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    My Mother's Body

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      I depend, those few for whom

      I will rise in the night to give

      comfort, massage, medicine,

      whose calls I always take.

      My children are my books

      that I gestate for years,

      a slow-witted elephant

      eternally pregnant, books

      that I sit on for eras like the great

      auk on a vast marble egg.

      I raise them with loving care,

      I groom and educate them,

      I chastise, reward and adore.

      I exercise them lean and fatten them up.

      I roll them about my mind all night

      and fuss over them in the mornings.

      Then they march off into the world

      to be misunderstood, mistreated, stolen,

      to be loved for the wrong reasons,

      to be fondled, beaten, lost.

      Now and then I get a postcard

      from Topeka Kansas, doing just fine.

      People take them in and devour them.

      People marry them for love.

      People write me letters and tell me

      how they are my children too.

      I have children whose languages

      rattle dumbly in my ears like gravel,

      children born of the wind that blows

      through me from the graves of the poor

      and brave who struggled all their short

      throttled lives to free people

      whose faces they could not imagine.

      Such are the children of my words.

      Mr. Big

      Darkest chocolate, bittersweet,

      the muscled power of horse’s

      haunches, the sleekness of a seal,

      the swagger of a heavyweight

      strolling to the ring:

      Jim Beam works hard as overlord

      hustling to rule his turf in winter

      when only the great horned owl

      can frighten him. But July Fourth

      brings up the summer people

      with their dogs, their cats,

      their children, their dirt bikes,

      their firecrackers. All summer

      he collects scars and anger

      trying to boss his ward.

      He gets leaner, meaner.

      He sulks and roars in baritone

      O my unappreciated soul, all night.

      He wants to be force-fed

      love like chicken soup.

      He wants love to chase him

      like a panting dog,

      without asking, without earning.

      Jim Beam, you’re indistinguishable

      from half the men I’ve adored.

      Being a cat you are lucky.

      I do carry you off by force

      and today you lie by the computer

      on a satin pillow and eat turkey

      and suffer, suffer your belly

      to be scratched and endure

      your chin chucked and tickled, at ease,

      air conditioned while it’s ninety out.

      O Jim Beam, this must

      be love: will you marry me?

      The maternal instinct at work

      In the bed Dinah curls,

      kittens tumbling over kittens

      at nipples pink and upright

      against the silver blue fur.

      Her mrow interrogates.

      The second night she toted

      them one by one into my bed

      arranged them against my flank

      nuzzling, then took off

      flirting her tail.

      Birthing box, bottoms

      of closets, dark places,

      the hell with that. She

      crawled between my legs

      when her water broke.

      Think of them as ours

      she urges us, have you

      heard of any decent day care?

      I think kitten raising

      should be a truly collective

      process, and besides, it’s all

      your fault. You gave me

      to that little silver-

      balled brute to do his will

      upon me. Now look.

      Here I am a hot-water

      bottle, an assembly line

      of tits, a milk factory.

      The least you can do

      is take the night feeding.

      Magic mama

      The woman who shines with a dull comfortable glow.

      The woman who sweats honey, an aphid

      enrolled to sweeten the lives of others.

      The woman who puts down her work like knitting

      the moment you speak, but somehow it gets done

      secretly in the night while everyone sleeps.

      The woman whose lap is wide as the Nile

      delta, whose flesh is a lullaby

      of goosedown petals lacking the bite

      of menace real lullabies ride on

      (if the bough breaks, birds

      and butterflies pecking out his eyes).

      Whose own eyes are soft-focus mirrors.

      Whose arms are bolsters. Whose love

      is laid on like the municipal water.

      She is not the mother goddess, vortex

      of dark and light powers with her consorts,

      her hungers, her favorites, her temper

      blasting the corn so it withers in its ear,

      her bloody humor that sends the hunter fleeing

      to be tracked and torn by his hounds,

      the great door into the earth’s darkness

      where bones are rewoven into wheat,

      who loves the hawk as she loves the rabbit.

      Big mama has no power, not even over herself.

      The taxpayer of guilt, whatever she gives

      you both agree is never enough.

      She is a one-way street down which pour

      parades of opulent gifts and admiration

      from a three-shift factory of love.

      Magic mama has to make it right, straighten

      the crooked, ease pain, raise the darkness,

      feed the hungry and matchmake for the lonesome

      and ask nothing in return. If you win

      you no longer know her, and if you lose

      it is because her goodness failed you.

      Whenever you create big mama from another

      woman’s smile, a generosity of spirit working

      like yeast in the inert matter of the day,

      you are stealing from a woman her own ripe

      grape sweet desire, the must of her fears,

      the shadow she casts into her own future

      and turning her into a diaper service,

      the cleaning lady of your adventure.

      Who thanks a light bulb for giving light?

      Listen, your mother is not your mother.

      She is herself and unmothered. It is time

      to take the apron off your mind.

      Nothing more will happen

      You are rumpled like a sweater

      smelling of burnt leaves and dried sea grasses.

      Your smile belongs to an archaic boy of wasting stone on Delos.

      You change shape like spilled mercury.

      There is no part of you that touches me

      not even your laugh catching like fur in your nose.

      I am with you on a glacier

      white snowfield gouged with blue-green crevasses

      deep and the color of your eyes.

      There is no place to go, we cannot lie down.

      In the distance your people wait checking their gear.

      We blaze like a refinery on the ice.

      A dry snow begins to descend

      as your hands fall clasped to your sides

      as your eyes freeze to the rim of the sky.

      Already I cannot see you for the snow.

      Heavy iron gates like those in a levee or fortress

      are closing in my breasts.

      Blue Tuesday in August

      The world smelled like a mattress you find


      on the street and leave there,

      or like a humid house reciting yesterday’s

      dinner menu and the day before’s.

      Everybody had breathed this air repeatedly

      and used it to cool an engine.

      Oil hung in the sky in queasy clouds.

      Then the rain swept through slamming doors.

      Today is blue as a cornflower,

      tall as a steel tower,

      springy as a trampoline.

      Beside the drive the ruffs of Queen Anne’s lace

      are host to the striped caterpillar

      that probes with its roan horns.

      Dry as the white dunes under sunlight, the day

      smells of cut curing grasses beige as Siamese cats.

      The cicadas like little chainsaws inflame the air.

      All things bear sharp corners of a pane of glass.

      What a clean unused day to walk all over.

      On such a morning I can almost believe

      something blue and green and yellow

      may survive us after we explode

      and burn the sky down.

      Some shoot may sprout and grow.

      The Disinherited

      We do not inherit the world from our parents,

      we borrow it from our children.

      Gandhi

      The dreams of the children

      reek of char and ashes.

      The fears of the children

      peer out through the brown eyes

      of a calf tethered away from its mother,

      a calf who bawls for the unknown

      bad thing about to happen

      as the butcher’s truck arrives.

      The children finger their own sharp

      bones in their wrists.

      They knead their foreheads gingerly.

      Last night I dreamed Mother was burning,

      the little girl said in class,

      my father, my dog, my brother,

      fire was eating them all.

      I wrote three postcards to the President.

      I won’t be anything when I grow up,

      the boy said, I won’t live that long.

      I don’t like firecrackers anymore.

      I always draw houses falling.

      Blood seeps from the roof of the cave

      of their minds, fear becoming rock.

      In their dreams there is one great

      loud noise. Then weeping. Then silence.

      Cold head, cold heart

      I suppose no one has ever died of a head cold

      while not fearing or fervently

      wishing to do so on the hour,

      gasping through a nose the size of Detroit.

      My mouth tastes of moldy sneaker.

      My tongue is big as a liverwurst.

      My throat steams like a sewer.

      The gnome of snot has stuck a bicycle pump in my ear.

      I am a quagmire, a slithy bog.

      I exude effluvia, mumbled curses,

      and a dropsy of wads of paper,

      handkerchiefs like little leprosies.

      The world is an irritant

      full of friends jumping in noisy frolic.

      The damned healthy: I breathe on them.

      My germs are my only comfort.

      Deferral

      You’ll do it, what you really want.

      You’ll start counting, you’ll

      feel everything direct as rain

      on your skin in mild May twilight.

      You’ll start chewing every moment

      like fresh corn on the cob hot

      buttered and actually enjoy it

      as soon as you grow up, leave home,

      after you’ve got your diploma,

      when you’ve passed your orals,

      when you finish psychoanalysis,

      as soon as you meet the one woman for you,

      when Mr. Right comes charging along,

      after you pay off the mortgage,

      as soon as the children are in school,

      when you finally get the divorce,

      after the children finish college,

      when you’re promoted as you deserve,

      when you’re a complete success at last,

      after you retire to Florida,

      when you die and go to heaven.

      You’ll have considerable practice

      at being dead by then.

      Breaking out

      My first political act? I am seeing

      two doors that usually stood open,

      leaning together like gossips, making

      a closet of their corner.

      A mangle stood there, for ironing

      what I never thought needed it:

      sheets, towels, my father’s underwear;

      an upright vacuum with its stuffed

      sausage bag that deflated with a gusty

      sigh as if weary of housework as I,

      who swore I would never dust or sweep

      after I left home, who hated

      to see my mother removing daily

      the sludge the air lay down like a snail’s track

      so that when in school I read of Sisyphus

      and his rock, it was her I

      thought of, housewife scrubbing

      on raw knees as the factories rained ash.

      Nasty stork king of the hobnobbing

      doors was a wooden yardstick dusty

      with chalk marks from hems’ rise and fall.

      When I had been judged truly wicked

      that stick was the tool of punishment.

      I was beaten as I bellowed like a locomotive

      as if noise could ward off blows.

      My mother wielded it more fiercely

      but my father far longer and harder.

      I’d twist my head in the mirror to inspect.

      I’d study those red and blue mountain

      ranges as on a map that offered escape,

      the veins and arteries the roads

      I could travel to freedom when I grew.

      When I was eleven, after a beating

      I took and smashed the ruler to kindling.

      Fingering the splinters I could not believe.

      How could this rod prove weaker than me?

      It was not that I was never again beaten

      but in destroying that stick that had measured my pain

      the next day I was an adolescent, not a child.

      This is not a tale of innocence lost but power

      gained: I would not be Sisyphus.

      There were things that I should learn to break.

      Paper birds

      Paper birds:

      can they fly?

      Not far.

      Can they dive after fish?

      Do they lay edible eggs?

      Do they eat harmful insects?

      No, but they sing

      both long and short

      and scratch real fleas.

      Can you cook them?

      How do they taste?

      Like you. Like me.

      They fill the mind

      but half an hour later

      you want more.

      How many kinds are there?

      They evolve, like other

      birds, fill empty niches,

      become extinct.

      But each species

      is composed of only one.

      How do they reproduce then?

      By fission. By fusion.

      By one hell of a lot of work.

      Listening to a speech

      The woman carefully dressed

      in quasimale drag

      fashionable among her friends

      spoke scornfully from the podium

      of bourgeois housewives.

      Bourgeois? Someone who works

      for nothing

      who owns zip,

      who receives no pension,

      who possesses no credit, no name.

      I thought the bourgeoisie

      owned the means of production?

      She is a means of reproduction

    &nbs
    p; leased by her husband,

      liable to be traded in.

      Those widows who live on cat food,

      those ladies who eat in cafeterias

      once a day, taking fifteen

      minutes to choose their only dish,

      their houses have deserted them.

      This bag lady chewing stale hot-

      dog buns from the garbage igloo,

      who pees in the alley squatting,

      who sleeps in an abandoned car,

      was a bourgeois housewife.

      Your superiority licks itself

      like a pleased cat. No housewife

      is bourgeois any more than pets

      are, just one owner away

      from the streets and starvation.

      Making a will

      Over the shoulder peer cartoon images

      of skinny misers and bloated bankers

      disinheriting wayward daughters in love

      with honest workingclass boys;

      the dowager in her bed writing in

      the gardener, writing out her nephew.

      Little goes the way we plan it

      even with us to knead and pull,

      stir and sweeten and cook it down.

      How many scenes written flat on the back

      in bed ever play in the moonlight?

      How often revenge bubbles itself flat.

      Given wobbly control with all our

      muscle and guile and wit bearing down

      like a squad of tactical police,

      how do we suppose when we’re ashes

      what we think we want will matter?

      Less than the spider in the rafters.

      We cannot protect those we love

      no matter how we gild and dip them

      in the molten plastic of our care;

      when we are gone our formulae

      in legal sludge guarantee nothing

      but that all lawyer’s fees be paid.

      Maybe it is an act of faith

      not in anything but the goodwill

      of a few, those documents of intent

      we scatter in which we claim sound mind

      and try to stuff a log in the jaws

      of fate to keep those teeth from closing.

     
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