling it up,

      damp salty days with grey underworld light

     


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