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    Made in Detroit: Poems

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      Some of us are selfconscious,

      wearing muumuus and sweat

      shirts or layer over layer. Others

      seek clothes that show you off.

      My identity contains a streak

      of you. But sometimes I feel

      as if I walk around behind you

      like a person behind a parade

      float, just tagging along.

      Words hard as stones

      All the words I never spoke in time

      in the flashing moments when they

      could have, might have but didn’t—

      they follow me like vultures circling

      so that I know something rotten

      lies in the field. The apologies

      never delivered age in the dead

      letter office of the brain, yellowing.

      But the promises’ broken bits

      have worked their way into

      the mattress and poke my sleep,

      words I should never have said.

      Gossip, curses, whispers behind

      closed doors, in bed; words

      hurled in argument, justification,

      the stinging gnats of lies:

      sticky words, overpoweringly

      fragrant like lilies in a closed room,

      rancid, spiky. Such are words made

      flesh, made bread, made dagger.

      Absence wears out the heart

      Missing can be seen as a hole

      in the heart, that imaginary

      valentine where we store

      our emotions.

      Absence of someone loved

      can be a presence, a lack

      that whispers, that raises

      hair on your neck

      with fear of no return.

      Final absence is a black

      hole sucking your whole

      life into it unless

      you thrust it from you

      again and again and

      again, supper with the plate

      solemn as a moon;

      two a.m. waking to empty-

      ness louder than a shout;

      a voice you hear, but

      no one is speaking, ever.

      A republic of cats

      Nobody rules. They all

      take turns. I can never

      tell who will chase who

      playing war over the couch

      and chairs, round and

      round again until suddenly

      they stop as if a whistle

      blew in their heads.

      Five of them, aged fifteen

      to two. Who will curl

      together making one cushion

      of patchwork fur? Who

      will painstakingly lick

      a friend, washing and

      cuddling. Who will growl

      at their friend of last hour?

      The one rule is where each

      sleeps at night, their spot

      in the bed and with whom?

      It is written in bone.

      What do they expect?

      What traces have I left

      on all the bodies I have held?

      Do they remember my mouth?

      Let them forget.

      Some come like cats howling

      in the night for sex withheld.

      Some have gone from my mind.

      Their scent has drifted off.

      Some I remember with anger

      but that too runs down the drain.

      Maybe the sink is still dirty.

      Maybe the water is clean.

      I dream of none of them.

      I dream of my mother and cats.

      I dream of danger and hunger.

      I dream my dying.

      What prints do we leave

      on old lovers? Do they wash

      off or wear down? Sometimes

      they turn up expecting

      that I will be that girl they

      bedded, maybe they still

      see her smooth and willing.

      They find only me

      like an old oak rooted deep,

      like a cat who has learned

      where to find her food

      and where she will only starve.

      Decades of intimacy creating

      What we weave, day into night into day

      now and again, I’m sure looks lumpy

      rough burlap from the outside, but

      in its house like an oriole’s nest

      hanging from our sugar maple, we curl

      and coil and feed and doze together.

      We exchange dreams in the thick

      night. We pass tasks between us.

      We polish each other’s noses

      like doorknobs. We crawl into

      each other turning round and round

      like a cat making a place to sleep.

      A long marriage is a quiet epic

      full of battles won and lost and ended

      by treaties and half forgotten,

      of full-throated songs and whispered

      treatises, of wispy and rocky promises,

      of friendships that dried up like old

      apples stored too long and friendships

      with cycles of famine and plenty. Cycles

      of discovery exploring new islands, cycles

      of retreat back into the couple exploring

      each other’s strange core and familiar

      skin, making it new again and again.

      We used to be close, I said

      I gripped you like a speckled serpent

      sinewy, twisting in my tiring arms,

      finally breaking free to bite me.

      I thought us more alike than we

      ever were. In part we invented

      each other in a clouded mirror.

      We talked, oh long into the night

      but did we ever listen? What

      did we hear but our wishes?

      I gave and you graciously

      accepted and then I resented.

      When is my turn that never came?

      The turning came: the scorpion end

      with the poison sting in its tail.

      The polychrome egg of our friend-

      ship broke open and the rot within

      dyed the air mustard yellow. How

      long ago that embryo must’ve died.

      A wind suddenly chills you

      Unless illness sticks a knife in you

      between the ribs like a mugger

      from behind, you never imagine

      your death until your friends

      begin to die. There you are

      in a field suddenly stripped bare

      with a north wind sandpapering

      your skin and when you look

      around, where have all the flowers

      and bushes and prancing hares

      gone? Where are the quick

      foxes, the wandering butterflies?

      Even your dog at heel has passed

      under the soil and rain pours

      through him. Then you feel the skull

      pressing through your cheeks

      as if eager to expose itself

      like a flasher in the park.

      All the friends, the lovers,

      the cats and dogs with whom

      you shared rooms and beds—

      their memories bloom like ghost

      flowers brighter, more vivid

      than the remaining weeds that grow.

      Why she frightens me

      My old cat Malkah howls at night

      waking me. Sometimes I’m

      kind, get up and bring her

      to bed, pet and cuddle.

      Sometimes I’m pissed off

      chase her from the bedroom

      shut the door tight. I wonder

      what she is wanting in darkness

      when we are all in bed, when

      even the other cats sleep.

      She is frail, gets two kinds

      of medicine daily.

      I am not so frisky myself—

      arthritis in my knees

      from a tr
    eadmill accident

      in a run-down gym.

      I think her howling scares

      me because I hear in it

      the vault of loneliness old

      age threatens to us all.

      That I could face not so much

      death but years of getting up

      in a silent house, pottering

      around talking to myself

      because there is no one

      to care any longer what

      I say and so my words

      dry up and turn to dust.

      My sweetness, my desire

      Pumpkin I call you, sweet

      and spicy pie. Mango

      juicy. Scotch bonnet hot.

      Dark chocolate. Espresso.

      Fresh squeezed orange

      juice thick with pulp.

      You come through for

      me time after time and

      again. Reliable as Old

      Faithful. Solid as granite.

      You always give me

      the gift of laughter.

      Whatever I love you try

      to love. What threatens me

      you stand on guard. We

      talk and we talk but it

      never wears out. Together

      we lay out a feast of love.

      They come, they go in the space of a breath

      We are told on certain days and nights

      the dead are close to us. Yet I find

      Shalimar perfume, cinnamon, roasting

      chicken can summon them, so that

      my grandmother stands just behind me,

      my mother sits at my vanity staring

      into her vanished face.

      If like Orpheus I try to turn to them,

      seize their presence, shuffle unanswered

      questions before them, cards on a table

      faceup, they wisp away like the scent

      that brought them. If I think of them,

      remembering a dress, a laugh rising

      like smoke to the ceiling

      they stay away. They come when

      they choose and leave so quickly

      I wonder if it happened. Sometimes

      I hear my mother’s voice behind

      me, commenting on my cooking,

      my clothing. Grandma has come

      like Eliyahu on Pesach,

      stood for a moment over the laden

      table and left again. Two of my cats

      came back to visit, ever so briefly.

      What do they want, these dead

      ones that never linger? They tease,

      perhaps, or have only as much energy

      as a candle that burns itself out.

      In storms I can hear the surf a mile away

      You may love the ocean. Never boring,

      always in motion, sliding up the shingle

      then sucked back in, waves with manes

      of white lions’ lashing at the shore, waves

      standing like a bear tearing at the dunes.

      You may love the ocean, but it does

      not love you back. It would as soon eat

      you as keep you afloat. Perhaps it

      loves the great whales, perhaps it

      likes walruses, but it’s always hungry.

      You may love the ocean like my friend

      who at eighty will go far out twice

      a day if he can get a tourist to pay

      his gas. He likes to be out of sight

      of land. The sea lurks under his boat

      waiting. The ocean is always beautiful

      here in all weathers it churns up. It

      does not approve of land and wants to

      take it back. Someday it will. Even

      the hill I live on: sandy bottom.

      Tides will stir the ashes of my mother

      and the tiny bones of my cats. My grave

      will be home to crabs. Who is to say

      that is not just that the sea take into

      itself what long ago it gave us.

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      “Made in Detroit,” Napalm Health Spa, 2012.

      “The frontroom,” Paterson Literary Review, Vol. 39, 2011–2012.

      “Detroit, February 1943,” Third Wednesday, Vol. 2, Issue 2, Spring 2010.

      “Things that will never happen here again,” Poet Lore, Vol. 108, No. 1/2, Spring/Summer 2013.

      “Detroit fauna,” Third Wednesday, Vol. 3, Issue 2, 2011.

      “Family vacation to Yellowstone,” “Remnants still visible,” “Hard rain and potent thunder,” Connotation Press, Congeries with John Hoppenthaler, Vol. II, Issue IV, December 2010.

      “The rented lakes of my childhood,” Third Wednesday, Vol. 5, Issue 3, Summer 2013.

      “Thirteen,” “By the river of Detroit,” Third Wednesday, Vol. 3, Issue 2, 2011.

      “She held forth,” Paterson Literary Review, Vol. 39, 2011–2012.

      “The scent of apple cake,” “Ashes in their places,” San Diego Poetry Annual, 2012–13.

      “City bleeding,” “My time in better dresses,” Third Wednesday, Vol. VIII, No. 1, Winter 2014.

      “Mehitabel & me” is forthcoming in Long Island Sounds Anthology.

      “The street that was,” Fifth Wednesday, Issue 12, Fall 2012.

      “What my mother gave me,” “Ashes in their places,” San Diego Poetry Annual, 2011–12.

      “Our neverending entanglement,” The Pinch, Spring 2012.

      “Ashes in their places,” San Diego Poetry Annual, 2011–12.

      “January orders,” “We have come through,” The Poetry Porch, Spring 2013.

      “How I gained respect for night herons,” Elohi Gadugi Journal, Summer 2013.

      “The constant exchange,” Cape Cod Poetry Review, Vol. II, Winter 2014.

      “May opens wide,” Poetsusa.com, 2012.

      “Wisteria can pull a house down,” “The suicide of dolphins,” Atlanta Review, Spring/Summer, Vol. XX, Issue 2.

      “June 15th, 8 p.m.,” San Pedro River Review, Special Issue: Harbors and Harbor Towns, Summer 2013.

      “Ignorance bigger than the moon,” “Even if we try not to let go,” Ibbetson Street Press, No. 4, December 2013.

      “Little house with no door,” Broadkill Review, Vol. 7, Issue 4, July/August 2013.

      “Why did the palace of excess have cockroaches?” Haibun Today, Vol. 7, No. 3, September 2013.

      “There were no mountains in Detroit,” Haibun Today, Vol. 7, No. 11, December 2014.

      “But soon there will be none,” Paterson Literary Review, Issue 42, 2014–15.

      “Missing, missed,” Haibun Today, Vol. 8, No. 3, September 2014.

      “Death’s charming face,” Spillway, Issue 19, Fall 2012.

      “The frost moon,” Ibbetson Street, No. 31, Summer 2012.

      “December arrives like an unpaid bill,” Red Thread, Gold Thread, Vol. 2, 2012.

      “The poor are no longer with us,” “These bills are long unpaid,” Monthly Review, Vol. 64, No. 1, May 2012.

      “Don’t send dead flowers,” Revolution House, Vol. 2.1, April 2012.

      “A hundred years since the Triangle Fire,” Monthly Review, Vol. 62, Issue 11, 2011.

      “Ethics for Republicans,” On the Issues Magazine, Winter 2012.

      “Another obituary,” Ms. Magazine, April 2012.

      “What it means,” Monthly Review, Vol. 64, No. 4, September 2012.

      “How have the mighty …” Tryst, October 2010.

      “We know,” Eco-Poetry.org, November 2013.

      “The passion of a fan,” Literary Arts Annual, 2013.

      “In pieces,” So It Goes: The Literary Journal of the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library, 2013.

      “Ghosts,” Monthly Review, Vol. 65, March 2013.

      “One of the expendables,” Cape Cod Times, May 28, 2013.

      “Let’s meet in a restaurant,” Visions International, Winter 2014.

      “Come fly without me,” Ibbetson Street, No. 28, November 2010.

      “Hope is a long, slow thing,” The Progressive, Vol. 76, No. 12/1, December 2012
    /January 2013.

      “The late year,” Midstream, September/October 2002.

      “Erev New Years,” Midstream, Summer 2011.

      “Head of the year,” The ’98 Lunar Calendar, September 1998.

      “Late that afternoon they come,” Midstream, Vol. 58, Summer 2012.

      “The wall of cold descends,” Spillway, Issue 19, Fall 2012.

      “How she learned,” Prism, Journal for Holocaust Educators, Vol. 3, Spring 2011.

      “Working at it,” Jewish Women’s Literary Annual, Vol. 9, 2013.

      “The order of the seder,” Midstream, Vol. 50, No. 3, April 2004.

      “The two cities,” Tikkun, Israel at 60, May/June 2008.

      “Where silence waits,” Moment, 2011.

      “I say Kaddish but still mourn,” Poetica Magazine, Summer 2012.

      “Little diurnal tragedies,” Sugar Mule, Issue 39, November 2011.

      “The next evolutionary step,” New Guard Literary Review, Vol. III, 2014.

      “That was Cobb Farm,” december magazine, Vol. 25.2, Fall/Winter 2014.

      “They meet,” Third Wednesday, Winter 2013.

      “A cigarette left smoldering,” Potomac Review, 2013.

      “Discovery motion,” “Different voices, one sentence,” Softblow, January 2012.

      “Sun in January,” Muddy River Poetry Review, Fall 2013.

      “Little rabbit’s dream song,” “Cotton’s wife,” Ibbetson Street, No. 31, Summer 2012.

     
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