spiraled houses upward,
   rabbits hop over the fence.
   The garden like a green
   and bronze goddess loves
   zucchini this year but will
   not give us cucumbers.
   She does as she pleases.
   Purple beans but no yellows.
   Serve me, she whispers,
   maybe I will give you tomatoes,
   or maybe I will hatch into
   thousands of green caterpillars
   maybe I will grow only bindweed,
   joe-pye weed and dandelions.
   All gardeners worship weather
   and luck. We begin in compost
   and end in decay. The life
   of one is the death of the other.
   Beetles eat squash plant. Bird
   eats beetle. Soil eats all.
   Eclipse at the solstice
   New moon and the hottest sun:
   It should be the day of the triumphant
   sun marching like a red elephant
   up the lapis arch of sky.
   The moon is invisible, shy,
   almost wounded. She draws
   the thin short darkness around her
   like a torn dress.
   Then in the fat of the afternoon
   she slides over the sun
   enveloping him. I have
   conquered, she croons,
   brought darkness and put the birds
   to sleep, raised the twilight wind.
   But then his corona shines
   around her and she sees.
   You really are a lion with mane
   of white fire, you beauty. So
   she gives him the day back,
   slowly, and lets him roar.
   The rain as wine
   It is a ripe rain
   coming down in big fat drops
   like grapes dropping on the roof—
   white grapes round as moons.
   It is coming in waves
   whooshing through the trees.
   Silvery, intimate, it softens
   and washes the parched air.
   It falls on my face
   like a blessing.
   It sweetens my body
   rolling down my upstretched arms.
   The rain blesses us
   as it opens the cracked earth
   as it opens us to itself:
   the sweet gush of August rain.
   Taconic at midnight
   At eleven we headed home, north
   on the Taconic Parkway to the Mass Pike,
   a mild late September night with fog
   drifting in great hanks like white Spanish
   moss, wavering in translucent
   banners across the narrow highway,
   diffusing moonlight, deflecting our beams.
   Almost at once we began to see them:
   deer congregated on each side where
   the woods opened, dozens in a clearing,
   bucks in the road, does milling about.
   We drove slower and slower, inching
   past, steering among them who ignored
   our intrusion. They were intent
   on each other, for this gathering
   was a mating mart like a mixer:
   but they were serious, examining
   each other with desperate attention,
   an air of silky sexy tension roiling
   like the fog that sank and lifted
   bedazzling their sleek flanks,
   their shaking antlers. The road
   did not belong. It should have been
   rolled up like a bale of wire and stowed,
   for this was a night of the ancient gods
   when America floated on the turtle’s back
   and all things were still pristine
   as the lucent brown eye of a virgin doe.
   The equinox rush
   The swan heads south in the night sky.
   Overhead, the sharp white triangle
   of Altair, Deneb and Vega prickles.
   At dawn there is a hint of frost,
   only etched on the truck down
   at the foot of the drive.
   A sharp shinned hawk eyes
   chickadees at the feeder, swoops.
   That afternoon over High Head
   I see two more hawks passing
   missile lean, hurrying before
   a wind I cannot feel.
   Everything quickens. Squirrels
   rush to feed. Monarchs among
   the milkweed raggedly zigzag
   toward South America. Too early
   for the final harvest, too early
   to mulch and protect, too soon
   to take off the screens, still
   some sharp corner has been turned.
   I am stirred to finish something.
   A hint of cold frames the moment
   and compresses it. Urgency
   is the drug of the day.
   Find a task and do it, the red
   of the Virginia creeper warns.
   The sunset is a brushfire.
   I am hurrying, I am running hard
   toward I don’t know what,
   but I mean to arrive before dark.
   Seder with comet
   The comet was still hanging in the sky
   that year at Pesach, and of course
   the full moon, as every year.
   After the bulk of the seder, after
   the long rich redolent meal, we all
   went out on the road walking away
   from the house whose lights we had
   dimmed. There on the velvet playing
   field of night we saw the moon rolling
   toward us like a limestone millwheel
   the whole sky pouring to fill our heads
   a little drunk with the sweet wine
   so that the stars sank in with a whisper
   like a havdalah candle doused in wine
   giving a little electric buzz to the brain.
   Then we saw it, the comet like the mane
   of a white lion, something holy to mark
   this one more Passover with all of us
   together, my old commune mates, friends
   from here and the city, children I have known
   since birth, all standing with our faces turned
   up like pale sunflowers to the icy fire.
   Then we went back to the house, drank
   the last cup and sang till we were hoarse.
   The cameo
   My only time in Naples
   the day we went to Pompeii
   street sellers had them: big fine cameos
   just like the one my grandma
   left to me, a brooch. Seeing them
   was finding a footprint in the street:
   her small feet like my mother’s
   had passed here with her great
   sophisticated love. Her rabbi
   father married them on his deathbed.
   They left Russia under a load of straw
   a price on his head, no papers.
   In Naples he sold his gold
   watch to buy them passports
   taking the name Bunin, after
   the writer he admired.
   What will you do in America?
   the anarchist seller asked.
   Make a revolution, he declaimed.
   So he got a good price.
   Off to Ellis Island, where the
   immigration inspector added
   an extra n and let them slip
   in, Grandma secretly pregnant
   under her too big black dress.
   She insisted on mourning her father
   though her husband objected.
   But she kept her long chestnut
   hair against custom, to please
   him, who said such glory should
   never be sacrificed, and any angels
   tempted would have to come through
   him. She did not know yet
   he would be unfaithful, give her
 &nbs 
					     					 			p; eleven children to raise in squalor,
   make no revolution but organize
   unions, be killed by Pinkertons.
   In Naples she danced through exotic
   dangerous streets on his arm, proud
   he could speak Italian and bargain
   not only for passports cheap
   but carved head and shoulders of a fine
   looking woman he said resembled
   her, and she was pleased although
   already she did not believe him.
   Miriam’s cup
   This cup of fresh water on the seder table at Pesach represents the well of Miriam, Moses’ older sister who gave water to the children of Israel through the desert until her death. It compliments the traditional cup of Eliyahu.
   The cup of Eliyahu holds wine;
   the cup of Miriam holds water.
   Wine is more precious
   until you have no water.
   Water that flows in our veins,
   water that is the stuff of life
   for we are made of breath
   and water, vision
   and fact. Eliyahu is
   the extraordinary; Miriam
   brings the daily wonders:
   the joy of a fresh morning
   like a newly prepared table,
   a white linen cloth on which
   nothing has yet spilled.
   The descent into the heavy
   waters of sleep healing us.
   The scent of baking bread,
   roasted chicken, fresh herbs,
   the faces of friends across
   the table. What sustains us
   every morning, every evening,
   the common miracles
   like the taste of cool water.
   Dignity
   Near the end of your life you regard
   me with a gaze clear and lucid
   saying simply, I am, I will not be.
   How foolish to imagine animals
   don’t comprehend death. Old
   cats study it like a recalcitrant mouse.
   You seek out warmth for your bones
   close now to the sleek coat
   that barely wraps them,
   little knobs of spine, the jut
   of hip bones, the skull
   my fingers lightly caress.
   Sometimes in the night you cry:
   a deep piteous banner of gone
   desire and current sorrow,
   the fear that the night is long
   and hungry and you pace
   among its teeth feeling time
   slipping through you cold and
   slick. If I rise and fetch you back
   to bed, you curl against me purring
   able to grasp pleasure by the nape
   even inside pain. Your austere
   dying opens its rose of ash.
   Old cat crying
   The old cat stands on the flagstone
   path through the herb garden,
   crying, crying. She has what
   the vet calls cognitive
   dysfunction, as will we all
   as will we all.
   She is crying for the companion
   who always came to her
   from the time he drank
   her milk, with whom she slept
   four sharp ears from one
   grey cushion of fur.
   He should not have died
   before her. She cries
   for him to come. She
   sniffed his body and knew
   but she has forgotten
   and he does not come.
   I hold her and it is my
   past I mourn, my mother,
   lovers, friends whom
   I shall never again summon
   and the future’s empty
   silent rooms.
   Traveling dream
   I am packing to go to the airport
   but somehow I am never packed.
   I keep remembering more things
   I keep forgetting.
   Secretly the clock is bolting
   forward ten minutes at a click
   instead of one. Each time
   I look away, it jumps.
   Now I remember I have to find
   the cats. I have five cats
   even when I am asleep.
   One is on the bed and I slip
   her into the suitcase.
   One is under the sofa. I
   drag him out. But the tabby
   in the suitcase has vanished.
   Now my tickets have run away.
   Maybe the cat has my tickets.
   I can only find one cat.
   My purse has gone into hiding.
   Now it is time to get packed.
   I take the suitcase down.
   There is a cat in it but no clothes.
   My tickets are floating in the bath
   tub full of water. I dry them.
   One cat is in my purse
   but my wallet has dissolved.
   The tickets are still dripping.
   I look at the clock as it leaps
   forward and see I have missed
   my plane. My bed is gone now.
   There is one cat the size of a sofa.
   Kamasutra for dummies
   Years ago I had a lover who got bored.
   He liked a challenge. I was
   too easily pleased to fluff his ego.
   He bought a manual. We would
   work our way through the positions.
   Work is the operant word. I remember
   his horny toenails and ripe feet
   either side of my eyes and cheeks.
   I remember arching my back
   like a cat, the ache just looming.
   In some positions his prick slipped
   out every other stroke and he would
   curse. It was sensual as those videos
   to flatten your abs or firm your buttocks
   where three young women whose abs
   are flat as floorboards grin like rigor
   mortis as they demonstrate some
   overpriced 800 number device.
   They never sweat. But we did.
   We used chairs. And tables and stools.
   Always the manual was open beside us
   guiding our calisthenics. Spontaneous
   as a concession speech, exciting
   as a lecture on actuarial tables
   he staked my quivering libido through
   its smoking heart. The night he wanted
   to try it standing with me upsidedown
   I left him hanging from the door
   and whoosh, zoomed off like a rabid bat
   to find someone who actually liked sex.
   The first time I tasted you
   The first time I tasted you I thought
   strange: metallic, musty, with salt
   and cinnamon, the sea
   and the kitchen
   safety and danger.
   The second time I tasted you I thought
   known: already known,
   perhaps in an oasis of dream
   in the desert of a hard night
   the dry wind parching me.
   I tasted the fruit of a tree
   that promised not life
   but love, the knowledge
   of being known at last
   down to my gnarly pit.
   What we know and don’t
   of each other goes on
   a voyage not infinite
   but long enough, notching
   years on our bones.
   From your body I eat
   and drink all I will ever
   know of passionate love
   from now till death
   drains the chalice.
   Colors passing through us
   Purple as tulips in May, mauve
   into lush velvet, purple
   as the stain blackberries leave
   on the lips, on the hands,
   the purple of ripe grapes
   sunlit and warm as flesh.
   
					     					 			; Every day I will give you a color,
   like a new flower in a bud vase
   on your desk. Every day
   I will paint you, as women
   color each other with henna
   on hands and on feet.
   Red as henna, as cinnamon,
   as coals after the fire is banked,
   the cardinal in the feeder,
   the roses tumbling on the arbor
   their weight bending the wood
   the red of the syrup I make from their petals.
   Orange as the perfumed fruit
   hanging their globes on the glossy tree,
   orange as pumpkins in the field,
   orange as butterflyweed and the monarchs
   who come to eat it, orange as my
   cat running lithe through the high grass.
   Yellow as a goat’s wise and wicked eyes,
   yellow as a hill of daffodils,
   yellow as dandelions by the highway,
   yellow as butter and egg yolks,
   yellow as a school bus stopping you,
   yellow as a slicker in a downpour.
   Here is my bouquet, here is a sing
   song of all the things you make
   me think of, here is oblique
   praise for the height and depth
   of you and the width too.
   Here is my box of new crayons at your feet.
   Green as mint jelly, green
   as a frog on a lily pad twanging,
   the green of cos lettuce upright
   about to bolt into opulent towers,
   green as Grande Chartreuse in a clear
   glass, green as wine bottles.