to strip off our houses
   like snails left unprotected
   and let the stars poke
   into our skulls till we seem
   to fall upward. How intimate
   we are now with the night.
   The full moon of Nisan
   The full moon of Nisan pulls us
   almost every Jew under the sky
   to a table. Like a tide composed
   of tiny rivulets we head
   purposefully toward our seders
   laden with the flat tasteless
   bread of haste.
   The moon when it rises looks
   like strawberry ice cream.
   Then it lightens to waxy cheese.
   Then it soars pale and pitted
   like matzoh, the old kind
   round instead of square
   dry and winking.
   Nisan brings the matzoh moon
   urging buds to open, urging
   minds to fling their gates
   wide on the night we become
   slaves and then march out
   to freedom past lintels
   smeared with blood.
   Peace in a time of war
   A puddle of amber light
   like sun spread on a table,
   food flirting savor into the nose,
   faces of friends, a vase
   of daffodils and Dutch iris:
   this is an evening of honey
   on the tongue, cinnamon
   scented, red wine sweet
   and dry, voices rising
   like a flock of swallows
   turning together in evening
   air. Darkness walls off
   the room from what lies
   outside, the fire and dust
   and blood of war, bodies
   stacked like firewood
   burst like overripe melons.
   Ceremony is a moat we have
   crossed into a moment’s
   harmony, as if the world paused—
   but it doesn’t. What we must
   do waits like coats tossed
   on the bed, for us to rise
   from this warm table
   put on again and go out.
   The cup of Eliyahu
   In life you had a temper.
   Your sarcasm was a whetted knife.
   Sometimes you shuddered with fear
   but you made yourself act no matter
   how few stood with you.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that he may come in.
   Now you return to us
   in rough times, out of smoke
   and dust that swirls blinding us.
   You come in vision, you come
   in lightning on blackness.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that he may come in.
   In every generation you return
   speaking what few want to hear
   words that burn us, that cut
   us loose so we rise and go again
   over the sharp rocks upward.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that he may come in.
   You come as a wild man,
   as a homeless sidewalk orator,
   you come as a woman taking the bima,
   you come in prayer and song,
   you come in a fierce rant.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that she may come in.
   Prophecy is not a gift, but
   sometimes a curse, Jonah
   refusing. It is dangerous
   to be right, to be righteous.
   To stand against the wall of might.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that he may come in.
   There are moments for each
   of us when you summon, when
   you call the whirlwind, when you
   shake us like a rattle: Then we
   too must become you and rise.
   Open the door for Eliyahu
   that we may come in.
   The wind of saying
   The words dance in the wind of saying.
   They are leaves that crispen,
   sere, turning to dust. As long
   as that language runs its blood-
   rich river through the tongues
   of people, as long as grand
   mothers weave the warp and woof
   of old stories with bright new
   words carpeting the air
   into dreams, then the words
   live like good bacteria
   within our guts, feeding us.
   We catch the letters and trap
   them in books, pearlescent butterflies
   pinned down. We fasten the letters
   with nails to the white pages.
   Most words dry finally to husks
   even though dead languages
   whisper, blown sand through
   the dim corridors of library stacks.
   Languages wither, languages
   are arrested and die in prison,
   stories are chopped off at the roots
   like weeds, lullabies spill
   on the floor and dry up.
   Conquerors force their words
   into the minds of their victims.
   Our natural language is a scream.
   Our natural language is a cry
   rattling in the night. But tongues
   are how we touch, how we reach,
   how we teach, the spine of words.
   Some New Poems
   The low road
   What can they do
   to you? Whatever they want.
   They can set you up, they can
   bust you, they can break
   your fingers, they can
   burn your brain with electricity,
   blur you with drugs till you
   can’t walk, can’t remember, they can
   take your child, wall up
   your lover. They can do anything
   you can’t stop them
   from doing. How can you stop
   them? Alone, you can fight,
   you can refuse, you can
   take what revenge you can
   but they roll over you.
   Two people can keep each other
   sane, can give support, conviction,
   love, massage, hope, sex.
   Three people are a delegation,
   a committee, a wedge. With four
   you can play bridge and start
   an organization. With six
   you can rent a whole house,
   eat pie for dinner with no
   seconds and hold a fund-raising party.
   A dozen make a demonstration.
   A hundred fill a hall.
   A thousand have solidarity and your own newsletter;
   ten thousand, power and your own paper;
   a hundred thousand, your own media;
   ten million, your own country.
   It goes on one at a time,
   it starts when you care
   to act, it starts when you do
   it again after they said No,
   it starts when you say We
   and know who you mean, and each
   day you mean one more.
   The curse of Wonder Woman
   Batman can suffer angst in his batcave,
   pester his butler factotum with doubts,
   question his adoption of Robin,
   but Wonder Woman can never waver.
   She must fight, fight, fight without
   recompense. No 3 a.m. nitpicking
   of a festering conscience for her.
   Role models can’t stop to consider.
   Role models can’t whine or take
   to their beds with PMS or enjoy
   a headache with chocolates
   on the couch. Women are watching,
   judging, waiting for the cracks
   in the makeup to show. Role
   models can’t enjoy a fling in Jamaica.
   They don’t get vacations or spas.
   People need a 
					     					 			nd resent role models
   with equal fervor. She’d like to
   retire, but who else can bounce
   back bullets on a quest for justice?
   She’s stuck in the spotlight impaled
   by duty. Sometimes she half wishes
   to fail and be replaced by some other
   woman without sense to be afraid.
   July Sunday 10 a.m.
   We drink café au lait on the sunporch,
   Puck has dozed off paws in the air
   lying on the rumpled morning paper.
   Through the screens, a scent of roses
   and the repeated cry of a cardinal
   shaped like a sickle. You wear only
   red silk boxers. I wear my thinnest
   nightgown. The air is heavy
   with pollen and the sun sparkles
   on the rhododendrons as if they
   had just been waxed.
   Football for dummies
   Among my husbands and lovers,
   I had never before lived
   with a sports fan. Hockey
   he does not follow, but base-
   ball, basketball, football all
   in their seasons consume him.
   I had to share something:
   baseball is too slow. Basket-
   ball goes on for months
   and months, interminably,
   a herd of skinny giants
   running back and forth mys-
   terious as a flock of swallows
   wheeling together at twilight.
   But football: it’s only sixteen
   Sundays and maybe playoffs.
   That seemed reasonable. I
   bought a book. Now every
   Sunday in season I stare
   avidly while huge millionaires
   collide like rival rhinoceros.
   When we watch the Super
   Bowl with groups of men
   and I explain a nickel
   back they gaze at me
   with esoteric lust. I
   look only at the screen.
   Football, it is mine.
   Murder, unincorporated
   I am of the opinion that almost
   anyone would kill for something—
   an idea, a country on a map or
   in the head, a god or goddess,
   a lover, a child, a hovel, a home.
   A stash of money or drugs,
   a meal, a blanket, medicine,
   personal morality as in kill
   the bitch, a real Picasso
   a mother, a father, prized
   stallion, prize bull, a dog.
   To stay out of prison, to cross
   a border to safety, to cover
   up a lie, a theft, to maintain
   cover, to steal identity.
   Because the gun was in
   the drawer, the ax on the
   table, the chance lay open
   like a switchblade and temper
   sparked a blaze only blood
   could cool. Because
   the sergeant said to.
   Because the others did.
   The happy man
   Pierre-Joseph Redouté painted roses;
   also succulents, lilies, rare tropical
   imports, but most famously, roses.
   He was from a family of journeymen
   painters, never famous, portraits
   to order, flattering of course,
   church and abbey decorations.
   But Redouté painted flowers. He
   looked like a peasant, squarish
   in body, strong with huge mishapen
   hands, not what aristocrats or critics
   expect. But Redouté painted flowers.
   He ambled through courts, Marie
   Antoinette’s play village at Versailles,
   Revolution, Terror, Napoléon. Josephine’s
   triumph and her divorce, Charles X,
   Louis-Philippe, court painter to each
   in turn unfailingly friendly, painting flowers.
   His younger brother drew beetles
   and reptiles instead of court ladies
   or kings, but Redouté painted flowers.
   Money came to him like rain to a garden.
   He drank it in blindly, gave it to others,
   spent it like the water it seemed.
   Always more tomorrow. He grew old,
   unfashionable. Moneylenders sucked
   him dry but he never drooped. Flowers
   were always calling. At the end poor
   but busy, brush in hand he died smiling
   as he painted a perfect white lily.
   Collectors
   Some people collect grudges
   like stamps or rare coins.
   They take out their prize holdings
   to polish till they glow.
   But after a while, it doesn’t work
   any longer, so they need fresh
   ones to cherish the way another
   will groom a champion setter.
   Friendships are expendable
   as last decade’s palazzo pants.
   Rejecting is more fun than
   holding close. So on they go
   their paths littered with torn
   and discarded friendships,
   like bones outside the den
   of a fairy tale giant.
   First sown
   Peas are the first thing we plant
   always. We lie full length
   on the cold black earth and poke
   holes in it for the wrinkled
   old men of the seeds.
   Nothing will happen for weeks.
   Rain will soak them, a white
   tablecloth of snow will cover
   them and be whisked off.
   The moon will sing to them:
   open, loosen, let the pale
   shoots break out. No,
   they are pebbles, they sit
   in the earth like false teeth.
   They ignore the sweet sun.
   Then one unlikely day
   the soil cracks along miniature
   faults and soon baby leaves
   stick out their double heads
   and we know we shall have peas.
   Away with all that
   Where the Herring River meets Wellfleet Bay
   the tide carries brackish water out to sea.
   I arrive with my pants pocket stuffed
   with stale bread. As I tear off each piece
   I name what I am praying will depart.
   Envy and prejudice sink under their own
   weight like hunks of granite. Impatience
   darts out into the bay waters, vanishing
   as a fish rises to gulp it. Procrastination,
   sloth eddy back and forth at waves’ edge.
   Conceit prances out on wave tops.
   Anger and malice bounce off each other
   and sink down onto the sand. Intention
   never carried out simply comes apart.
   It is all me. It is all I wish were not me.
   Wishing won’t do it any more than old
   bread can rid me of what I must pry
   out of myself every day, intention
   that wears through like an old runner
   on stairs I must climb to the top.
   If only I could discard my rotten parts
   as simply as I toss these bits of bread
   too hard to eat onto waves that push,
   push, push my named sins to the bay,
   to bigger bay, out into the world ocean.
   All that remains
   A pillar of salt would slowly dissolve
   in the season of rains, as women
   have so often melted from history
   so many nameless, wife of,
   daughter of, maidservant of.
   Their faces peer out between
   the black logs and squiggles
   of Hebrew letters, as if through
   bars. We were here too, they
   whisper like page 
					     					 			s turning,
   pages on which their fates
   are sometimes written, always
   by others. The strongest ones,
   Miriam, Deborah, hold their
   names gripped in their teeth.
   Diving through the letters
   into the white light between
   I seek them out, wife of,
   daughter of, maidservant of—
   their silence deafens me.
   What comes next
   After a hurricane the whine
   of chainsaws cutting into downed trees.
   After a blizzard, whiteout silence
   then the cries of hungry birds.
   After a loss, another kind
   of silence when we are too weary
   to cry, too numb to tackle
   the list of things that must be done.
   The force of what has happened
   flattens us to old rugs
   on which the pattern is only
   memory and their use is past.
   Where dreams come from
   A girl slams the door of her little room
   under the eaves where marauding squirrels
   scamper overhead like herds of ideas.
   She has forgotten to be grateful she has
   finally a room with a door that shuts.
   She is furious her parents don’t comprehend
   why she wants to go to college, that place
   of musical comedy fantasies and weekend
   football her father watches, beer can
   in hand. It is as if she announced I want
   to journey to Iceland or Machu Picchu.
   Nobody in their family goes to college.
   Where do dreams come from? Do they