You were just back from the war,
   still a Marine, crazy on experimental
   drugs for malaria, and you poured
   the whole Pacific war into my ears
   till I was raw and blistered.
   Forty years later I could hear your voice,
   I could see the women falling into the sea,
   I could see the rotting bodies on the coral,
   I remember your talking of the smell of battle,
   of shit when bodies break open,
   how blood stinks like spoiled meat.
   You talked about how you had been promoted
   then busted for hitting your sergeant,
   time in stockade, beaten for being
   a Jew, for being short, for having
   a temper like a piñata breaking.
   You were back to divorce Florence,
   your second wife. You brought souvenirs
   of the occupation, silks, a kimono,
   glass animals, little saki cups, photos
   of you with buddies, geishas, captured flags.
   You marched on and on as the medicine burned
   in you. I was the pit into which you shoveled
   memories and then walked off.
   You winked at me and you began to whistle.
   In your mind you began to change the sky,
   the water, the land. The stories turned
   from yellow to blue. The blood turned
   to paint. It smelled like glory.
   It was the Fourth of July all year
   and the war became a recruiting poster
   featuring you.
   Brotherless three: Never good enough
   Suzie was my niece; she was not
   your daughter: you refused her
   the way someone will send back the wrong
   dish in a restaurant.
   The way you turned from the sons
   of your third marriage. In a pique
   you had a vasectomy, saying that no child
   of yours ever did it right.
   Did what? You seemed to have no love
   to spare for them, as you pretended
   your first three wives were one
   dead woman. For twelve years
   we had only an occasional card.
   What is a half brother? Half time?
   Half there? Half brother and half not?
   We had different fathers. Yours, a short
   stocky Jew whom imigration had labeled
   a foot itch product, Courtade. The
   year before your bar mitzvah, our mother
   eloped with my father. Your father
   took out her desertion on you.
   When you were sixteen, my parents
   caught you fucking your girlfriend Isabel,
   forced you to marry. They tried
   that on me at eighteen. I yelled
   I’d take off and she’d never see me again.
   A pit lined with fur and barbed wire;
   roast chicken and plastique, warmth
   and bile, a kiss and a razor in the ribs,
   our family.
   These memories tangle, a fine gold chain
   with invisible barbs. As I pick out knots,
   always there are tighter knots inside.
   My fingers bleed. I remember
   coming to see you in L.A. in ’64.
   I was in civil rights. Black friends
   told me L.A. was bad, stewing, smell of raw
   sewage on smoggy mornings, hope eviscerated.
   You said, We have no Negroes here.
   Each link, a barb. Each set of links,
   a knot I could never pick free.
   My palms are crisscrossed with scars
   as from barbed wire.
   By then you were a college graduate—
   who had not finished high school.
   By then, your father was a Frenchman,
   a French Catholic. By then, you were
   a Marine hero with medals and war stories
   you shared at the VFW. You drank martinis
   instead of boilermakers. You speculated
   in real estate near that huge
   stinking sink the Salton Sea
   where drowned rats wash up by the flooded
   motels and the desert is laid out
   with sidewalks and street signs.
   Once when I read poetry in your city
   you came. Afterward you stared at me.
   Why do you remember those old sad things?
   Why do these people come to hear you?
   That old stuff, who cares?
   Ah, but you cared. You could not look
   me in the eyes. You could not risk
   one real word
   for fear I would like a big bad wolf
   blow your house down
   with my voice of fire.
   Brotherless four: Liars dance
   The myth says, he left three women,
   three children, his family; his best friend
   he left to die alone, so he was lonely
   and unloved to the bitter end.
   We live far more in fractals than in grids.
   His fourth wife was Chicana, a widow
   with four children who had a house
   in a good section of the L.A. hills.
   Of all his wives and girlfriends,
   she alone resembled our mother—
   small, dark, busty, flirtatious
   she smiled easily and lied,
   as well as he did, but not to him.
   She was Spanish, an old colonial
   family; he was French.
   They were passionate to be proper.
   Their house was papered with genealogies,
   an aristocracy of Oz, detailed
   as the papers of a prize schnauzer,
   a past elaborated, documented
   with the zeal of federal marshals
   protecting a star witness.
   Maybe I should simply see it
   as a mating dance, two cranes
   stepping about each other transfixed,
   the ritual of two hot lovers
   in bed pretending to be children
   or Klingons or dogs—extending
   the role for thirty years.
   Like lovebirds in a cage,
   they did not tire of the mirror
   or each other.
   Brotherless five: Truth as a cloud of moths
   In adolescence I tried on others’
   styles, shrugged on a leather coat
   of tough street kid I had thrown off
   to run the college marathon;
   turned existentialist in black
   turtleneck and black jeans;
   played vamp, played Romeo
   and Juliet alternate nights.
   I would copy bits from movies,
   wriggle my hips like this one,
   pout like that. I thrust myself
   into dramas and slithered out.
   I’ve always seen the alternate
   lives, the faces I might have worn
   had I left the party with this man
   or that instead of going alone
   into the night’s soft rumble;
   had I paused when the golden balls
   were thrown before me on the race
   course like Atalanta, instead
   of laughing and running on.
   Variant selves haunt
   the corridors of my brain, people
   my novels, crowd in like ghosts
   drawn to blood when friends
   or strangers tell me secrets
   hand me their troubles,
   sweaters knit of hair and wire.
   Why then have I stalked for years
   round and round the self you
   built of forged documents,
   charm, sweat and subterfuge
   as if I were the sentinel of truth?
   We both wrote ourselves into being.
   Brotherless six: Unconversation
   I buzz irritating and 
					     					 			 persistent
   darting, biting at your death.
   What do I hope to understand?
   Why I grieve for someone I did not know?
   I was a white cedar swamp you traversed
   on a wooden walkway above the black water.
   You were a closet from which odd toys
   and bizarre tools fell out on my head.
   Our conversations were conducted
   without a common language.
   I gave you a foot. You handed me a balloon.
   You gave me spurs. I passed you marmalade.
   You thought I bore the past
   like a broad sword swinging
   to cleave you from your fictions
   and perhaps you were right.
   I’m an impolite wind that blows umbrellas
   wrong side to. Now I make you up
   out of pain you deposited in me decades
   ago, eggs of blood red dragonflies.
   I put out stories like weird fruit,
   a cheap mail order novelty: GROW PEACHES
   PLUMS, KIWIS, APPLES ON THE SAME TREE.
   Grandma’s tales, mother’s, friends’ and strangers’:
   you are stirred and mixed with them
   in the incandescent melting pot of my mind.
   I mother you into new ferment
   who would not brother me.
   Brotherless seven: Endless end
   I have trouble understanding
   when something is done
   that was not finished.
   I have to let you go
   since I lack a hold,
   no connection beyond a history
   you had abandoned
   like worn out clothes
   delivered to Goodwill.
   Lives are full of broken dishes
   and promises, stories left
   half told, apologies
   that come back like letters
   with insufficient postage,
   keys that open no known doors.
   The abandoned live with an absence
   that shaped them like the canyon
   of a river gone dry.
   Do I mourn you, Phoenix hedonist,
   or the man in the mirror
   you killed in 1945,
   because he was dragging you down?
   I have made my own brothers,
   my sisters. It is hard
   to say goodbye to nothing
   personal, mouthfuls bitten off
   of silence and wet ashes.
   from
   Early Grrrl
   The correct method of worshipping cats
   For her name is, She who must be petted.
   For her name is, She who eats from the flowered plate.
   For her name is, She who wants the door always opened.
   For her name is, She who must sleep between your legs.
   And he is called, He who must be played with until he drops.
   He is called, He who can wail loudest of all.
   He is called, He who eats also from your plate.
   He is called, He who sleeps in the softest chair.
   And they are known as eaters and rollers in catnip
   Famous among the nations for resonant purring.
   Feared among the mouse multitudes. The voles
   and moles also do run from their shadow.
   For they perform cossack dances at 4 a.m.
   For they stick their faces in your face and meow.
   For they sit on the computer monitor to monitor your work.
   For they make you laugh with their silly acrobatics
   but their dignity is that of the oldest gods.
   Because of all this we are permitted to serve them.
   We are the cat servants, some well trained and some ill,
   and they give us nothing but love and trouble.
   The well preserved man
   He was dug up from a bog
   where the acid tanned him
   like a good leather workboot.
   He is complete, teeth, elbows,
   toenails and stomach, penis,
   the last meal he was fed.
   Sacrificed to a god or goddess
   for fertility, good weather,
   an end to a plague, who knows?
   Only he was fed and then killed,
   as I began to realize as you
   ordered the expensive wine,
   urged lobster or steak, you
   whose eyes always toted the bill,
   I was to be terminated that night.
   I could not eat my last meal.
   I kept running to the ladies room.
   All I could do was drink and try,
   try not to weep at the table.
   I was green as May leaves opening wetly,
   I was new as a never folded dollar,
   a child who didn’t know how the old
   story always ended. Sacrificed
   to a woman with more to offer,
   the new May queen, lady of prominent
   family, like the bog man I was
   strangled with little bruising.
   I lay in my bed with arms folded
   believing my life had bled out.
   How astonished I was to survive,
   to find I was intact and hungry.
   All that happened was I knew the story
   now and I grew long nails and teeth.
   Nightcrawler
   Easy sleepers tucked in their white envelopes
   with a seal that only dawn’s alarm will break:
   with envy I lift away the sides of houses.
   Their snores arise like furry incense.
   Shunted like a boxcar through broken switches
   I rattle down prairie ghostlands of remember
   past rusty flyblown sagging shingle towns
   where the rusty sign of want creaks in the wind.
   Floodlit by a blind eyeball of moon,
   the past here is continuously performed,
   an all night movie for insomniacs.
   The floor is sticky with candy or with blood.
   Voyeur, I spy on my own dead, in action.
   Glued to that dim keyhole, I shout at them
   Hold on! Put down that bottle. Toss those pills.
   Next week a love letter will come with a check.
   They don’t listen. They break each other’s
   bones. They rub ground glass into their eyes
   as blood flows out like satin under the door.
   Always a phone rings in an empty house.
   Easy sleepers, do ghosts ride your rails
   all night telling stories you dread hearing?
   This train runs backward toward old deaths
   as fast as I pull forward toward new ones.
   I vow to sleep through it
   I hate New Year’s Eve.
   I remember the panic to have
   something, anything to do,
   some kind of date
   animal, vegetable, mineral,
   a giant walking carrot,
   a boa constrictor, a ferret,
   an orangutan, a lump of coal.
   I remember ringing apartment
   bells on 114th Street
   looking for a rumored party.
   Parties with lab punch:
   Mogen David, grapefruit juice
   and lab alcohol, hangovers
   guaranteed to anyone within
   ten yards of the foaming punchbowl.
   I wake the next morning
   with my mouth full of mouse
   turds and wood ashes.
   I wake and remember
   how I tried to demonstrate
   the hula, my hips banging
   like a misloaded washer,
   how I made out with a toad.
   I remember limp parties,
   parties askew, everyone
   straggling home with the wrong
   mate, the false match.
   Evenings endless and boring
   as a bowling tournament
   at the senior center.
					     					 			>
   Is it midnight yet?
   Only 9:30? Only
   9:38? At midnight
   we will spill drinks on
   each other’s clothes, kiss
   the boors and bores we detest,
   the new year like a white
   tablecloth on which a drink
   has already been spilled.
   Midsummer night’s stroll
   The attenuated silvery evenings of northern summer,
   they are at once languid and fierce, white Persian
   cats preparing to mate. They are pale lilies
   whose fragrance paints the air of a bedroom.
   The light is milky, suave and must be entered.
   Who can sit inside with the lights on?
   This mauve sky wants to soak through your skin.
   Your body will float like a cherry blossom fallen
   on a slowly moving mirroring river.
   This glow will not tan but lighten your flesh
   till you find yourself borne up as pollen.
   Words escape you like birds startled awake.
   Your lover’s face floats on this dusk, an alien
   moon. You rise and vanish in the sky like a balloon.
   The name of that country is lonesome
   We go to meet our favorite programs
   the way we might have met a lover,
   the mixture of the familiar routine
   and the unexpected revelation.
   We can buy love at the shelter
   if we get there before they have
   executed it for being unwanted,
   its fur cooling in the garbage.
   It becomes more and more unusual
   to be invited to dinner;
   fast food is the family feast.
   Who can be bothered with friends?
   They have needs, you have to remember