She is awkwardly lovely, her face
   pure as a single trill perfectly
   prolonged on a violin, yet she
   knows the camera sees her
   and she arranges her body
   like a flower in a vase to be
   displayed, admired she hopes.
   She longs to be luminous
   and visible, to shine in the eyes
   of it must be a handsome man,
   who will carry her away—and he
   will into poverty and an abortion
   but not yet. Now she drapes
   her best, her only good dress
   inherited from her sister who dances
   on the stage, around her legs
   that she does not like
   and leans a little forward
   because she does like her breasts.
   How she wants love to bathe
   her in honeyed light lifting her
   up through smoky clouds clamped
   on the Pittsburgh slum. Blessed
   are we who cannot know
   what will come to us,
   our upturned faces following
   through the sky
   the sun of love.
   One reason I like opera
   In movies, you can tell the heroine
   because she is blonder and thinner
   than her sidekick. The villainess
   is darkest. If a woman is fat,
   she is a joke and will probably die.
   In movies, the blondest are the best
   and in bleaching lies not only purity
   but victory. If two people are both
   extra pretty, they will end up
   in the final clinch.
   Only the flawless in face and body
   win. That is why I treat
   movies as less interesting
   than comic books. The camera
   is stupid. It sucks surfaces.
   Let’s go to the opera instead.
   The heroine is fifty and weighs
   as much as a ’65 Chevy with fins.
   She could crack your jaw in her fist.
   She can hit high C lying down.
   The tenor the women scream for
   wolfs an eight course meal daily.
   He resembles a bull on hind legs.
   His thighs are the size of beer kegs.
   His chest is a redwood with hair.
   Their voices twine, golden serpents.
   Their voices rise like the best
   fireworks and hang and hang
   then drift slowly down descending
   in brilliant and still fiery sparks.
   The hippopotamus baritone (the villain)
   has a voice that could give you
   an orgasm right in your seat.
   His voice smokes with passion.
   He is hot as lava. He erupts nightly.
   The contralto is, however, svelte.
   She is supposed to be the soprano’s
   mother, but is ten years younger,
   beautiful and Black. Nobody cares.
   She sings you into her womb where you rock.
   What you see is work like digging a ditch,
   hard physical labor. What you hear
   is magic as tricky as knife throwing.
   What you see is strength like any
   great athlete’s; what you hear
   is skill rendered precisely as the best
   Swiss watchmaker. The body is
   resonance. The body is the cello case.
   The body just is. The voice loud
   as hunger remagnetizes your bones.
   My mother gives me her recipe
   Take some flour. Oh, I don’t know,
   like two–three cups, and you cut
   in the butter. Now some women
   they make it with shortening.
   but I say butter, even though
   that meant you had to have fish, see?
   You cut up some apples. Not those
   stupid sweet ones. Apples for the cake,
   they have to have some bite, you know?
   A little sour in the sweet, like love.
   You slice them into little moons.
   No, no! Like half or crescent
   moons. You aren’t listening.
   You mix sugar and cinnamon and cloves,
   some women use allspice. You coat
   every little moon. Did I say you add
   milk? Oh, just till it feels right.
   Use your hands. Milk in the cake part!
   Then you pat it into a pan, I like
   round ones, but who cares?
   I forgot to say you add baking powder.
   Did I forget a little lemon on the apples?
   Then you just bake it. Well, till it’s done
   of course. Did I remember you place
   the apples in rows? You can make
   a pattern, like a weave. It’s pretty
   that way. I like things pretty.
   It’s just a simple cake.
   Any fool can make it
   except your aunt. I
   gave her the recipe
   but she never
   got it right.
   The good old days at home sweet home
   On Monday my mother washed.
   It was the way of the world,
   all those lines of sheets flapping
   in the narrow yards of the neighborhood,
   the pulleys stretching out second
   and third floor windows.
   Down in the dank steamy basement,
   washtubs vast and grey, the wringer
   sliding between the washer
   and each tub. At least every
   year she or I caught
   a hand in it.
   Tuesday my mother ironed.
   One iron was the mangle.
   She sat at it feeding in towels,
   sheets, pillowcases.
   The hand ironing began
   with my father’s underwear.
   She ironed his shorts.
   She ironed his socks.
   She ironed his undershirts.
   Then came the shirts
   a half hour to each, the starch
   boiling on the stove.
   I forget blueing. I forget
   the props that held up the line
   clattering down. I forget
   chasing the pigeons that shat
   on her billowing housedresses.
   I forget clothespins in the teeth.
   Tuesday my mother ironed my
   father’s underwear. Wednesday
   she mended, darned socks on
   a wooden egg. Shined shoes.
   Thursday she scrubbed floors.
   Put down newspapers to keep
   them clean. Friday she
   vacuumed, dusted, polished,
   scraped, waxed, pummeled.
   How did you become a feminist
   interviewers always ask
   as if to say, when did this
   rare virus attack your brain?
   It could have been Sunday
   when she washed the windows,
   Thursday when she burned
   the trash, bought groceries
   hauling the heavy bags home.
   It could have been any day
   she did again and again what
   time and dust obliterated
   at once until stroke broke
   her open. I think it was Tuesday
   when she ironed my father’s shorts.
   The day my mother died
   I seldom have premonitions of death.
   That day opened like any
   ordinary can of tomatoes.
   The alarm drilled into my ear.
   The cats stirred and one leapt off.
   The scent of coffee slipped into my head
   like a lover into my arms and I sighed,
   drew the curtains and examined
   the face of the day.
   I remember no dreams of loss.
   No dark angel rustled ominous win 
					     					 			gs
   or whispered gravely.
   I was caught by surprise
   like the trout that takes the fly
   and I gasped in the fatal air.
   You were gone suddenly as a sound
   fading in the coil of the ear
   no trace, no print, no ash
   just the emptiness of stilled air.
   My hunger feeds on itself.
   My hands are stretched out
   to grasp and find only their
   own weight bearing them down
   toward the dark cold earth.
   Love has certain limited powers
   The dead walk with us briefly,
   suddenly just behind on the narrow
   path like a part in the hairy grass.
   We feel them between our shoulder
   blades and we can speak, but if
   we turn, like Eurydice they’re gone.
   The dead lie with us briefly
   swimming through the warm salty
   pool of darkness flat as flounders,
   floating like feathers on the shafts
   of silver moonlight. Their hair
   brushes our face and is gone.
   The dead speak to us through
   the scent of red musk roses,
   through steam rising from green tea,
   through the spring rain scratching
   on the pane. If I try to recapture
   your voice, silence grates
   in my ears, the mocking rush
   of silence. But months later
   I stand at the stove stirring a pot
   of soup and you say, Too much salt,
   and you say, You have my hair,
   and, Pain wears out like anything else.
   Little lights
   Tonight I light the first candle
   on the chanukiyah by the window
   and then a second in the bathtub,
   the yahrzeit candle for your death.
   I am always sad the first night
   of a holiday when we should rejoice.
   This night nineteen years ago
   the light of your mind snuffed out.
   The Chanukkah candles burn quickly
   two hours and they gutter out
   their short time burnt up.
   We did not know how old you were—
   you’d always fudged your age,
   you had no birth certificate—
   I don’t know if you knew
   your birth date and place, for real.
   Grandma always gave a different
   answer and then shrugged. Your
   mother is younger than me and
   older than you, what else matters?
   Yes, there’s Moses and David,
   Babylon and the Talmud,
   Maimonides, and then we appear
   out of a cloud of smoke and haze
   of old blood there among the Jew-
   haters clutching a few bundles.
   My people poor, without names,
   histories vanished into the hard soil
   but we had stories with pedigrees:
   my female ancestors told them,
   Lilith, the golem, Rabbi Nachman,
   the Maccabees, all simultaneous
   all swarming around my bed
   all caught in my hair as you
   washed it with tar soap, relating
   fables, family gossip, bubele
   maisehs, precious handed down
   the true family jewels, my dowry.
   Those little flames you lit in my
   mind burn on paper for you,
   your true yahrzeit, all year
   every year of my aging life.
   Gifts that keep on giving
   You know when you unwrap them:
   fruitcake is notorious. There were only
   51 of them baked in 1917 by the
   personal chef of Rasputin. The mad monk
   ate one. That was what finally killed him
   But there are many more bouncers:
   bowls green and purple spotted like lepers.
   Vases of inept majolica in the shape
   of wheezing frogs or overweight lilies.
   Sweaters sized for Notre Dame’s hunchback.
   Hourglasses of no use humans
   can devise. Gloves to fit three-toed sloths.
   Mufflers of screaming plaid acrylic.
   Necklaces and pins that transform
   any outfit to a thrift shop reject.
   Boxes of candy so stale and sticky
   the bonbons pull teeth faster than
   your dentist. Weird sauces bought
   at warehouse sales no one will ever
   taste unless suicidal or blind.
   Immortal as vampires, these gifts
   circulate from birthdays to Christmas,
   from weddings to anniversaries.
   Even if you send them to the dump,
   they resurface, bobbing up on the third
   day like the corpses they call floaters.
   After all living have turned to dust
   and ashes, in the ruins of cities
   alien archeologists will judge our
   civilization by these monstrous relics.
   The yellow light
   When I see—obsolete, forgotten—
   a yellow porchlight, I am transported
   to muggy Michigan evenings.
   The air is thick with July.
   We are playing pinochle.
   Every face card is a relative.
   Now we are playing Hearts
   but I am the Queen of Spades.
   Mosquitoes hum over the weedy
   lake. An owl groans in the pines.
   Moths hurl themselves against
   the screens, a dry brown rain.
   Yellow makes every card black.
   The eyes of my uncles are avid.
   They are playing for pennies
   and blood. One shows off
   a new Buick, one a new wife.
   The women are whispering
   about bellies and beds.
   It always smells like fried perch.
   I am afraid I will never grow up.
   I think the owl is calling me
   over the black water to hide
   in the pines and turn, turn
   into something strange and dark
   with wings and talons and words
   of a more powerful language
   than uncles and aunts know,
   than uncles and aunts understand.
   The new era, c. 1946
   It was right after the war of my childhood
   World War II, and the parks were wide open.
   The lights were all turned on, house
   lights, streetlights, neon like green
   and purple blood pumping the city’s heart.
   I had grown up in brownout, blackout,
   my father the air raid warden going
   house to house to check that no pencil
   of light stabbed out between blackout curtains.
   Now it was summer and Detroit was celebrating.
   Fireworks burst open their incandescent petals
   flaring in arcs down into my wide eyes.
   A band was playing “Stars and Stripes Forever.”
   Then the lights came on brighter and starker
   than day and sprayers began to mist the field.
   It was the new miracle DDT in which we danced
   its faint perfumy smell like privet along the sidewalks.
   It was comfort in mist, for there would be no more
   mosquitoes forever, and we would always be safe.
   Out in Nevada soldiers were bathing in fallout.
   People downwind of the tests were drinking
   heavy water out of their faucets. Cancer
   was the rising sign in the neon painted night.
   Little birds fell out of the trees but no one
   noticed. We had so many birds then.
   In Europe American cigarettes were money.
   Here all 
					     					 			 the kids smoked on street corners.
   I used to light kitchen matches with my thumbnail.
   My parents threw out their Depression ware
   and bought Melmac plastic dishes.
   They believed in plastic and the promise
   that when they got old, they would go
   to Florida and live like the middle class.
   My brother settled in California with a new
   wife and his old discontent. New car,
   new refrigerator, Mama and Daddy have new hats.
   Crouch and cover. Ashes, all fall down.
   Winter promises
   Tomatoes rosy as perfect babies’ buttocks,
   eggplants glossy as waxed fenders,
   purple neon flawless glistening
   peppers, pole beans fecund and fast
   growing as Jack’s Viagra-sped stalk,
   big as truck tire zinnias that mildew
   will never wilt, roses weighing down
   a bush never touched by black spot,
   brave little fruit trees shouldering up
   their spotless ornaments of glass fruit:
   I lie on the couch under a blanket
   of seed catalogs ordering far
   too much. Sleet slides down
   the windows, a wind edged
   with ice knifes through every crack.
   Lie to me, sweet garden-mongers:
   I want to believe every promise,
   to trust in five pound tomatoes
   and dahlias brighter than the sun
   that was eaten by frost last week.
   The gardener’s litany
   We plant, it is true.
   I start the tiny seedlings
   in peat pots, water, feed.
   But the garden is alive
   in the night with its own
   adventures. Slugs steal
   out, snails carry their