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    The Hunger Moon: New and Selected Poems, 1980-2010

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      What did you fear in me, the child who wore

      your hair, the woman who let that black hair

      grow long as a banner of darkness, when you

      a proper flapper wore yours cropped.

      You pushed and you pulled on my rubbery

      flesh, you kneaded me like a ball of dough.

      Rise, rise, and then you pounded me flat.

      Secretly bones formed in the bread.

      I became willful, private as a cat.

      You never knew what alleys I had wandered.

      You called me bad and I posed like a gutter

      queen in a dress sewn of knives.

      All I feared was being stuck in a box

      with a lid. A good woman appeared to me

      indistinguishable from a dead one

      except that she worked all the time.

      Your payday never came. Your dreams ran

      with bright colors like Mexican cottons

      that bled onto the drab sheets of the day

      and would not bleach with scrubbing.

      My dear, what you said was one thing

      but what you sang was another, sweetly

      subversive and dark as blackberries

      and I became the daughter of your dream.

      This body is your body, ashes now

      and roses, but alive in my eyes, my breasts,

      my throat, my thighs. You run in me

      a tang of salt in the creek waters of my blood,

      you sing in my mind like wine. What you

      did not dare in your life you dare in mine.

      How grey, how wet, how cold

      They are bits of fog caught in armor.

      The outside pretends to the solidity of rocks

      and requires force and skill bearing in

      to cut the muscle, shatter the illusion.

      If you stare at them, your stomach

      curls, the grey eyes of Athena

      pried out, the texture of heavy phlegm,

      chill clots of mortality and come.

      They lie on the tongue, distillations

      of the sea. Fresh as the morning

      wind that tatters the mist.

      Sweet as cream but with that bottom

      of granite, the taste of deep well

      water drawn up on the hottest day,

      the vein of slate in true Chablis,

      the kiss of acid sharpening the tongue.

      They slip down quick as minnows

      darting to cover, and the mouth

      remembers sex. Both provide

      a meeting of the primitive

      and worldly, in that we do

      little more for oysters than the gull

      smashing the shells on the rocks

      or the crab wrestling them open,

      yet in subtle flavor and the choice

      to taste them raw comes a delicacy

      not of the brain but of the senses

      and the wit to leave perfection bare.

      Taking a hot bath

      Surely nobody has ever decided

      to go on a diet while in a tub.

      The body is beautiful stretched

      out under water wavering.

      It suggests a long island of pleasure

      whole seascapes of calm sensual

      response, the nerves as gentle fronds

      of waterweed swaying in warm currents.

      Then if ever we must love ourselves

      in the amniotic fluid floating

      a ship at anchor in a perfect

      protected blood-warm tropical bay.

      The water enters us and the minor

      pains depart, supplanted guests,

      the aches, the strains, the chills.

      Muscles open like hungry clams.

      Born again from my bath like a hot

      sweet tempered, sweet smelling baby,

      I am ready to seize sleep like a milky breast

      or start climbing my day hand over hand.

      Sleeping with cats

      I am at once source

      and sink of heat; giver

      and taker. I am a vast

      soft mountain of slow breathing.

      The smells I exude soothe them:

      the lingering odor of sex,

      of soap, even of perfume,

      its afteraroma sunk into skin

      mingling with sweat and the traces

      of food and drink.

      They are curled into flowers

      of fur, they are coiled

      hot seashells of flesh

      in my armpit, around my head

      a dark sighing halo.

      They are plastered to my side,

      a poultice fixing sore muscles

      better than a heating pad.

      They snuggle up to my sex

      purring. They embrace my feet.

      Some cats I place like a pillow.

      In the morning they rest where

      I arranged them, still sleeping.

      Some cats start at my head

      and end between my legs

      like a textbook lover. Some

      slip out to prowl the living room

      patrolling, restive, then

      leap back to fight about

      hegemony over my knees.

      Every one of them cares

      passionately where they sleep

      and with whom.

      Sleeping together is a euphemism

      for people but tantamount

      to marriage for cats.

      Mammals together we snuggle

      and snore through the cold nights

      while the stars swing round

      the pole and the great horned

      owl hunts for flesh like ours.

      The place where everything changed

      Great love is an abrupt switching

      in a life bearing along at express speeds

      expecting to reach the designated stations

      at the minute listed in the timetable.

      Great love can cause derailment,

      coaches upended, people screaming,

      luggage strewn over the mountainside,

      blood and paper on the grass.

      It’s months before the repairs are done,

      everyone discharged from the hospital,

      all the lawsuits settled, damage

      paid for, the scandal subsided.

      Then we get on with the journey

      in some new direction, hiking overland

      with camels, mules, via helicopter

      by barge through canals.

      The maps are all redrawn and what

      was north is east of south

      and there be dragons in those mountains

      and the sun shines warmer and hairier

      and the moon has a cat’s face.

      There is more sunshine. More rain.

      The seasons are marked and intense.

      We seldom catch colds.

      There is always you at my back

      ready to fight when I must fight;

      there is always you at my side

      the words flashing light and shadow.

      What was grey ripples scarlet and golden;

      what was bland reeks of ginger and brandy;

      what was empty roars like a packed stadium;

      what slept gallops for miles.

      Even our bones are reformed in the close

      night when we hold each other’s dreams.

      Memories uncoil backward and are remade.

      Now the first egg itself is freshly twinned.

      We build daily houses brick by brick.

      We put each other up at night like tents.

      This story tells itself as it grows.

      Each morning we give birth to one another.

      The chuppah

      The chuppah stands on four poles.

      The home has its four corners.

      The chuppah stands on four poles.

      The marriage stands on four legs.

      Four points loose the winds

      that blow on the walls of the house,
    />
      the south wind that brings the warm rain,

      the east wind that brings the cold rain,

      the north wind that brings the cold sun

      and the snow, the long west wind

      bringing weather off the far plains.

      Here we live open to the seasons.

      Here the winds caress and cuff us

      contrary and fierce as bears.

      Here the winds are caught and snarling

      in the pines, a cat in a net clawing

      breaking twigs to fight loose.

      Here the winds brush your face

      soft in the morning as feathers

      that float down from a dove’s breast.

      Here the moon sails up out of the ocean

      dripping like a just washed apple.

      Here the sun wakes us like a baby.

      Therefore the chuppah has no sides.

      It is not a box.

      It is not a coffin.

      It is not a dead end.

      Therefore the chuppah has no walls.

      We have made a home together

      open to the weather of our time

      We are mills that turn in the winds of struggle

      converting fierce energy into bread.

      The canopy is the cloth of our table

      where we share fruit and vegetables

      of our labor, where our care for the earth

      comes back and we take its body in ours.

      The canopy is the cover of our bed

      where our bodies open their portals wide,

      where we eat and drink the blood

      of our love, where the skin shines red

      as a swallowed sunrise and we burn

      in one furnace of joy molten as steel

      and the dream is flesh and flower.

      O my love O my love we dance

      under the chuppah standing over us

      like an animal on its four legs,

      like a table on which we set our love

      as a feast, like a tent

      under which we work

      not safe but no longer solitary

      in the searing heat of our time.

      House built of breath

      Words plain as pancakes syruped with endearment.

      Simple as potatoes, homely as cottage cheese.

      Wet as onions, dry as salt.

      Slow as honey, fast as seltzer,

      my raisin, my sultana, my apricot love

      my artichoke, furry one, my pineapple

      I love you daily as milk,

      I love you nightly as aromatic port.

      The words trail a bitter slime like slugs,

      then in the belly warm like cabbage borscht.

      The words are hung out on the line,

      sheets for the wind to bleach.

      The words are simmering slowly

      on the back burner like a good stew.

      Words are the kindling in the woodstove.

      Even the quilt at night is stuffed with word down.

      When we are alone the walls sing

      and even the cats talk but only in Yiddish.

      When we are alone we make love in deeds.

      And then in words. And then in food.

      Nailing up the mezuzah

      A friend from Greece

      brought a tin house

      on a plaque, designed

      to protect our abode,

      as in Greek churches

      embossed legs or hearts

      on display entreat aid.

      I hung it but now

      nail my own proper charm.

      I refuse no offers of help,

      at least from friends,

      yet this presence

      is long overdue. Mostly

      we nurture our own

      blessings or spoil them,

      build firmly or undermine

      our walls. Who are termites

      but our obsessions gnawing?

      Still the winds blow hard

      from the cave of the sea

      carrying off what they will.

      Our smaller luck abides

      like a worm snug in an apple

      who does not comprehend

      the shivering of the leaves

      as the ax bites hard

      in the smooth trunk.

      We need all help proffered

      by benign forces. Outside

      we commit our beans to the earth,

      the tomato plants started

      in February to the care

      of the rain. My little

      pregnant grey cat offers

      the taut bow of her belly

      to the sun’s hot tongue.

      Saturday I watched alewives

      swarm in their thousands

      waiting in queues quivering

      pointed against the white

      rush of the torrents

      to try their leaps upstream.

      The gulls bald as coffin

      nails stabbed them casually

      conversing in shrieks, picnicking.

      On its earth, this house

      is oriented. We grow

      from our bed rooted firmly

      as an old willow into the water

      of our dreams flowing deep

      in the hillside. This hill

      is my temple, my soul.

      Malach hamoves, angel of death

      pass over, pass on.

      The faithless

      Sleep, you jade smooth liar,

      you promised to come

      to me, come to me

      waiting here like a cut

      open melon ripe as summer.

      Sleep, you black velvet

      tomcat, where are you prowling?

      I set a trap of sheets

      clean and fresh as daisies,

      pillows like cloudy sighs.

      Sleep, you soft-bellied

      angel with feathered thighs,

      you tease my cheek with the brush

      of your wings. I reach

      for you but clutch air.

      Sleep, you fur-bottomed tramp,

      when I want you, you’re in

      everybody’s bed but my own.

      Take you for granted and you stalk

      me from the low point of every hour.

      Sleep, omnivorous billy goat,

      you gobble the kittens, the crows,

      the cop on duty, the fast horse,

      but me you leave on the plate

      like a cold shore dinner.

      Is this divorce permanent?

      Runneled with hope I lie down

      nightly longing to pass

      again under the fresh blessing

      of your weight and broad wings.

      And whose creature am I?

      At times characters from my novels swarm through me,

      children of my mind, and possess me as dybbuks.

      My own shabby memories they have plucked and eaten

      till sometimes I cannot remember my own sorrows.

      In all that I value there is a core of mystery,

      in the seed that wriggles its new roots into the soil

      and whose pale head bursts the surface,

      in the dance where our bodies merge and reassemble,

      in the starving baby whose huge glazing eyes

      burned into my bones, in the look that passes

      between predator and prey before the death blow.

      I know of what rags and bones and clippings

      from frothing newsprint and poisonous glue

      my structures are built. Yet these creatures

      I have improvised like golem walk off and thrive.

      Between one and two thirds of our lives we spend

      in darkness, and the little lights we turn on

      make little holes in that great thick rich void.

      We are never done with knowing or with gnawing,

      but under the saying is whispering, touching

      and silence. Out of a given set of atoms

      we cast and recast the holy patterns new.

      Magic mama

    />   The woman who shines with a dull comfortable glow.

      The woman who sweats honey, an aphid

      enrolled to sweeten the lives of others.

      The woman who puts down her work like knitting

      the moment you speak, but somehow it gets done

      secretly in the night while everyone sleeps.

      The woman whose lap is wide as the Nile

      delta, whose voice is a lullaby

      whose flesh is stuffed with goosedown.

      Whose eyes are soft-focus mirrors.

      Whose arms are bolsters. Whose love

      is laid on like the municipal water.

      She is not the mother goddess, vortex

      of dark and light powers with her consorts,

      her hungers, her favorites, her temper

      blasting the corn so it withers in its ear,

      her bloody humor that sends the hunter fleeing

      to be tracked and torn by his hounds,

      the great door into the earth’s darkness

      where bones are rewoven into wheat,

      who loves the hawk as she loves the rabbit.

      Big mama has no power, not even over herself.

      The taxpayer of guilt, whatever she gives

      you both agree is never enough.

      She is a one-way street down which pour

      parades of opulent gifts and admiration

      from a three-shift factory of love.

      Magic mama has to make it right, straighten

      the crooked, ease pain, raise the darkness,

      feed the hungry and matchmake for the lonesome

      and ask nothing in return. If you win

      you no longer know her, and if you lose

      it is because her goodness failed you.

      Whenever you create big mama from another

     
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