shaped under the tent of her summer dress.
   I see you in my mother at thirty
   in her flapper gear, skinny legs
   and then you knocking on the tight dress.
   We hand you down like a prize feather quilt,
   our female shame and sunburst strength.
   The flying Jew
   I never met my uncle Dave.
   The most real thing I know about him
   is how he died, which he did
   again and again in the middle of the night
   my mother screaming, my father shouting,
   “Shut up, Bert, you’re having a bad dream.”
   My uncle Dave, the recurring nightmare.
   He was the Jew who flew.
   How did he manage it? Flying was for
   gentlemen, and he was a kid from the slums
   of Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Cleveland—
   zaydeh one headlong leap ahead of the law
   and the Pinkertons, the goons who finally
   bashed his head in when he was organizing
   his last union, the bakery workers.
   Dave looked up between the buildings,
   higher than the filthy sparrows who pecked
   at horse dung and the pigeons who strutted
   and cooed in the tenement eaves,
   up to the grey clouds of Philadelphia,
   the rust clouds of Pittsburgh with the fires
   of the open hearth steel mills staining them,
   a pillar of smoke by day and fire by night.
   He followed into the clouds.
   My mother doesn’t know who taught
   him to fly, but he learned.
   He became one with the plane, they said.
   Off he went to France. He flew in combat,
   was shot down and survived, never
   became an ace, didn’t enjoy combat,
   the killing, but flying was better than sex.
   He took my mother up once and she wept
   the whole time. She wouldn’t fly again
   till she was seventy-five and said then
   she didn’t care if the plane went down.
   It was his only talent, his only passion
   and a good plane was a perfect fit for
   his body and his mind, his reflexes.
   The earth was something that clung to his shoes,
   something to shake off, something to gather
   all your strength into a taut charge
   and then launch forward and leave behind.
   After the war, he was lost for two years,
   tried selling, tried insurance, then off
   he went barnstorming with his war buddies.
   Time on the ground was just stalling time,
   killing time, parked in roominghouses
   and tourist homes and bedbug hotels.
   He drank little. Women were aspirin.
   Being the only Jew, he had something
   to prove every day, so he flew the fastest,
   he did the final trick that made the audience
   shriek. The planes grew older, the crowds
   thinned out. One fall day outside Cleveland
   he got his mother, sister Bert and her
   little boy to watch the act. It was a triple
   Zimmerman roll he had done five hundred
   shows but this time the plane plowed
   into the earth and a fireball rose.
   So every six months he died flaming
   in the middle of the night, and all I
   ever knew of him was Mother screaming.
   My rich uncle, whom I only met three times
   We were never invited to his house.
   We went there once while they were all in Hawaii,
   climbed steps from which someone had shoveled
   the snow, not him, to the wide terrace.
   Yellow brick, the house peered into fir and juniper.
   It was too large for me to imagine what it held
   but I was sure everyone of them, four girls
   and bony wife, each had a room of her own.
   He had been a magician and on those rare
   nights he had to stay at the Detroit Statler
   downtown, he would summon us for supper
   in the hotel restaurant. Mother would put on
   and take off every dress in her closet, all six,
   climb in the swaybacked brown Hudson muttering shame.
   He would do tricks with his napkin and pull
   quarters from my ears and spoons from his sleeves.
   He had been a clumsy acrobat, he had failed at comedy
   and vaudeville; he was entertaining for a party
   when he met a widow with four girls and an inheritance.
   He waltzed right out of her romantic movie dreams
   and he strolled into her house and she had him redone.
   He learned to talk almost like her dead husband.
   He learned to wear suits, play golf and give orders
   to servants. His name changed, his background rebuilt,
   his religion painted over, he almost fit in.
   Of my uncles, only he was unreal, arriving by plane
   to stay on the fanciest street in downtown Detroit.
   The waiter brought a phone to the table, his broker
   calling. I imagined a cowboy breaking horses.
   He made knives disappear. He made a napkin vanish.
   He was like an animated suit, no flesh, no emotions
   bubbling the blood and steaming the windows as
   my other uncles and aunts did. Only the discreet
   Persian leather smell of money droned in my nose.
   His longest trick was to render himself invisible.
   Then one night after the guests had left, he went down
   to the basement in the latest multilevel glass vast
   whatnot shelf of house and hanged himself by the furnace.
   They did not want his family at the funeral. She had
   no idea, his wife said, why would he be depressed?
   I remember his laugh like a cough and his varnished
   face, buffed till the silverware shone in his eyes.
   His last trick was to vanish himself forever.
   Your standard midlife crisis
   A friend is destroying his life
   like a set of dishes
   he has tired of, is breaking
   for the noise.
   The old wife is older
   of course. She promises
   nothing but what he knows
   he can have.
   She is an oak rocking chair,
   sturdy, plain, shapely
   something he has taken comfort
   in for years.
   This one flirts like a firefly,
   on and off, on and off.
   Where will she flash next?
   In his pocket.
   She mirrors his needs,
   she sends him messages to decode
   twisted in his hair, knotted
   in his skin.
   With me you will forget failure.
   With me you will be another.
   My youth will shave your years
   to smooth fresh skin.
   O real life, I feel! he says,
   his infatuation, a charge
   like fourteen cups of espresso
   and as lasting.
   He careens downhill, throwing off
   books, children, history,
   tossing friends, pledges, knowledge
   down into crystal canyon.
   There every cliff reflects her
   face with the eyes illuminating
   him like fireworks, doomed
   to burn themselves out.
   The visitation
   The yearling doe stands by the pile of salt
   hay, nibbling and then strolls up the path.
   Among the spring flowers she stands amazed,
   hundreds of daffodils, forsythia,
   the bright chalices of tulips, cr 
					     					 			imson,
   golden, orange streaked with green, the wild
   tulips opening like stars fallen on the ground.
   She leans gracefully to taste a tarda,
   yellow and white sunburst, sees us, stops,
   uncertain. Stares at us with her head cocked.
   What are you? She is not frightened
   but bemused. Do I know you?
   The landscaping dazzles her, impresses her
   far more than the two of us on the driveway
   speaking to her in the same tone we use
   with the cats as if she had become our pet,
   as she sidles among the peach trees,
   a pink blossom clinging to her dun flank.
   Graceful among the rhododendrons, I know
   what her skittish courage represents: she
   is beautiful as those sub-Saharan children
   with the huge luminous brown eyes of star-
   vation. A hard winter following a hurricane,
   tangles of downed trees even the deer
   cannot penetrate, a long slow spring
   with the buds obdurate as pebbles,
   too much building, so she comes to stand
   in our garden, eyes flowering with wonder
   under the incandescent buffet of the fruit
   trees, this garden cafeteria she has walked
   into to graze, from the lean late woods.
   Half vulture, half eagle
   I saw it last night, the mortgage
   bird with heavy hunched shoulders
   nesting in shredded hundred dollar bills
   its long curved claws seize, devour.
   You feed it and feed it in hopes
   it will grow smaller. Does this make
   sense? After five years of my writing
   checks on the first day of every month
   it is swollen and red eyed and hungry.
   It has passed from owner to owner,
   sold by the bank to Ohio and thence
   to an ersatz company that buys up slave
   mortgages and is accountable to Panama
   or perhaps Luxembourg, cannot be
   communicated with by less than four lawyers
   connected end to end like Christmas
   tree light sets and blinking in six
   colors simultaneously by fax.
   It says, I squat on the foot of your
   bed when the medical bills shovel in.
   When your income withers like corn
   stalks in a Kansas drought, I laugh
   with a sound of sand hitting a windshield,
   laughter dry as parched kernels from which
   all water has been stolen by the sun.
   Each month I wring you a little more.
   I own a corner of your house, say
   the northeast corner the storms hit
   when they roar from the blast of the sea
   churned into grey sudsy cliffs, and as
   the storm bashes the dunes into sand
   it washes away, so I can carry off
   your house any time you fail to feed
   me promptly. Your misfortune is my
   best gamble. I am the mortgage bird
   and my weight is on your back.
   The level
   A great balance hangs in the sky
   and briefly on the black pan
   and on the blue pan, the melon
   of the moon and the blood orange
   of the sun are symmetrical
   like two unmatched eyes glowing
   at us with one desire.
   This is an instant’s equality,
   a level that at once
   starts to dip. In spring
   the sun starts up its golden
   engine earlier each dawn.
   In fall, night soaks
   its dye into the edges of day.
   But now they hang, two bright
   balls teasing us to balance
   the halves of our brain, need
   and will, gut and intellect,
   you and me in an instant’s grace—
   understanding no woman, even
   Gaia, can always make it work.
   The negative ion dance
   The ocean reopens us.
   The brass doors in the forehead swing wide.
   Light enters us like a swarm of bees
   and bees turn into white petals falling.
   The lungs expand as the salt air
   stretches them, and they sing, treble
   bagpipes eerie and serpentine.
   The bones lighten to balsa wood.
   The head bobs on air currents
   like a bright blue balloon without ballast.
   The arms want to flap. The terns
   dive around us giving hopeless instruction.
   Light is sharp, serrated, a flight of saws.
   Light enters us and is absorbed like water,
   like radiation. We take the light in
   and darken it. We look just the same.
   We shine only in the back of the eyes
   if you stare into them as you kiss.
   The light leaks out through the palms
   as they caress you later in the dark.
   The voice of the grackle
   Among the red winged blackbirds—
   latecomers clustered at the top
   of the sugar maple after the others
   have split up the better home sites
   in the marshes, along Dun’s Run—
   their buzzes, chirs and warbles,
   I hear a rasp, a harsh ruckus.
   The grackles have come north again.
   Nobody greets them with the joy
   meted out to robins, the geese
   rowing high overhead, the finches
   flitting gold and red to the feeders.
   I am their solitary welcoming
   committee, tossing extra corn.
   Their cries are no more melodious
   than the screech of unadjusted
   brakes, and yet I like their song
   of the unoiled door hinge creaking,
   the rusty saw grating, the squawk
   of an air mattress stomped on,
   unmistakable among the twitters.
   They are big and shiny, handsome
   even sulking in the rain.
   Feathers gleam like the polish
   on a new car when the sun hits them,
   black as asphalt, with oil slick
   colors shimmering, purple satin
   like hoods in their gang colors.
   We never see more than a few,
   often one alone, like the oversized
   kid who hangs out, misfit, with
   the younger crowd, slumps at the back
   of the classroom making offcolor
   comments in his cracking voice,
   awkward, half clown, half hero.
   Salt in the afternoon
   The room is a conch shell
   and echoing in it, the blood
   rushes in the ears,
   the surf of desire sliding in
   on the warm beach.
   The room is the shell of the moon
   snail, gorgeous predator
   whose shell winds round and round
   the color of moonshine
   on your pumping back.
   The bed is a slipper shell
   on which we rock, opaline
   and pearled with light sweat,
   two great deep currents
   colliding into white water.
   The clamshell opens.
   The oyster is eaten.
   The squid shoots its white ink.
   Now there is nothing but warm
   salt puddles on the flats.
   Brotherless one: Sun god
   In a family snapshot I stand in pigtails
   grinning. I hug the two pillars
   of my cracked world, my cold
   father, my hot brother, the fair and the ruddy,
   the grey eyed forbidder, the one who hit
   
					     					 			 but never caressed, who shouted
   but never praised; and on the left, you.
   You were the dark pulsating sun of my childhood,
   the man whose eyes could give water
   instead of ice, eyes brown as tree bark.
   You were the one I looked like, as even
   your children looked more like me
   than like their mothers. All had the same
   dark slanted Tartar eyes glinting like blades
   and the same black hair rippling—
   coarse, abundant, grass of a tundra of night.
   We are small and scrappy.
   We go for the throat in anger.
   We have bad genes and good minds.
   We drag a load of peacock tales sweeping the dust.
   Myths come into life around us
   like butterflies hatching, bright and voracious.
   We learned sex easily as we learned to talk
   and it shaped our handshakes and our laughter.
   Trouble was our shadow, tied to our heels.
   Thus we grew out of the same mother
   but never spoke real words since I turned twelve.
   Yet you built into my psyche that space
   for a man not of ice and thumbtacks,
   a man who could think with his body,
   a man who could laugh from the soles
   of his feet, a man who could touch
   skin simply as sun does.
   You gave me a license
   for the right of the body to joy.
   Brotherless two: Palimpsest
   My friend Elizabeth said, the week you died
   and your widow would not have me at
   your funeral: you and your brother
   both had great wild imaginations.
   You put yours into books.
   He rewrote himself.
   I can remember the last honest talking that ever
   went between us, strong, jolting to me
   as straight bourbon to a child not used to beer.