The Hunger Moon: New and Selected Poems, 1980-2010
            
            
            
   My poems go out into the world as best they can in print or on the Internet and get used for memorial services, love notes, political organizing, teaching, religious services, weddings, and bar and bat mitzvot. All that is appropriate. I write the poems, but they belong to whoever wants them. That’s how poetry stays alive—in the minds and voices of those who want to share it. I hear regularly from people for whom my poetry is meaningful and part of their consciousness. That means a great deal to me.
   from
   Stone, Paper, Knife
   A key to common lethal fungi
   What rots it is taking
   for granted. To assume what
   is given you is laid on like the water
   that rushes from the faucet singing
   when you turn the tap. Wait
   till the reservoir goes dry
   to learn how precious are those
   clear diamond drops.
   We hunt our lovers like deer
   through the thorny thickets and after
   we have caught love we start
   eating it to the bone.
   We use it up in hamburgers
   complaining of monotony.
   We walk all over the common miracles
   without bothering to wipe our feet.
   Then we wonder why we need more
   and more salt to taste our food.
   My old man, my old lady, my
   ball and chain: listen, even the cat
   you found starving in the alley
   who purrs you to sleep dancing
   with kneading paws in your hair
   will vanish if your heart closes its fist.
   Habit’s fine dust chokes us.
   As in a city the streetlights
   and neon signs prevent us from viewing
   the stars, so the casual noise, the smoke
   of ego turning over its engine blinds
   us till we can no longer see past
   our minor needs to the major constellations
   of the ram, the hunter, the swan
   that guide our finite gaze
   through the infinite dark.
   The common living dirt
   The small ears prick on the bushes,
   furry buds, shoots tender and pale.
   The swamp maples blow scarlet.
   Color teases the corner of the eye,
   delicate gold, chartreuse, crimson,
   mauve speckled, just dashed on.
   The soil stretches naked. All winter
   hidden under the down comforter of snow,
   delicious now, rich in the hand
   as chocolate cake: the fragrant busy
   soil the worm passes through her gut
   and the beetle swims in like a lake.
   As I kneel to place the seeds
   careful as stitching, I am in love.
   You are the bed we all sleep on.
   You are the food we eat, the food
   we ate, the food we will become.
   We are walking trees rooted in you.
   You can live thousands of years
   undressing in the spring your black
   body, your red body, your brown body
   penetrated by the rain. Here
   is the goddess unveiled,
   the earth opening her strong thighs.
   Yet you grow exhausted with bearing
   too much, too soon, too often, just
   as a woman wears through like an old rug.
   We have contempt for what we spring
   from. Dirt, we say, you’re dirt
   if we were not all your children.
   We have lost the simplest gratitude.
   We lack the knowledge we showed ten
   thousand years past, that you live
   a goddess but mortal, that what we take
   must be returned; that the poison we drop
   in you will stunt our children’s growth.
   Tending a plot of your flesh binds
   me as nothing ever could, to the seasons,
   to the will of the plants, clamorous
   in their green tenderness. What
   calls louder than the cry of a field
   of corn ready, or trees of ripe peaches?
   I worship on my knees, laying
   seeds in you, that worship rooted
   in need, in hunger, in kinship,
   flesh of the planet with my own flesh,
   a ritual of compost, a litany of manure.
   My garden’s a chapel, but a meadow
   gone wild in grass and flower
   is a cathedral. How you seethe
   with little quick ones, vole, field
   mouse, shrew and mole in their thousands,
   rabbit and woodchuck. In you rest
   the jewels of the genes wrapped in seed.
   Power warps because it involves joy
   in domination; also because it means
   forgetting how we too starve, break
   like a corn stalk in the wind, how we
   die like the spinach of drought,
   how what slays the vole slays us.
   Because you can die of overwork, because
   you can die of the fire that melts
   rock, because you can die of the poison
   that kills the beetle and the slug,
   we must come again to worship you
   on our knees, the common living dirt.
   Toad dreams
   That afternoon the dream of the toads rang through the elms by Little River and affected the thoughts of men, though they were not conscious that they heard it.
   —Henry Thoreau
   The dream of toads: we rarely
   credit what we consider lesser
   life with emotions big as ours,
   but we are easily distracted,
   abstracted. People sit nibbling,
   before television’s flicker watching
   ghosts chase balls and each other
   while the skunk is out risking grisly
   death to cross the highway to mate;
   while the fox scales the wire fence
   where it knows the shotgun lurks
   to taste the sweet blood of a hen.
   Birds are greedy little bombs
   bursting to give voice to appetite.
   I had a cat who died of love, starving
   when my husband left her too.
   Dogs trail their masters across con-
   tinents. We are far too busy
   to be starkly simple in passion.
   We will never dream the intense
   wet spring lust of the toads.
   Down at the bottom of things
   In the marshes of the blood river
   frogs blurt out their grocery lists
   of lust, and some frogs croak poems.
   In the brackish backwaters of the psyche
   the strong night side of our nature
   develops its food chain. I do believe
   that in corporate board rooms, in bank
   offices, in the subcommittees of Congress,
   senators with oil bribes easing their way
   toward power act from greed, yes,
   but petty hatreds flash swarming thick
   as piranhas in their murky speeches, and around
   their deals musty resentments circle
   buzzing like fat horseflies.
   In the salty estuary of the blood river
   small intermittent truths dart
   in fear through the eel grass, and the nastier
   facts come striding, herons stabbing
   with long bills yet graceful when they rise in heavy
   flight. Here we deal with the archaic base
   of advertising slogans and bureaucratic
   orders that condemn babies to kwashiorkor,
   here on the mud flats of language. Our duty
   rises red as the rusty moon, waxing
   and waning surely but always returning.
   Here where the salty fluids of the blood
   meet the renewal of fr 
					     					 			eshwater streaming
   from the clouds soaked through the grasses,
   down runoff ditches, wandering through brown
   meanders of stream; here where the ocean
   turns on its elbow muttering and begins
   to heave back on itself, whispering
   its rise in all the little fiddler crab
   burrows, through all the interstices
   of tidal grass, we read the news
   in minute flotsam of the large
   catastrophes out at sea and upriver.
   The oil slicks, the wrecks, the sewage
   tainted, the chemicals dumped in the stream
   we taste here clamlike as we strain
   the waters to prophesy in frogs’ tongues.
   A marsh smells like sex and teems
   with tiny life that all the showier
   big creatures of the shallow sea
   fatten on. Here the only decision
   that presents itself is to see, to watch,
   to taste, to listen, to know and to say,
   all with care as the heron stalks probing,
   all with care as the crab scuttles into the safety
   of burrow, all with care as the kingfisher
   watches, one way the fish, the other way
   the hawk. To survive saying, to say again
   and again, here in the rich soup of creation,
   in the obscure salty pit where the rhythms
   of life repeat and renew, and the cost
   of greed is etched in poison on every cell.
   A story wet as tears
   Remember the princess who kissed the frog
   so he became a prince? At first they danced
   all weekend, toasted each other in the morning
   with coffee, with champagne at night
   and always with kisses. Perhaps it was
   in bed after the first year had ground
   around she noticed he had become cold
   with her. She had to sleep
   with heating pad and down comforter.
   His manner grew increasingly chilly
   and damp when she entered a room.
   He spent his time in water sports,
   hydroponics, working on his insect
   collection.
   Then in the third year
   when she said to him one day, “My dearest,
   are you taking your vitamins daily,
   you look quite green,” he leaped
   away from her.
   Finally on their
   fifth anniversary she confronted him.
   “My precious, don’t you love me any
   more?” He replied, “Ribbit. Ribbit.”
   Though courtship turns frogs into princes,
   marriage turns them quietly back.
   Absolute zero in the brain
   Penfield the great doctor did a lobotomy
   on his own sister and recorded
   pages of clinical observations
   on her lack of initiative afterward.
   Dullness, he wrote, is superseded
   by euphoria at times. Slight hemi-
   paresis with aphasia. The rebellious sister
   died from the head down into the pages
   of medical journals and Penfield founded
   a new specialty. Intellectuals
   sneer at moviegoers who confuse
   Dr. Frankenstein with his monster.
   The fans think Frankenstein is the monster.
   Isn’t he?
   Eating my tail
   There are times in my life to which I
   return like a cat scratching, licking,
   worrying at an old sore, a long since
   exterminated nest of fleas behind my ear.
   I seem sure that if I keep poking
   and rubbing that old itch will finally
   be quelled. Or is it pattern I seek?
   A mapmaker returning to the mountains
   to pace out again the distances.
   Of course, if the massacre had not
   occurred in this pass, why would we care?
   Some disasters alter the landscape
   and realign even the roads driven
   over years before. It is the bloody
   moon of pain that gives a lurid
   backlighting to this scene I peer at
   beating my wings of anxiety silent
   as a bat. Yet if pain gives portent
   to the words spoken, it denies entrance.
   They sit at the table and eat. Wine
   is poured, she gets up to bring
   warm bread. Yellow apples are heaped
   in an orange bowl whose sides reflect
   candle flames. Telling a story, she takes
   his hand. I know of course what she thinks
   is happening and how wrong she is.
   But if I opened his forehead, would I find
   the violence and anger to come? The past,
   it’s turning out the pocket of a jacket
   I wore in the garden: plant ties, half
   a packet of seeds, a mummified peach:
   a combination of intention and waste.
   They laugh heartily and the soup steams
   and the golden apples shine like lumps of amber.
   The present tears at the past as if living
   were something the mind could ever hold
   like water in a cup or a map in the hand.
   Maps are abstractions useful for finding
   whatever is actually entered on them.
   Otherwise you just walk in. And through.
   When you go back it’s always someplace else.
   It breaks
   You hand me a cup of water;
   I drink it and thank you pretending
   what I take into me so calmly
   could not kill me. We take food
   from strangers, from restaurants
   behind whose swinging doors flies
   swarm and settle, from estranged
   lovers who dream over the salad plates
   of breaking the bones of our backs.
   Trust flits through the apple
   blossoms, a tiny spring warbler
   in bright mating plumage. Trust
   relies on learned pattern
   and signal to let us walk down
   stairs without thinking each
   step, without stumbling.
   I take parts of your body
   inside me. I give you
   the flimsy black lace and sweat
   stained sleaze of my secrets.
   I lay my sleeping body naked
   at your side. Jump, you shout.
   I do and you catch me.
   In love we open wide as a house
   to a summer afternoon, every shade up
   and window cranked open and doors
   flung back to the probing breeze.
   If we love long, we stand like row
   houses with no outer walls.
   Suddenly we are naked.
   The plaster of bedrooms
   hangs exposed, wallpaper
   pink and beige skins of broken
   intimacy, torn and flapping.
   To fear you is fearing my left hand
   cut off. The lineaments of old
   desire remain, but the gestures
   are new and harsh. Words unheard
   before are spat out grating
   with the rush of loosed anger.
   Friends bear banner headlines
   of your rewriting of our common
   past. I wonder at my own trust
   how absolute it was, part of me
   like the bones of my pelvis.
   You were the true center of my
   cycles, the magnetic north
   I used to plot my wanderings.
   It is not that I will not love
   again or give myself into partnership
   or lie naked sweating secrets
   like nectar, but I will never
   share a joint checking account
   and wh 
					     					 			en some lover tells me, Always,
   baby, I’ll be thinking, sure,
   until this one too meets an heiress
   and ships out. After a bone breaks
   you can see in X-rays
   the healing and the damage.
   What’s that smell in the kitchen?
   All over America women are burning dinners.
   It’s lambchops in Peoria; it’s haddock
   in Providence; it’s steak in Chicago;
   tofu delight in Big Sur; red
   rice and beans in Dallas.
   All over America women are burning
   food they’re supposed to bring with calico
   smiles on platters glittering like wax.
   Anger sputters in her brainpan, confined
   but spewing out missiles of hot fat.
   Carbonized despair presses like a clinker
   from a barbecue against the back of her eyes.
   If she wants to grill anything, it’s
   her husband spitted over a slow fire.
   If she wants to serve him anything
   it’s a dead rat with a bomb in its belly
   ticking like the heart of an insomniac.
   Her life is cooked and digested,
   nothing but leftovers in Tupperware.
   Look, she says, once I was roast duck
   on your platter with parsley but now I am Spam.
   Burning dinner is not incompetence but war.
   The weight
   1.
   I lived in the winter drought of his anger,
   cold and dry and bright. I could not breathe.