Book Read Free

Collected Poems of Muriel Rukeyser

Page 48

by Janet Kaufman


  sing to each other.

  3 FOR DOLCI

  Angel of declaring, you opened before us walls,

  the lives of children, water as power.

  To control the water is to control our days,

  to build a dam is to face the enemy.

  We will form a new person who will step forward,

  he it is, she it is, assumes full life,

  fully responsible. We will bring all the children,

  they will decide together.

  We will ask these children : what is before you?

  They will say what they see.

  They will say what they don't see.

  Once again we breathe in discovery.

  A man, a woman,

  will discover

  we are each other's sources.

  4 CONCRETE

  They are pouring the city:

  they tear down the towers,

  grind their lives,

  laughing tainted, the river

  flows down to tomorrow.

  They are setting the forms,

  pouring the new buildings.

  Our days pour down.

  I am pouring my poems.

  5 BRECHT'S GALILEO

  Brecht saying : Galileo talking astronomy

  Stripped to the torso, the intellectual life

  Pouring from this gross man in his nakedness.

  Galileo, his physical contentment

  Is having his back rubbed by his student; the boy mauls;

  The man sighs and transforms it; intellectual product!

  Galileo spins a toy of the earth around

  The spinning sun; he looks at the student boy.

  Learning is teaching, teaching is learning.

  Galileo

  Demonstrates how horrible is betrayal,

  Particularly on the shore of a new era.

  6 READING THE KIEU

  There was always a murder within another murder.

  Red leaves and rosy threads bind them together.

  The hero of Vietnam's epic is a woman

  and she has sold herself to save her father.

  Odor of massacres spread on the sky.

  Loneliness, the windy, dusty world.

  The roads crowded with armor and betrayal.

  Mirror of the sun and moon, this land,

  in which being handed to soldiers is the journey.

  Shame, disgrace, change of seas into burnt fields.

  Banners, loudspeakers, violation of each day,

  everything being unjust. But she does save him,

  and we find everything in another way.

  7 THE FLOOR OF OCEAN

  Sistine Chapel

  Climbing the air, prophet beyond prophet

  leaning upon creation backward to the first

  creation the great spark of night

  breathing sun energy a gap between finger-tips

  across all of space or nothing, infinity.

  But beyond this, with this, these

  arms raising reaching wavering

  as from the floor of ocean

  wavering showing swaying like sea-plants

  pointing straight up closing the gap between

  continual creation and the daily touch.

  8 H. F. D.

  From you I learned the dark potential

  theatres of the acts of man holding

  on a rehearsal stage people and lights.

  You in your red hair ran down the darkened

  aisle, making documents and poems

  in their people form the play.

  Hallie it was from you I learned this:

  you told the company in dress-rehearsal

  in that ultimate equipped building what they lacked:

  among the lighting, the sight-lines, the acoustics,

  the perfect revolving stage, they lacked only one thing

  the most important thing. It would come tonight:

  The audience the response

  Hallie I learned from you this summer, this

  Hallie I saw you lying all gone to bone

  the tremor of bone I stroked the head all sculpture

  I held the hands of birds I spoke to the sealed eyes

  the soft live red mouth of a red-headed woman.

  I knew Hallie then I could move without answer,

  like the veterans for peace, hurling back their medals

  and not expecting an answer from the grass.

  You taught me this in your dying, for poems and theatre

  and love and peace-making that living and my love

  are where response and no-response

  meet at last, Hallie, in infinity.

  9 THE ARTIST AS SOCIAL CRITIC

  They have asked me to speak in public

  and set me a subject.

  I hate anything that begins : the artist as…

  and as for “social critic”

  at the last quarter of the twentieth century

  I know what that is:

  late at night, among radio music

  the voice of my son speaking half-world away

  coming clear on the radio into my room

  out of blazing Belfast.

  Long enough for me to walk around

  in that strong voice.

  10 THE PRESIDENT AND THE LASER BOMB

  He speaks in a big voice through all the air

  saying : we have made strength,

  we have made a beginning,

  we will have lasting peace.

  Something shouts on the river.

  All night long the acts speak:

  the new laser bomb falls impeccably

  along the beam of a strict light

  finding inevitably a narrow footbridge

  in Asia.

  11 NOT SEARCHING

  What did I miss as I went searching?

  What did I not see?

  I renounce all this regret.

  Now I will make another try.

  One step and I am free.

  When it happens to us again and again,

  sometimes we know it for we are prepared

  but to discover, to live at the edge of things,

  to fall out of routine into invention

  and recognize at the other edge of ocean

  a new kind of man a new kind of woman

  walking toward me into the little surf.

  This is the next me and the next child

  daybreak in continual creation.

  Dayray we see, we say,

  we sing what we don't see.

  Picasso saying : I don't search, I find!

  And in us our need, the traces of the future,

  the egg and its becoming.

  I come to you searching and searching.

  12 THE QUESTION

  After this crisis,

  nothing being conquered,

  the theme is set:

  to move with the forces,

  how to go on

  from the moment that

  changed our life,

  the moment of revelation,

  proceeding from the crisis,

  from the dream,

  and not from the moment

  of sleep before it?

  13

  Searching/not searching. To make closeness.

  For if this communication was the truth,

  then it was this communication itself

  which was the value to be supported.

  And for this communication to endure,

  men and women must move freely. And to make

  this communication renew itself always

  we must renew justice.

  And to make this communication

  lasting, we must live to eliminate

  violence and the lie.

  Yes, we set the communication

  we have achieved

  against the world of murder.

  Searching/not searching.

  after Camus, 1946

  14

  What did I
see? What did I not see?

  The river flowing past my window.

  The night-lit city. My white pointed light.

  Pieces of world away

  within my room.

  Unseen and seen, the bodies within my life.

  Voices under the leaves of Asia,

  and America, in sex, in possibility.

  We are trying to make, to let our closeness be made,

  not torn apart tonight by our dead skills.

  The shadow of my hand.

  The shadow of the pen.

  Morning of the day we reach or do not reach.

  In our bodies, we find each other.

  On our mouths, inner greet,

  in our eyes.

  A SIMPLE EXPERIMENT

  When a magnet is

  struck by a hammer

  the magnetism spills out of

  the iron.

  The molecules

  are jarred,

  they are a mob going

  in all directions

  The magnet is

  shockéd back

  it is no magnet but

  simple iron.

  There is no more

  of its former

  kind of accord

  or force.

  But if you take

  another magnet

  and stroke the iron

  with this,

  it can be

  remagnetized

  if you stroke it

  and stroke it,

  stroke it

  stroke it,

  the molecules

  can be given

  their tending grace

  by a strong magnet

  stroking stroking

  always in the same direction,

  of course.

  ALONG HISTORY

  Along history, forever

  some woman dancing,

  making shapes on the air;

  forever a man

  riding a good horse,

  sitting the dark horse well,

  his penis erect with

  fantasy

  BOYS OF THESE MEN FULL SPEED

  for Jane Cooper

  Boys of these men

  full speed across free,

  my father's boyhood eyes.

  Sail-skating with friends

  bright on Wisconsin ice

  those years away.

  Sails strung across their backs

  boys racing toward

  fierce bitter middle-age

  in the great glitter of

  corrupted cities.

  Father, your dark mouth

  speaking its rancor.

  Alive not yet, the girl

  I would become

  stares at that ice

  stippled with skaters,

  a story you tell.

  Boys of those men

  call across winter

  where I stand and shake,

  woman of that girl.

  ALL THE LITTLE ANIMALS

  “You are not pregnant,” said the man

  with the probe and the white white coat;

  “Yes she is,” said all the little animals.

  Then the great gynecologist examined. “You are not now,

  and I doubt that you ever have been,” he said with

  authority.

  “Test me again.” He looked at his nurse and shrugged.

  “Yes she is,” said all the little animals, and laid down their

  lives for my son and me.

  Twenty-one years later, my son a grown man and far away

  at the other ocean,

  I hear them : “Yes you are,” say all the little animals.

  I see them, they move in great jumping procession through my waking hours,

  those frogs and rabbits look at me with their round eyes,

  they kick powerfully with their strong hind legs,

  they lay down their lives in silence,

  all the rabbits saying Yes, all the frogs saying Yes,

  in the face of all men and all institutions,

  all the doctors, all the parents, all the worldly friends, all the

  psychiatrists, all the abortionists, all the lawyers.

  The little animals whom I bless and praise and thank forever,

  they are part of my living,

  go leap through my waking and my sleep, go leap through

  my life and my birth-giving and my death,

  go leap through my dreams,

  and my son's life

  and whatever streams from him.

  NEXT

  after Charles Morice

  Come : you are the one chosen, by them, to serve them.

  Now, in the evening of L'Amour and La Mort.

  Come : you are the one chosen, by them, to love them.

  …The child perceives and the cycles are fulfilled.

  Man's dead. Dead never to be reborn.

  The Islands and Waters serve another lord,

  New, better. His eyes are the flowering of light.

  He is beautiful. The child smiles at him in his tears.

  TWO YEARS

  Two years of my sister's bitter illness;

  the wind whips the river of her last spring.

  I have burned the beans again.

  IRIS

  1

  Middle of May, when the iris blows,

  blue below blue, the bearded patriarchface

  on the green flute body of a boy

  Poseidon torso of Eros

  blue

  sky below sea

  day over daybreak violet behind twilight

  the May iris

  midnight on midday

  2

  Something is over and under this deep blue.

  Over and under this movement, etwas

  before and after, alguna cosa

  blue before blue

  is it

  perhaps

  death?

  That may be the wrong word.

  The iris stands in the light.

  3

  Death is here, death is guarded by swords.

  No. By shapes of swords

  flicker of green leaves

  under all the speaking and crying

  shadowing the words the eyes here they all die

  racing withering blue evening

  my sister death the iris

  stands clear in light.

  4

  In the water-cave

  ferocious needles of teeth

  the green morays

  in blue water rays

  a maleficence ribbon of green the flat look of

  eyes staring fatal mouth staring

  the rippling potent force

  curving into any hole

  death finding his way.

  5

  Depth of petals, May iris

  transparent infinitely deep they are

  petal-thin with light behind them

  and you, death,

  and you

  behind them

  blue under blue.

  What I cannot say

  in adequate music

  something being born

  transparency blue of

  light standing on light

  this stalk of

  (among mortal petals-and-leaves)

  light

  2 Orange and Grape

  BALLAD OF ORANGE AND GRAPE

  After you finish your work

  after you do your day

  after you've read your reading

  after you've written your say—

  you go down the street to the hot dog stand,

  one block down and across the way.

  On a blistering afternoon in East Harlem in the twentieth century.

  Most of the windows are boarded up,

  the rats run out of a sack—

  sticking out of the crummy garage

  one shiny long Cadillac;

  at the glass door of the drug-addiction center,

  a man who'd l
ike to break your back.

  But here's a brown woman with a little girl dressed in rose and pink, too.

  Frankfurters frankfurters sizzle on the steel

  where the hot-dog-man leans—

  nothing else on the counter

  but the usual two machines,

  the grape one, empty, and the orange one, empty,

  I face him in between.

  A black boy comes along, looks at the hot dogs, goes on walking.

  I watch the man as he stands and pours

  in the familiar shape

  bright purple in the one marked ORANGE

  orange in the one marked GRAPE,

  the grape drink in the machine marked ORANGE

  and orange drink in the GRAPE.

  Just the one word large and clear, unmistakable, on each machine.

  I ask him : How can we go on reading

  and make sense out of what we read?—

  How can they write and believe what they're writing,

  the young ones across the street,

  while you go on pouring grape into ORANGE

  and orange into the one marked GRAPE—?

  (How are we going to believe what we read and we write

  and we hear and we say and we do?)

  He looks at the two machines and he smiles

  and he shrugs and smiles and pours again.

  It could be violence and nonviolence

  it could be white and black women and men

  it could be war and peace or any

  binary system, love and hate, enemy, friend.

  Yes and no, be and not-be, what we do and what we don't do.

  On a corner in East Harlem

  garbage, reading, a deep smile, rape,

  forgetfulness, a hot street of murder,

  misery, withered hope,

  a man keeps pouring grape into ORANGE

  and orange into the one marked GRAPE,

  pouring orange into GRAPE and grape into ORANGE forever.

  ROCK FLOW, RIVER MIX

  Flickering

  in the buildings

  they dance now

  hip face and knee

  dances I hunted for

  when at nineteen

  I stood at the river

  here, the Hudson

  hunting for Africa—

  something rumored

  caught, poured in shadow and light

  face of ecstasy

  on film

  swivel neck, eternal smile

  suffer the night

  water flows down

  to

  today

  black theatre, road dusted with light

  streaking down over our heads

  setting before us, around us

  sound track

  image track

  MARTIN LUTHER KING, MALCOLM X

  Bleeding of the mountains

  the noon bleeding

  he is shot through the voice

 

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