of the walls of suburban
   villas, so no prowler
   can climb over.
   What closeness remains
   is that of samurai
   in ritual sword dance
   combat, each hoping to
   behead the other and,
   invulnerable and armored, escape.
   Poetry festival lover
   He reads his poem about you,
   making sure everyone in town
   knows you have been lovers
   as if he published his own
   tabloid with banner head
   and passed it out at the door.
   He kneels at your feet as you sit
   a stuffed duck at autographings
   and holds the hand others
   wait to have sign their
   purchased books.
   Alone the last night he asks
   favors (blurbs, readings,
   your name on a folder) but
   not your favor: he wants
   the position but not the work.
   His private parts lie quiet
   and the public is all
   he’s hot to screw.
   Avoid the poet who tells
   his love loudly in public;
   in private he counts his money.
   Complaint
   of the exhausted author
   Pain turns on its dull red warning light
   dim and steady in the dark.
   My back clanks like an old coal furnace.
   My brain is a cellar bin
   empty except for desiccated spiders.
   Even the mice have dropped their neat
   tracks and shipped out.
   Everything I have to burn
   is burned and the house grows cold.
   I remember real hunger,
   the urgency, then the lassitude,
   a hollow pain roaring like a distant sea
   and through it all the sense
   of the body cutting its losses
   of the cells shutting down one by one
   the lights going out.
   That hunger was bone chip sharp.
   Not simple, not of the bargaining flesh,
   this hunger snivels and whines.
   The quaking, tail low but wagging
   cur of the heart
   has desires that hide and abide,
   a lion in yellow dog clothing
   who will, who will be fed.
   Don’t think because I speak strong words
   that I am always strong.
   What moves through me moves
   on and leaves me empty as a storm sewer
   when the rains have gone.
   My ribs squeal like a bad accordion.
   Feed me, mother me. Coddle my fears.
   Or I will go like a mole through the garden
   chewing off roots for spite. I will crawl
   into the rafters and become a leak
   dripping on your chest in bed.
   I will turn into a fat rheumatic yellow dog
   who sprawls all day on the kitchen floor
   in front of the stove in everybody’s way,
   and if you make me move
   I will fix you with a baleful blind eye
   and sigh and limp.
   I will turn into a cough you can’t get
   rid of, or a fog bank
   that broods on the house.
   At night I will take my old form
   and steal to the typewriter
   to write damp querulous poems
   like this one.
   Feed me before it’s too late.
   For strong women
   A strong woman is a woman who is straining.
   A strong woman is a woman standing
   on tiptoe and lifting a barbell
   while trying to sing Boris Godunov.
   A strong woman is a woman at work
   cleaning out the cesspool of the ages,
   and while she shovels, she talks about
   how she doesn’t mind crying, it opens
   the ducts of the eyes, and throwing up
   develops the stomach muscles, and
   she goes on shoveling with tears
   in her nose.
   A strong woman is a woman in whose head
   a voice is repeating, I told you so,
   ugly, bad girl, bitch, nag, shrill, witch,
   ballbuster, nobody will ever love you back,
   why aren’t you feminine, why aren’t
   you soft, why aren’t you quiet, why
   aren’t you dead?
   A strong woman is a woman determined
   to do something others are determined
   not be done. She is pushing up on the bottom
   of a lead coffin lid. She is trying to raise
   a manhole cover with her head, she is trying
   to butt her way through a steel wall.
   Her head hurts. People waiting for the hole
   to be made say, hurry, you’re so strong.
   A strong woman is a woman bleeding
   inside. A strong woman is a woman making
   herself strong every morning while her teeth
   loosen and her back throbs. Every baby,
   a tooth, midwives used to say, and now
   every battle a scar. A strong woman
   is a mass of scar tissue that aches
   when it rains and wounds that bleed
   when you bump them and memories that get up
   in the night and pace in boots to and fro.
   A strong woman is a woman who craves love
   like oxygen or she turns blue choking.
   A strong woman is a woman who loves
   strongly and weeps strongly and is strongly
   terrified and has strong needs. A strong woman is strong
   in words, in action, in connection, in feeling;
   she is not strong as a stone but as a wolf
   suckling her young. Strength is not in her, but she
   enacts it as the wind fills a sail.
   What comforts her is others loving
   her equally for the strength and for the weakness
   from which it issues, lightning from a cloud.
   Lightning stuns. In rain, the clouds disperse.
   Only water of connection remains,
   flowing through us. Strong is what we make
   each other. Until we are all strong together,
   a strong woman is a woman strongly afraid.
   Apologies
   Moments
   when I care about nothing
   except an apple:
   red as a maple tree
   satin and speckled
   tart and winy.
   Moments
   when body is all:
   fast as an elevator
   pulsing out waves of darkness
   hot as the inner earth
   molten and greedy.
   Moments
   when sky fills my head:
   bluer than thought
   cleaner than number
   with a wind
   fresh and sour
   cold from the mouth of the sea.
   Moments
   of sinking my teeth
   into now like a hungry fox:
   never otherwise
   am I so cruel;
   never otherwise
   so happy.
   The fisherman’s catalogue:
   a found poem
   Orvis nymphs: dark hendrickson,
   leadwing coachman, pale evening dun.
   Cream midge. Grizzly wulff hairwing fly.
   Wet flies: hornberg, quill gordon, ginger quill.
   Weighted nymphs: zug bug, hare’s ear, Ted’s stone fly.
   Caddis pupa of great brown and speckled sedge.
   Pale sulphur dun thorax dry fly, Rat Faced McDougal.
   King’s river caddis downwing fly.
   Silver doctor, green highlander, dusty miller,
   black dose, rusty rat, hairy Mary
   and the salmon muddler. And the popping frog.
					     					 			r />   Rainy 4th
   I am someone who boots myself from bed
   when the alarm cracks my sleep. Spineless
   as raw egg on the tilted slab of day
   I ooze toward breakfast to be born.
   I stagger to my desk on crutches of strong coffee.
   How sensuous then are the mornings we do
   not rise. This morning we curl embracing
   while rain crawls over the roof like a thousand
   scuttling fiddler crabs. Set off a
   twenty-one tea kettle salute
   for a rainy 4th with the parade and races
   cancelled, our picnic chilling disconsolate
   in five refrigerators. A sneaky hooray
   for the uneven gallop of the drops,
   for the steady splash of the drainpipe,
   for the rushing of the leaves in green
   whooshing wet bellows, for the teeming wind
   that blows the house before it in full sail.
   We are at sea together in the woods.
   The air chill enough for the quilt, warm
   and sweet as cocoa and coconut we make
   love in the morning when there’s never time.
   Now time rains over us liquid and vast.
   We talk facing, elastic parentheses.
   We dawdle in green mazes of conversing
   seeking no way out but only farther into
   the undulating hedges, grey statues of nymphs,
   satyrs and learned old women, broken busts,
   past a fountain and tombstone
   in the boxwood of our curious minds
   that like the pole beans on the fence
   expand perceptibly in the long rain.
   Neurotic in July
   Even desks and tables have edges sharp
   as the blade of a guillotine today.
   The wind gnashes its teeth in the oaks.
   The translucent pearl fog of morning
   is tarnished with my fear. One friend
   dies at home in whatever pitted dignity
   pain allows. Another friend lies dying
   while the doctors in the hall mumble
   their lies unsanctified as white lab rats.
   Another comes out of a coma that almost
   killed him, mischance exploding in the hands,
   while in high glittery summer out on Route 6
   tourists try to drive through each other’s
   bodies. The rescue squad drags their fatigue
   to the third accident today, broken
   glass and broken organs, the stench
   of spilled gas and blood.
   I jerk with anxiety, the reflexes
   of a severed tail. Straw and sleet I am.
   My thoughts spill, the contents of a dash
   board ashtray, butts, roaches, seeds,
   cores, bottlecaps. What I dream stinks.
   Only in political rage can I scorn danger.
   In daily life I quiver like a mass of frog’s
   eggs. Quaking I carry my breasts before
   me like ripe figs a thumb could bruise
   and, Be careful! Be careful! I croon
   all day like a demented cuckoo with only
   one harsh plaintive cry to those I love.
   They pay no attention at all but wander
   freely in and out of danger like sanderlings
   feeding on the edge of the ocean as the tide
   changes, chasing after each wave as it recedes,
   racing before as the wave rushes back.
   Attack of the squash people
   And thus the people every year
   in the valley of humid July
   did sacrifice themselves
   to the long green phallic god
   and eat and eat and eat.
   They’re coming, they’re on us,
   the long striped gourds, the silky
   babies, the hairy adolescents,
   the lumpy vast adults
   like the trunks of green elephants.
   Recite fifty zucchini recipes!
   Zucchini tempura; creamed soup;
   sauté with olive oil and cumin,
   tomatoes, onion; frittata;
   casserole of lamb; baked
   topped by cheese; marinated;
   stuffed; stewed; driven
   through the heart like a stake.
   Get rid of old friends: they too
   have gardens and full trunks.
   Look for newcomers: befriend
   them in the post office, unload
   on them and run. Stop tourists
   in the street. Take truckloads
   to Boston. Give to your Red Cross.
   Beg on the highway: please
   take my zucchini, I have a crippled
   mother at home with heartburn.
   Sneak out before dawn to drop
   them in other people’s gardens,
   in baby buggies at churchdoors.
   Shot, smuggling zucchini into
   mailboxes, a federal offense.
   With a suave reptilian glitter
   you bask among your raspy
   fronds sudden and huge as
   alligators. You give and give
   too much, like summer days
   limp with heat, thunderstorms
   bursting their bags on our heads,
   as we salt and freeze and pickle
   for the too little to come.
   The inquisition
   Did you love him? you stab the old
   photographs. And him? And him? And her?
   Oh, you shrug then. What does it mean?
   Your love comes round regularly as the truck
   that sweeps the streets, welcome but
   hardly monumental. It stirs up the dust,
   it goes on its way, doing some kind
   of temporary good, busy, truculent.
   You were only eight years old then, I say,
   how could I love you if I’d been mean
   and proper, if I’d rationed myself
   like some prescription drug, if I’d frozen
   on grit at the core waiting for the perfect
   sun to melt me. I’m a survivor, a scavenger
   and I make the best I can out of the daily
   disaster, I mold my icons out of newspaper mâché.
   How could you make love to him in an elevator
   you say. But it was a freight elevator
   I say, it went up very slowly, you could lock
   it between floors. Besides that was a decade
   ago, I was more adventurist then. Oh, you say,
   so you wouldn’t fuck me in an elevator, I see.
   I like my comfort better now, I say, but you
   are my only comfort. Have you an elevator in mind?
   Look at this book, you say, you wrote him
   twenty-two love poems. How could you? And publish
   them. They weren’t all to him, I say, I was busy
   that year. And they’re good, aren’t they? Still?
   Oh, so it’s just literature, the ones you write
   me. Words. But I write the truth out of my life
   and if some truths are truer than others in
   the long run, the short sprint makes poems too.
   Listen, you idiot, we’re crawling up the far
   slope of our third year and still sometimes
   I weep after we make love. It is love we make
   and it feeds me daily like a good cow.
   I’m an old tart and you come late and I have
   loyalties scattered over the landscape like lots
   I bought and pay taxes on still, but it’s you
   and Robert I live with, live in, live by.
   Because we work together we are obscurely
   joined deep in the soil, deep in the water
   table where the pure vulnerable stream
   flows in the dark sustaining all life. In dreams
   you walk in my head arguing, we gallop
   on thornapple quests, we lie in 
					     					 			 each other’s
   arms. What a richly colored strong warm coat
   is woven when love is the warp and work is the woof.
   Arofa
   My little carry-on baggage,
   my howler monkey, my blue-
   eyed sleek beige passion,
   you want a monogamous relationship
   with me. Othella, if you were
   big as me you’d have nipped
   my head off in a fit.
   Gourmet, winebibber, you fancy
   a good Bordeaux as much
   as schlag, but would rather
   be petted than eat.
   You play Ivan the Terrible
   to guests, you hiss and slap
   at them to go away. Only
   an occasional lover gains
   your tolerance if my smell
   rubs off on him and he
   lets you sleep in the bed.
   When I travel you hurtle
   about upending the rugs.
   When I return you run from me.
   Not till I climb into bed
   are you content and crouch
   between my breasts kneading,
   a calliope of purrs.
   When I got a kitten a decade
   and a half ago, I didn’t know
   I was being acquired
   by such a demanding lover,
   such a passionate, jealous,
   furry, fussy wife.
   Cho-Cho
   At the Animal Disposal League
   you reached through the bars
   avid to live. Discarded offspring
   of Persian splendor and tuxedo
   alley cat, your hunger saved
   you, fuzzy and fist-sized.
   Now you are sunny, opaque,
   utterly beyond words, alien
   as the dreams of a pine tree.
   Sometimes when I look at you
   you purr as if stroked.
   Outside you turn your head
   pretending not to see me
   off on business, a rabbit
   in the marshgrass, rendezvous
   in the briars. In the house
   you’re a sponge for love,
   a recirculating fountain.
   Angry, you sulk way under