hunger, always hungry
   a woman made of pain.
   A cat or dog approaches another,
   they sniff noses. They sniff behinds.
   They bristle or lick. They fall
   in love as often as we do,
   as passionately. But they fall
   in love or lust with furry flesh,
   not silicon breasts or push up bras
   rib removal or liposuction.
   It is not for male or female dogs
   that poodles are clipped
   to topiary hedges.
   If only we could like each other raw.
   If only we could love ourselves
   like healthy babies burbling in our arms.
   If only we were not programmed and reprogrammed
   to need what is sold us.
   Why should we want to live inside ads?
   Why should we want to scourge our softness,
   to straight lines like a Mondrian painting?
   Why should we punish each other with scorn
   as if to have a large ass
   were worse than being greedy or mean?
   When will women not be compelled
   to view their bodies as science projects,
   gardens to be weeded,
   dogs to be trained?
   When will a woman cease
   to be made of pain?
   Elegy in rock, for Audre Lorde
   A child, I cherished a polyhedron of salt
   my father brought up from under Detroit,
   the pure crystal from a deep mine.
   The miracle was it felt hard and clear
   as glass and yet the tongue said tears.
   My other treasure was a polished shard
   of anthracite that glittered on my palm,
   harder, fiercer than the soft coal
   we shoveled into the basement furnace.
   Coal halfway to a diamond?
   More than once we talked about rocks
   for which you had a passion, curiosity
   fired by adventure, reading the landscape
   with eye and pick, cliffs that confided
   in a lover’s whisper their history.
   Obsidian, the obvious: it can take
   an edge, can serve as a knife
   in ritual or in combat, as your fine
   dark deep voice could pour out love
   or take an edge like a machete.
   Carnelian lips, black and rose marble
   metamorphosed rock blasted into beauty:
   but what you are now that only the work
   remains is garnet, not a flashy
   jewel, native, smoldering, female.
   Garnet: the blackest red,
   color of the inner woman, of deep sex,
   color of the inside of the lid closed tight
   while the eye still searches
   for light in itself.
   Sand is the residue,
   the pulverized bones of mountains.
   Here on the great beach in summer
   the sea rolls over and bares
   slabs of tawny sand that glitter:
   little buffed worlds of garnet
   pool like the shadows of old blood
   under the sun’s yellow stare.
   On my palm they wink, this shading
   like rouge stippling the sand.
   You told me of a garnet big as a child’s
   head, you told me of garnets glowing
   like women’s stories pulled from the dust,
   garnets you freed into the sun,
   lying on your palm like summer nights.
   Rich darkness I praise, dark richness,
   the true color of a live pulsing heart,
   blackberries in strong sunlight,
   crow’s colors, black tulip chalices,
   the city sky glowering from the plain.
   Audre, Audre, your work shines on the night
   of the world, the blaze of your words
   but your own female power and beauty
   are gone, a garnet ground into powder
   and dissolved in wine the earth drinks.
   All systems are up
   You dial and a voice answers.
   After you have stammered a reply
   into dead air, you realize
   it cannot hear or know you.
   The preprogrammed voice of a thing
   addresses you as a retarded dog:
   Press 0 if you wish to be connected
   to emergency services. Press 1
   to order a product. Press 2
   to speak to an agent. Press 3
   if you need assistance.
   Have a nice day.
   I press 3. I need information.
   Another robot says, Press 1
   if you wish to order a product.
   Press 2 to speak to an agent
   —who bleeds? Press 3 if
   you need further assistance.
   I press 3. The voice says,
   You have pressed 3.
   That is not a valid number.
   Please press 4 and make
   another choice. I press 4.
   The canned voice speaks:
   Press 3 if you desire euthanasia.
   Press 2 if you wish to detonate.
   Press 1 never to have been born.
   Press 0 for universal Armageddon.
   Have a nice day.
   For two women shot to death in Brookline, Massachusetts
   How dare a woman choose?
   Choose to be pregnant
   choose to be childless
   choose to be lesbian
   choose to have two lovers or none
   choose to abort
   choose to live alone
   choose to walk alone
   at night
   choose to come and to go
   without permission
   without leave
   without a man.
   Consider a woman’s blood
   spilled on a desk,
   pooled on an office floor,
   an ordinary morning at work,
   an ordinary morning of helping
   other women choose
   to be or not to be
   pregnant.
   A woman young and smiling
   sitting at a desk
   trying to put other woman at ease
   now bleeds from five
   large wounds, bleeding
   from her organs
   bleeding out her life.
   A young man is angry at women
   women who say no
   women who say maybe and mean no
   women who won’t
   women who do and they shouldn’t.
   If they are pregnant they are bad
   because that proves
   they did it with someone,
   they did it
   and should die.
   A man gets angry with a woman who decides to leave him
   who decides to walk off
   who decides to walk
   who decides.
   Woman are not real to such men.
   They should behave as meat.
   Such men drag them into the woods
   and stab them
   climb in their windows and rape them
   such men shoot them in kitchens
   such men strangle them in bed
   such men lie in wait
   and ambush them in parking lots
   such men walk into a clinic
   and kill the first woman they see.
   In harm’s way:
   meaning in the way of a man
   who is tasting his anger
   like rare steak.
   A daily ordinary courage
   doing what has to be done
   every morning, every afternoon
   doing it over and over
   because it is needed
   put them in harm’s way.
   Two women dying
   because they did their job
   helping other women survive.
   Two women dead
 
					     					 			   from the stupidity of an ex–altar boy
   who saw himself
   as a fetus
   who pumped his sullen fury
   automatically
   into the woman in front of him
   twice, and intended more.
   Stand up now and say No More.
   Stand up now and say We will not
   be ruled by crazies and killers,
   by shotguns and bombs and acid.
   We will not dwell in the caves of fear.
   We will make each other strong.
   We will make each other safe.
   There is no other monument.
   A day in the life
   She is wakened at 4 a.m.
   Of course she does not
   pick up, but listens
   through the answering machine
   to the male voice promising
   she will burn in hell.
   At seven she opens her door.
   A dead cat is hammered
   to her porch: brown tabby.
   Hit by a car, no collar.
   She hugs her own Duke of Orange.
   She cannot let him out.
   She has her car locked
   in a neighbor’s garage,
   safe from pipe bombs,
   but she must walk there.
   She drives to work
   a circuitous guesswork route.
   Outside the clinic three
   men walk in circles with photos
   of six-month fetuses.
   They surround her car.
   They are forbidden the parking
   lot but police don’t care.
   They bang on her hood.
   As she gets out, they bump
   and jostle her. One thrusts
   his sign into her face.
   She protects her eyes.
   Something hard strikes her back.
   Inside she sighs. Turns on
   the lights, the air
   conditioning, the coffee
   machine. The security system
   is always on. The funds
   for teenage contraception,
   gone into metal detectors.
   She answers the phone.
   “Is this where you kill babies?”
   The second call a woman
   is weeping. The day begins.
   A girl raped by her stepfather,
   a harried mother with too
   many children and diabetes,
   a terrified teenager who does
   not remember how it happened,
   a woman with an injunction
   against an abuser. All day
   she takes their calls,
   all day she checks them in,
   takes medical histories,
   holds hands, dries tears,
   hears secrets and lies and
   horrors, soothes, continues.
   Every time a new patient
   walks in, a tinny voice
   whispers, is this the one
   carrying a handgun, with
   an automatic weapon, with
   a knife? She sits exposed.
   She answers the phone,
   “I’m going to cut your throat,
   you murderer.” “Have
   a nice day.” A bomb threat
   is called in. She has
   to empty the clinic.
   The police finally come.
   There is no bomb. The
   doctor tells her how they
   are stalking his daughter.
   Then she goes home to Duke.
   Eats a late supper by the TV.
   Her mother calls. Her
   boyfriend comes over. She
   cries in his arms. He is,
   she can tell, getting tired
   of her tears. Next morning
   she rises and day falls
   on her like a truckload
   of wet cement. This is
   a true story, this is
   what I know of virtue,
   this is what I know
   of goodness in our time.
   The grey flannel sexual harassment suit
   The woman in the sexual harassment
   suit should be a virgin
   who attended church every Sunday,
   only ten thousand miles on her
   back and forth to the pew.
   Her immaculate house is
   bleached with chlorine tears.
   The woman in the sexual harassment
   suit should never have known
   a man other than her father
   who kissed her only
   on the cheek, and the minister
   who patted her head
   with his gloves on.
   The woman in the sexual harassment
   suit is visited by female
   angels only, has a platinum
   hymen protected by Brinks,
   is white of course as unpainted
   plaster, naturally blonde
   and speaks only English.
   The woman in the sexual harassment
   suit wears white cotton blouses
   buttoned to the throat, small
   pearl clip-on earrings,
   grey or blue suits and one
   inch heels with nylons.
   Her nails and lips are pink.
   If you are other than we have
   described above, please do
   not bother to complain.
   You are not a lady.
   We cannot help you.
   A woman like you simply
   cannot be harassed.
   On guard
   I want you for my bodyguard,
   to curl round each other like two socks
   matched and balled in a drawer.
   I want you to warm my backside,
   two S’s snaked curve to curve
   in the down burrow of the bed.
   I want you to tuck in my illness,
   coddle me with tea and chicken
   soup whose steam sweetens the house.
   I want you to watch my back
   as knives wink in the thin light
   and whips crack out from shelter.
   Guard my body against dust and disuse,
   warm me from the inside out,
   lie over me, under me, beside me
   in bed as the night’s creek
   rushes over our shining bones
   and we wake to the morning fresh
   and wet, a birch leaf just uncurling.
   Guard my body from disdain as age
   widens me like a river delta.
   Let us guard each other until death,
   with teeth, brain and galloping heart,
   each other’s rose red warrior.
   The thief
   Dina sent me a postcard,
   history at a glance,
   Sonka of the golden hand,
   the notorious thief
   being put in chains.
   She looks young still, dark hair,
   unsmiling—why would she?
   1915, surrounded by Russian men
   two blacksmiths preparing
   the chains and three soldiers
   to guard her, weaponless.
   A Jew from Odessa, she could
   move faster than water
   as quiet as a leaf growing
   more lightly than a shaft
   of sun tapping your arm.
   Like all young women
   she was full of desires
   little hot pomegranate seeds
   bursting in her womb,
   wishes crying from the dull
   mirror of poverty.
   Sonka heard the voices calling
   from inside the coins,
   take me, Sonka, take me
   turn me into something sweet
   turn me into something warm and soft
   a cashmere shawl, a silk mantilla
   a coat of fur like a bed of loving.
   Eat me, said the chicken.
   drink me, the brandy sang.
   Wear me, the blouse whispered.
   Sonka of the go 
					     					 			lden hands
   stands in the grim yard
   of the prison, with her quick
   hands bound in iron bracelets
   calling with her solemn eyes
   let me go, oh you who stare
   at me and jail me in your
   camera, now at last
   free me to dance again
   as I freed
   those captured coins.
   Belly good
   A heap of wheat, says the Song of Songs
   but I’ve never seen wheat in a pile.
   Apples, potatoes, cabbages, carrots
   make lumpy stacks, but you are sleek
   as a seal hauled out in the winter sun.
   I can see you as a great goose egg
   or a single juicy and fully ripe peach.
   You swell like a natural grassy hill.
   You are symmetrical as a Hopewell mound,
   with the eye of the naval wide open,
   the eye of my apple, the pear’s port
   window. You’re not supposed to exist
   at all this decade. You’re to be flat
   as a kitchen table, so children with
   roller skates can speed over you
   like those sidewalks of my childhood
   that each gave a different roar under
   my wheels. You’re required to show
   muscle striations like the ocean
   sand at ebb tide, but brick hard.
   Clothing is not designed for women
   of whose warm and flagrant bodies
   you are a swelling part. Yet I confess
   I meditate with my hands folded on you,
   a maternal cushion radiating comfort.
   Even when I have been at my thinnest,
   you have never abandoned me but curled
   round as a sleeping cat under my skirt.
   When I spread out, so do you. You like
   to eat, drink and bang on another belly.
   In anxiety I clutch you with nervous fingers
   as if you were a purse full of calm.
   In my grandmother standing in the fierce sun
   I see your cauldron that held eleven children