who gobbled through life, a little of this,
   a little of that, a lot of what others left,
   grasshoppers, a nice fat mouse, berries,
   rotten apples to get drunk on, roots
   we dug for, never efficiently. Not special-
   ized to do anything particularly well.
   Those middling animals, the small predators
   like the feral cat always chasing dinner
   and scrambling away from being eaten; the small
   grey fox who picks grapes on the high dunes
   and will steal a melon or a goose. Behold
   my ancestral portraits: shambling field
   apes smallish and chattering, with babies
   hanging on their backs picking over the fruit
   like my grandmother, my mother and like me.
   The answer to all problems
   We aren’t available, we can’t talk to you
   right now, but you can talk to us, we say,
   but think of the astonishment if machines
   suddenly spoke truth: what do you want?
   You’d best have a damned good reason for bothering
   me, intruding on my silence. If you’re bored,
   read a good book. Masturbate on your own time.
   Call weather or your mother or a talk show.
   If you’re a creditor, I’ve just been cremated.
   If you’re my ex, I’m fucking a perfect body
   in Acapulco. Hi, I’m too shy to answer.
   I’m scared of obscene calls. I’m paranoid.
   I’m sharing a bottle of wine and a loaf of bread
   with my lover, our flesh smokes with desire,
   our lips brush, our clothes uncoil hissing,
   and you have a problem? Try prayer.
   Hi obtuse one, it may be eleven on the West Coast
   but it’s two a.m. here and as you listen
   a pitch too high for you to hear is giving
   you herpes and melting your elastic and Velcro.
   Hi, this is the machine. My person is standing
   two feet away to hear if you’re worth the effort.
   Hi. If you hang up without leaving a message
   your teeth will loosen overnight.
   Hi, can my machine call your machine
   and make an appointment? Can my machine
   mate with yours and breed iPods?
   Hi, my humans have been murdered and cannot come.
   After the corn moon
   Swallows thrown from a giant hand turn,
   fleet motes, around each other hurtling
   over the marsh and back. The young
   grown, the flock assembles. On the wire
   neat, formal, they turn sleek heads south.
   Every rambling poison ivy vine burns
   in a few scarlet leaves. Grass tawny
   as lions, the salt meadow has fur now
   rippling over bunched muscles in the wind,
   leaner and raspier than last week,
   hungrier for something to rub, something
   to strip. The robins are drunk on rum
   cherries. The garlic falls over. The rose
   hips redden. Every day we peer at the grapes
   watching them color, puckering sour.
   The houses are all rented and the roads
   jammed with people driving their tempers
   flat out or boiling their brains dry
   in traffic like percolators searing
   good coffee to battery acid.
   Soon they will go home and the ponds
   will clean themselves of soapsuds and the piss
   of psychiatrists’ children and the fried clam
   shacks will put up their shutters and the air
   will smell of salt and pine again.
   This land is a room where a party has gone
   on too long. Nothing is left whole to break.
   As the blowzy embrace of heat slackens
   I long for the feisty bite of cold mornings,
   the bracing smack of the sea wind after
   the first storm, walking the great beach alone.
   The bed of summer needs changing to roughened
   sheets that smell of the line. Fall seeps in
   like energy quickening till it bursts out
   spurting crimson from creeper and tree.
   Even in this heat I walk farther and faster
   hearing the sea’s rising mutter. The birds
   seem all in a hurry. The season of death
   and fruition is nearly upon us. Sometimes
   the knife of frost is a blessing.
   Perfect weather
   On the six o’clock news, Ken poses in his three
   piece blue suit beside the map of fronts.
   Barbie pretends to slap at him. “Now Ken,
   I hope you aren’t going to give us bad weather!”
   “I’m giving you perfect 10 weather, Barbie,
   not a cloud all weekend! Not a storm in sight
   on our Super Weather Radar. Another
   perfect week coming up.” “Oh, thank you, Ken!”
   Gods in the box, they pop out grinning.
   Next will come the announcements of water
   shortages on the South Shore, crop
   failure in the Pioneer Valley, a fire raging
   through the pitch pines near Sandwich.
   Turn on the faucet, Barbie. Think that’s
   manufactured in some plant in Maine?
   Shipped from Taiwan like your microphone?
   It arrives in pellets called rain drops. That’s
   what you call bad and mean it: nasty weather.
   They want a permanent pasted on sun
   to shine over the freeze dried face and the body
   resembling exactly a mannequin in a shop
   window sipping an empty glass on Astroturf.
   That body will never thicken or that face
   admit it liked to smile or frown: wiped memory.
   A permanent now called lobotomy
   under a sunlamp sky, a neon moon, life as a golf
   course unrolled from a truck and every day
   you can play. Everyone you meet has just
   your skin color and income level; the dys-
   functional are removed immediately to storage.
   Service personnel speak another language.
   Death comes as a power failure.
   Ken, how’s supper? Did you know bluefish
   swim? Kiwi grow on trees made of bad weather
   juice? Perrier actually bubbles out of rock?
   Under the carpet under the cracking cement
   below the power lines and the toxic waste stored
   in old mines is molten rock, the hot liquid heart
   of the earth beating, about to erupt
   blowing the clots out of its ancient veins.
   We don’t own the earth, not even the way
   you buy a condo, Ken. We don’t time-share
   here, but live on it as hair grows
   on the scalp, from inside; we are part
   of earth, not visitors using the facilities.
   If the plumbing breaks down, we can’t move out
   to a bigger house. Rain is earth’s blood
   and ours while we swim and life swims in us.
   Pray for rain. Go out on the earth barefoot
   and dance for rain. Take a small
   ceremonial knife and slash your arms
   so the thick red water inside trickles out.
   Piss in the dust. Spit into the wind.
   Go climb a mountain without a canteen to learn
   how the swollen tongue sticks to the palate.
   Then tell us what good weather you’re providing.
   Moon of the mother turtle
   I am the busybody who interferes.
   All through turtle mating season
   I am hauling the females out of the road
   and setting them where I presume
   it is safe to lay their 
					     					 			 eggs.
   Who appointed me guardian of turtles?
   Yet when I see their bodies broken
   like rotten pumpkins on the blacktop
   I get so angry I have no choice but
   to go on dragging them to sandbanks.
   My least favorite duty is the two weeks
   of snapping turtles. Occasionally I grasp
   a weighty female and haul her out
   of the way of cars before she can react.
   Other times it’s a wrestling match,
   me with a stick and she with her beak,
   neither of us prepared to back down,
   a tug-of-war, wrestling, snarling
   in the ruts of the old railroad right-of-way.
   She must, she must. The eggs press
   on her to be born. She is half mad.
   Her eyes glitter dully as sun
   glimpsed through muddy water. She is
   an ancient ancestor raging with the urge
   to dig and lay, dig and lay more.
   I am a yelping dog circling, just as mad
   to get her out of the roadway. She
   hisses like a mother cat. Her great
   beak clacks. She stinks like muck
   from the basement of the fish maker’s shop.
   When finally I get her onto the bank, she
   goes to it at once, sighing. A train
   could pass two feet away as it used to
   and she would lay on. I am forgotten
   as I haul two ties to build her a rampart.
   Then we go our separate ways, me toward
   the bay to complete my four-mile walk,
   she back to Bound Brook, dragging her
   massive belly, each under our compulsions
   like moons with the same and different faces.
   Baboons in the perennial bed
   Even after common sense whittles ambition
   I always order too many seeds, bulbs, corms.
   What’s the lure? Why am I torn between
   cutting the lily for my bedside and savoring
   it daily on its pedestal of crisp leaves?
   They rouse and sate the senses, touch,
   sight, scent, the wild shagginess and precise
   sculpted lines, the shadings of color from clang
   to sigh. Yet I think what moves underneath
   is pleased envy at their flagrancy.
   They wave their sexual organs in the air,
   the plants, colored far more freely than the hind-
   quarters of baboons. We who are raised to shame
   for the moist orchid between our thighs
   must wish we were as certain of our beauty.
   Something to look forward to
   Menopause: word used as an insult,
   a menopausal woman, mind or poem
   as if not to leak regularly or on the caprice
   of the moon, the collision of egg and sperm,
   were the curse we first learned to call that blood.
   I have twisted myself to praise that bright splash.
   When my womb opens its lips on the full
   or dark of the moon, that connection
   aligns me as it does the sea. I quiver,
   a compass needle thrilling with magnetism.
   Yet for every celebration there’s the time
   it starts on a jet with the seatbelt sign on.
   Consider the trail of red amoebae
   crawling onto hostess’ sheets to signal
   my body’s disregard of calendar, clock.
   How often halfway up the side of a mountain,
   during a demonstration with the tactical police
   force drawn up in tanks between me and a toilet;
   during an endless wind machine panel with four males
   I the token woman and they with iron bladders,
   I have felt that wetness and wanted to strangle
   my womb like a mouse. Sometimes it feels cosmic
   and sometimes it feels like mud. Yes, I have prayed
   to my blood on my knees in toilet stalls
   simply to show its rainbow of deliverance.
   My friend Penny at twelve, being handed a napkin
   the size of an ironing board cover, cried out
   I have to do this from now till I die?
   No, said her mother, it stops in middle age.
   Good, said Penny, there’s something to look forward to.
   Today supine, groaning with demon crab claws
   gouging my belly, I tell you I will secretly dance
   and pour out a cup of wine on the earth
   when time stops that leak permanently;
   I will burn my last tampons as votive candles.
   Litter
   I am always forgetting something.
   The kettle boils dry and stinks.
   The tiny green-shouldered tomato plants
   while I’m writing a poem die of thirst
   scorched under the glass of the hotbed.
   I forget birthdays, I forget to call.
   I forget the book I promised to bring.
   I forget where I put my purse, my keys,
   my wallet, my lenses, my love.
   I lose my way in night’s black pocket.
   I can’t think of the name of the goddess
   who stands at the gate blinking her one
   great eye through the fog and the snarling
   wind, sweeping her warning glance across
   where the waves smash themselves kneeling.
   I forget the way my mother laughed.
   I forget her cake, the taste of the uncooked
   dough, the just proportions of cinnamon and sugar.
   I lose the touch of her fingers, stone
   washed smooth by water and laid in the sun.
   I lose the bread smell of my old cat’s fur;
   I lose the name and face of a man just out
   of prison who crawled in my body to hide;
   I lose the addresses of urgent people to whom
   I promised much in towns I have forgotten.
   What happened to my burnt orange shawl?
   My bones are slowly dissolving in salt water.
   It all falls away like feathers, like leaves,
   like sand blowing. In the end I will say,
   I was somebody maybe a woman I forget.
   All the lost words and things and tasks
   I have littered behind me are drifting on winds
   round and up as if gravity had forgotten
   to drop them, and sometimes in the night
   I wake and the name comes to me and I shout
   to the ceiling, Appomattox, rue de Sentier,
   Emily Hannah, 8325 American Avenue,
   metasomatism, two thirds to one,
   and then lilacs, the scent of my mother’s
   white lilacs, thickens the air till I weep.
   The bottom line
   That white withered angel cancer
   steals into a house through cracks,
   lurks in the foundation, the walls,
   litters down its infinitesimal dandruff
   from school ceilings into children’s lungs.
   That invisible fungus hides in processed food,
   in the cereal, the salami, the cake.
   Welcomed into the body like a friend
   it proceeds to eat you from inside,
   parasitic wasp in a tomato worm.
   Out of what caprice quenched in a moment’s
   pleasure does the poison seep?
   We come to mistrust the body
   a slave to be starved to submission,
   an other that can like a rabid dog
   turn on and bite a separate me.
   But the galloping horse of the thighs,
   the giraffe of the spine are innocent
   browsing their green. We die of decisions
   made at 3:15 in boardrooms.
   We die of the bottom line. We die
   of stockholders’ dividends and a big bonus
   
					     					 			; for top executives and more perks. Cancer
   is the white radioactive shadow of profit
   falling across, withering the dumb flesh.
   Morning love song
   I am filled with love like a melon
   with seeds, I am ripe and dripping sweet juices.
   If you knock gently on my belly
   it will thrum ripe, ripe.
   It is high green summer with the strawberries
   just ending and the blueberries coloring,
   with the roses tumbling like fat Persian
   kittens, the gold horns of the squash blowing.
   The day after a storm the leaves gleam.
   The world is clear as a just washed picture window.
   The air whips its fine silk through the hands.
   Every last bird has an idea to insist on.
   I am trying to work and instead
   I drip love for you like a honeycomb.
   I am devoid of fantasies clean as rainwater
   waiting to flow all over your skin.
   Implications of one plus one
   Sometimes we collide, tectonic plates merging,
   continents shoving, crumpling down into the molten
   veins of fire deep in the earth and raising
   tons of rock into jagged crests of Sierra.
   Sometimes your hands drift on me, milkweed’s
   airy silk, wingtip’s feathery caresses,
   our lips grazing, a drift of desires gathering
   like fog over warm water, thickening to rain.
   Sometimes we go to it heartily, digging,
   burrowing, grunting, tossing up covers
   like loose earth, nosing into the other’s
   flesh with hot nozzles and wallowing there.
   Sometimes we are kids making out, silly
   in the quilt, tickling the xylophone spine,