How to Carry Water

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  all roads began to lead

  to these tables

  these hungry children

  this time

  and

  I am become Death the destroyer of worlds.

  ■

  the times

  it is hard to remain human on a day

  when birds perch weeping

  in the trees and the squirrel eyes

  do not look away but the dog ones do

  in pity.

  another child has killed a child

  and i catch myself relieved that they are

  white and i might understand except

  that i am tired of understanding.

  if this

  alphabet could speak its own tongue

  it would be all symbol surely;

  the cat would hunch across the long table

  and that would mean time is catching up,

  and the spindle fish would run to ground

  and that would mean the end is coming

  and the grains of dust would gather themselves

  along the streets and spell out:

  these too are your children this too is your child

  ■

  dialysis

  after the cancer, the kidneys

  refused to continue.

  they closed their thousand eyes.

  blood fountains from the blind man’s

  arm and decorates the tile today.

  somebody mops it up.

  the woman who is over ninety

  cries for her mother. if our dead

  were here they would save us.

  we are not supposed to hate

  the dialysis unit. we are not

  supposed to hate the universe.

  this is not supposed to happen to me.

  after the cancer the body refused

  to lose any more. even the poisons

  were claimed and kept

  until they threatened to destroy

  the heart they loved. in my dream

  a house is burning.

  something crawls out of the fire

  cleansed and purified.

  in my dream i call it light.

  after the cancer i was so grateful

  to be alive. i am alive and furious.

  Blessed be even this?

  ■

  libation

  north carolina, 1999

  i offer to this ground,

  this gin.

  i imagine an old man

  crying here

  out of the overseer’s sight,

  pushing his tongue

  through where a tooth

  would be if he were whole.

  the space aches

  where his tooth would be,

  where his land would be, his

  house his wife his son

  his beautiful daughter.

  he wipes his sorrow from

  his cheek, then

  puts his thirsty finger

  to his thirsty tongue

  and licks the salt.

  i call a name that

  could be his.

  this offering

  is for you old man;

  this salty ground,

  this gin.

  ■

  jasper texas 1998

  for j. byrd

  i am a man’s head hunched in the road.

  i was chosen to speak by the members

  of my body. the arm as it pulled away

  pointed toward me, the hand opened once

  and was gone.

  why and why and why

  should i call a white man brother?

  who is the human in this place,

  the thing that is dragged or the dragger?

  what does my daughter say?

  the sun is a blister overhead.

  if i were alive i could not bear it.

  the townsfolk sing we shall overcome

  while hope bleeds slowly from my mouth

  into the dirt that covers us all.

  i am done with this dust. i am done.

  ■

  alabama 9/15/63

  Have you heard the one about

  the shivering lives,

  the never to be borne daughters and sons,

  the one about Cynthia and Carole and Denise and Addie

  Mae?

  Have you heard the one about

  the four little birds

  shattered into skylarks in the white

  light of Birmingham?

  Have you heard how the skylarks,

  known for their music,

  swooped into heaven, how the sunday

  morning strains shook the piano, how the blast

  is still too bright to hear them play?

  ■

  praise song

  to my aunt blanche

  who rolled from grass to driveway

  into the street one sunday morning.

  i was ten. i had never seen

  a human woman hurl her basketball

  of a body into the traffic of the world.

  Praise to the drivers who stopped in time.

  Praise to the faith with which she rose

  after some moments then slowly walked

  sighing back to her family.

  Praise to the arms which understood

  little or nothing of what it meant

  but welcomed her in without judgment,

  accepting it all like children might,

  like God.

  ■

  august

  for laine

  what would we give,

  my sister,

  to roll our weak

  and foolish brother

  back onto his bed,

  to face him with his sins

  and blame him

  for them?

  what would we give

  to fuss with him again,

  he who clasped his hands

  as if in prayer and melted

  to our mother? what

  would we give

  to smile and staple him

  back into our arms,

  our honey boy, our sam,

  not clean, not sober, not

  better than he was, but

  oh, at least, alive?

  ■

  study the masters

  like my aunt timmie.

  it was her iron,

  or one like hers,

  that smoothed the sheets

  the master poet slept on.

  home or hotel, what matters is

  he lay himself down on her handiwork

  and dreamed. she dreamed too, words:

  some cherokee, some masai and some

  huge and particular as hope.

  if you had heard her

  chanting as she ironed

  you would understand form and line

  and discipline and order and

  america.

  ■

  birthday 1999

  it is late. the train

  that is coming is

  closer. a woman can hear it

  in her fingers, in her knees,

  in the space where her uterus

  was. the platform feels

  filled with people

  but she sees no one else.

  she can almost hear the

  bright train eye.

  she can almost touch the cracked

  seat labeled lucille.

  someone should be with her.

  someone should undress her

  stroke her one more time

  and the train

  keeps coming closer.

  it is a dream i am having

  more and more and more.

  ■

  grief

  begin with the pain

  of the grass

  that bore the weight

  of adam,

  his broken rib mending

  into eve,

  imagine

  the origina
l bleeding,

  adam moaning

  and the lamentation of grass.

  from that garden,

  through fields of lost

  and found, to now, to here,

  to grief for the upright

  animal, to grief for the

  horizontal world.

  pause then for the human

  animal in its coat

  of many colors. pause

  for the myth of america.

  pause for the myth

  of america.

  and pause for the girl

  with twelve fingers

  who never learned to cry enough

  for anything that mattered,

  not enough for the fear,

  not enough for the loss,

  not enough for the history,

  not enough

  for the disregarded planet.

  not enough for the grass.

  then end in the garden of regret

  with time’s bell tolling grief

  and pain,

  grief for the grass

  that is older than adam,

  grief for what is born human,

  grief for what is not.

  ■

  the gift

  there was a woman who hit her head

  and ever after she could see the sharp

  wing of things blues and greens

  radiating from the body of her sister

  her mother  her friends  when she felt

  in her eyes the yellow sting

  of her mothers dying she trembled

  but did not speak her bent brain

  stilled her tongue so that her life

  became flash after flash of silence

  bright as flame she is gone now

  her head knocked again against a door

  that opened for her only

  i saw her last in a plain box smiling

  behind her sewn eyes there were hints

  of purple and crimson and gold

  ■

  out of body

  (mama)

  the words

  they fade

  i sift

  toward other languages

  you must listen

  with your hands

  with the twist ends

  of your hair

  that leaf

  pick up

  the sharp green stem

  try to feel me feel you

  i am saying I still love you

  i am saying

  i am trying to say

  i am trying to say

  from my mouth

  but baby there is no

  mouth

  ■

  oh antic God

  return to me

  my mother in her thirties

  leaned across the front porch

  the huge pillow of her breasts

  pressing against the rail

  summoning me in for bed.

  I am almost the dead woman’s age times two.

  I can barely recall her song

  the scent of her hands

  though her wild hair scratches my dreams

  at night. return to me, oh Lord of then

  and now, my mother’s calling,

  her young voice humming my name.

  ■

  april

  bird and bird

  over the thawing river

  circling parker

  waving his horn

  in the air above the osprey’s

  nest    my child

  smiling her I know something

  smile  their birthday

  is coming they are trying

  to be forty they will fail

  they will fall

  each from a different year

  into the river into the bay

  into an ocean of marvelous things

  ■

  children

  they are right, the poet mother

  carries her wolf in her heart,

  wailing at pain yet suckling it like

  romulus and remus. this now.

  how will I forgive myself

  for trying to bear the weight of this

  and trying to bear the weight also

  of writing the poem

  about this?

  ■

  surely i am able to write poems

  celebrating grass and how the blue

  in the sky can flow green or red

  and the waters lean against the

  chesapeake shore like a familiar,

  poems about nature and landscape

  surely but whenever i begin

  “the trees wave their knotted branches

  and …” why

  is there under that poem always

  an other poem?

  ■

  mulberry fields

  they thought the field was wasting

  and so they gathered the marker rocks and stones and

  piled them into a barn they say that the rocks were shaped

  some of them scratched with triangles and other forms they

  must have been trying to invent some new language they say

  the rocks went to build that wall there guarding the manor and

  some few were used for the state house

  crops refused to grow

  i say the stones marked an old tongue and it was called eternity

  and pointed toward the river i say that after that collection

  no pillow in the big house dreamed i say that somewhere under

  here moulders one called alice whose great grandson is old now

  too and refuses to talk about slavery i say that at the

  masters table only one plate is set for supper i say no seed

  can flourish on this ground once planted then forsaken wild

  berries warm a field of bones

  bloom how you must i say

  ■

  cancer

  the first time the dreaded word

  bangs against your eyes so that

  you think you must have heard it but

  what you know is that the room

  is twisting crimson on its hinge

  and all the other people there are dolls

  watching from their dollhouse chairs

  the second time you hear a swoosh as if

  your heart has fallen down a well

  and shivers in the water there

  trying to not drown

  the third time and you are so tired

  so tired and you nod your head

  and smile and walk away from

  the angel uniforms the blood

  machines and you enter the nearest

  movie house and stand in the last aisle

  staring at the screen with your living eyes

  ■

  in the mirror

  an only breast

  leans against her chest wall

  mourning she is suspended

  in a sob between t and e and a and r

  and the gash ghost of her sister

  t and e and a and r

  it is pronounced like crying

  it is pronounced like

  being torn away

  it is pronounced like trying to re

  member the shape of an unsafe life

  ■

  blood

  here in this ordinary house

  a girl is pressing a scarf

  against her bleeding body

  this is happening now

  she will continue for over

  thirty years emptying and

  filling sistering the moon

  on its wild ride

  men will march to games and wars

  pursuing the bright red scarf

  of courage heroes every moon

  some will die while every moon

  blood will enter this ordinary room

  this ordinary girl will learn

  to live with it

  ■
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  walking the blind dog

  for wsm

  then he walks the blind dog muku

  named for the dark of the moon

  out to the park where she can smell

  the other dogs and hear their

  yips their puppy dreams

  her one remaining eye is star lit

  though it has no sight and

  in its bright blue crater

  is a vision of the world

  old travelers who feel the way from here

  to there and back again

  who follow through the deep

  grass the ruff of breeze

  rustling her black coat his white hair

  both of them

  poets

  trusting the blind road home

  ■

  hands

  the snips of finger

  fell from the sterile bowl

  into my mind and after that

  whatever i was taught they would

  point toward a different learning

  which i followed

  i could no more ignore

  the totems of my tribe

  than i could close my eyes

  against the light flaring

  behind what has been called

  the world

  look hold these regulated hands

  against the sky

  see how they were born to more

  than bone see how their shadow

  steadies what i remain whole

  alive twelvefingered

  ■

  wind on the st. marys river

  january 2002

  it is the elders trying to return

  sensing the coast is near and they

  will soon be home again

  they have walked under two oceans

  and too many seas

  the nap of their silver hair whipping

  as the wind sings out to them

  this way this way

  and they come rising steadily not

  swimming exactly toward shore

  toward redemption

  but the wind dies down

  and they sigh and still and descend

  while we watch from our porches

  not remembering their names not calling out

  Jeremiah Fanny Lou Geronimo but only

  white caps on the water look white caps

  ■

  the tale the shepherds tell the sheep

  that some will rise

 

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