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The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010

Page 8

by Lucille Clifton


  off his stick like a miracle

  who will he find to fish the waters

  he had saved for you?

  his name stood at attention

  in seven letters,

  now there are six

  and it never again

  can be pronounced the same.

  speaking of loss

  i began with everything;

  parents, two extra fingers

  a brother to ruin. i was

  a rich girl with no money

  in a red dress. how did i come

  to sit in this house

  wearing a name i never heard

  until i was a woman? someone has stolen

  my parents and hidden my brother.

  my extra fingers are cut away.

  i am left with plain hands and

  nothing to give you but poems.

  to thelma who worried because i couldn’t cook

  because no man would taste you

  you tried to feed yourself

  kneading your body

  with your own fists. the beaten thing

  rose up like a dough

  and burst in the oven of your hunger.

  madam, i’m not your gifted girl,

  i am a woman and

  i know what to do.

  poem on my fortieth birthday to my mother who died young

  well i have almost come to the place where you fell

  tripping over a wire at the forty-fourth lap

  and i have decided to keep running,

  head up, body attentive, fingers

  aimed like darts at first prize, so

  i might not even watch out for the thin thing

  grabbing towards my ankles but

  i’m trying for the long one mama,

  running like hell and if i fall

  i fall.

  february 13, 1980

  twenty-one years of my life you have been

  the lost color in my eye. my secret blindness,

  all my seeings turned gray with your going.

  mother, i have worn your name like a shield.

  it has torn but protected me all these years,

  now even your absence comes of age.

  i put on a dress called woman for this day

  but i am not grown away from you

  whatever i say.

  forgiving my father

  it is friday. we have come

  to the paying of the bills.

  all week you have stood in my dreams

  like a ghost, asking for more time

  but today is payday, payday old man;

  my mother’s hand opens in her early grave

  and i hold it out like a good daughter.

  there is no more time for you. there will

  never be time enough daddy daddy old lecher

  old liar. i wish you were rich so i could take it all

  and give the lady what she was due

  but you were the son of a needy father,

  the father of a needy son;

  you gave her all you had

  which was nothing. you have already given her

  all you had.

  you are the pocket that was going to open

  and come up empty any friday.

  you were each other’s bad bargain, not mine.

  daddy old pauper old prisoner, old dead man

  what am i doing here collecting?

  you lie side by side in debtors’ boxes

  and no accounting will open them up.

  to the unborn and waiting children

  i went into my mother as

  some souls go into a church,

  for the rest only. but there,

  even there, from the belly of a

  poor woman who could not save herself

  i was pushed without my permission

  into a tangle of birthdays.

  listen, eavesdroppers, there is no such thing

  as a bed without affliction;

  the bodies all may open wide but

  you enter at your own risk.

  aunt agnes hatcher tells

  1. about the war

  after the war when rationing was over

  was a plenty names. people

  shuffled them like cards and drew

  new ones out the deck. child,

  letters and numbers went

  running through whole families.

  everybody’s cousin was

  somebody else. just

  consider yourself lucky if

  you know who you are.

  2. about my mama

  your mama, her bottom turned into hamburger

  during the war but it was fat meat and

  nobody wanted any. she sang Jesus keep me and

  beat her fists in fits. fell dead

  in the hospital hall

  two smiles next to the virgin mary.

  glad to be gone.

  hunger can kill you.

  she’s how i know.

  3. about my daddy

  your daddy, he decided to spread the wealth

  as they say, and made another daughter.

  just before the war she came calling

  looking like his natural blood.

  your mama surprised us and opened her heart.

  none of his other tricks worked that good.

  4. about me

  you

  slavery time they would be calling you

  worth your weight in diamonds the way you

  slide out babies like payday from that

  billion dollar behind.

  the once and future dead

  who learn they will be white men

  weep for their history. we call it

  rain.

  two-headed woman

  in this garden

  growing

  following strict orders

  following the Light

  see the sensational

  two-headed woman

  one face turned outward

  one face

  swiveling slowly in

  the making of poems

  the reason why i do it

  though i fail and fail

  in the giving of true names

  is i am adam and his mother

  and these failures are my job.

  new year

  lucy

  by sam

  out of thelma

  limps down a ramp

  toward the rest of her life.

  with too many candles

  in her hair

  she is a princess of

  burning buildings

  leaving the year that

  tried to consume her.

  her hands are bright

  as they witch for water

  and even her tears cry

  fire fire

  but she opens herself

  to the risk of flame and

  walks toward an ocean

  of days.

  sonora desert poem

  for lois and richard shelton

  1.

  the ones who live in the desert,

  if you knew them

  you would understand everything.

  they see it all and

  never judge any

  just drink the water when

  they get the chance.

  if i could grow arms on my scars

  like them,

  if i could learn

  the patience they know

  i wouldn’t apologize for my thorns either

  just stand in the desert

  and witness.

  2. directions for watching the sun set in the desert

  come to the landscape that was hidden under the sea.

  look in the opposite direction.

  reach for the mountain.

  the mountain will ignore your hand.

  the sun will fall on your back.

  the landscape will fade away.

  you will think you’re alone until a flash

  of green
incredible light.

  3. directions for leaving the desert

  push the bones back

  under your skin.

  finish the water.

  they will notice your thorns and

  ask you to testify.

  turn toward the shade.

  smile.

  say nothing at all.

  my friends

  no they will not understand

  when i throw off my legs and my arms

  at your hesitant yes.

  when i throw them off and slide

  like a marvelous snake toward your bed

  your box whatever you will keep me in

  no they will not understand what can be

  so valuable beyond paper dollars diamonds

  what is to me worth all appendages.

  they will never understand never approve

  of me loving at last where i would

  throw it all off to be,

  with you in your small room limbless

  but whole.

  wife

  we are some of us

  born for the water.

  we begin at once

  swimming toward him.

  we sight him.

  we circle him like a ring.

  if he does not drown us we stay.

  if he does

  we swim like a fish for his brother.

  i once knew a man

  i once knew a man who had wild horses killed.

  when he told about it

  the words came galloping out of his mouth

  and shook themselves and headed off in

  every damn direction. his tongue

  was wild and wide and spinning when he talked

  and the people he looked at closed their eyes

  and tore the skins off their backs as they walked away

  and stopped eating meat.

  there was no holding him once he got started;

  he had had wild horses killed one time and

  they rode him to his grave.

  angels

  “the angels say they have no wings”

  two shining women.

  i will not betray you with

  public naming

  nor celebrate actual birthdays.

  you are my two good secrets

  lady dark lady fair.

  no one will know that I recognize

  the rustle of sky in your voices

  and your meticulous absence

  of wing.

  conversation with my grandson, waiting to be conceived

  you will bloom

  in a family of flowers.

  you are the promise

  the Light made to adam,

  the love you will grow in

  is the garden of our lord.

  “and i will be a daisy.

  daddy too.

  mommy is a dandelion. grandma

  you are a flower

  that has no name.”

  the mystery that surely is present

  as the underside of a leaf

  turning to stare at you quietly

  from your hand,

  that is the mystery you have not

  looked for, and it turns

  with a silent shattering of your life

  for who knows ever after

  the proper position of things

  or what is waiting to turn from us

  even now?

  the astrologer predicts at mary’s birth

  this one lie down on grass.

  this one old men will follow

  calling mother mother.

  she womb will blossom then die.

  this one she hide from evening.

  at a certain time when she hear something

  it will burn her ear.

  at a certain place when she see something

  it will break her eye.

  anna speaks of the childhood of mary her daughter

  we rise up early and

  we work. work is the medicine

  for dreams.

  that dream

  i am having again;

  she washed in light,

  whole world bowed to its knees,

  she on a hill looking up,

  face all long tears.

  and shall i give her up

  to dreaming then? i fight this thing.

  all day we scrubbing scrubbing.

  mary’s dream

  winged women was saying

  “full of grace” and like.

  was light beyond sun and words

  of a name and a blessing.

  winged women to only i.

  i joined them, whispering

  yes.

  how he is coming then

  like a pot turned on the straw

  nuzzled by cows and an old man

  dressed like a father. like a loaf

  a poor baker sets in the haystack to cool.

  like a shepherd who hears in his herding

  his mother whisper my son my son.

  holy night

  joseph, i afraid of stars,

  their brilliant seeing.

  so many eyes. such light.

  joseph, i cannot still these limbs,

  i hands keep moving toward i breasts,

  so many stars. so bright.

  joseph, is wind burning from east

  joseph, i shine, oh joseph, oh

  illuminated night.

  a song of mary

  somewhere it being yesterday.

  i a maiden in my mother’s house.

  the animals silent outside.

  is morning.

  princes sitting on thrones in the east

  studying the incomprehensible heavens.

  joseph carving a table somewhere

  in another place.

  i watching my mother.

  i smiling an ordinary smile.

  island mary

  after the all been done and i

  one old creature carried on

  another creature’s back, i wonder

  could i have fought these thing?

  surrounded by no son of mine save

  old men calling mother like in the tale

  the astrologer tell, i wonder

  could i have walk away when voices

  singing in my sleep? i one old woman.

  always i seem to worrying now for

  another young girl asleep

  in the plain evening.

  what song around her ear?

  what star still choosing?

  mary mary astonished by God

  on a straw bed circled by beasts

  and an old husband. mary marinka

  holy woman split by sanctified seed

  into mother and mother for ever and ever

  we pray for you sister woman shook by the

  awe full affection of the saints.

  for the blind

  you will enter morning

  without error.

  you will stand in a room

  where you have never lingered.

  you will touch glass.

  someone will face you with bones

  repeating your bones.

  you will feel them in the glass.

  your fingers will shine

  with recognition,

  your eyes will open

  with delight.

  for the mad

  you will be alone at last

  in the sanity of your friends.

  brilliance will fade away from you

  and you will settle in dimmed light.

  you will not remember how to mourn

  your dying difference.

  you will not be better but

  they will say you are well.

  for the lame

  happen you will rise,

  lift from grounded in a spin

  and begin to forget the geography

  of fixed things.

  happen you will walk past

  where you meant to stay,

  happen
you will wonder at the way

  it seemed so marvelous to move.

  for the mute

  they will blow from your mouth one morning

  like from a shook bottle

  and you will try to keep them for

  tomorrow’s conversation but

  your patience will be broken when the

  bottle bursts

  and you will spill all of your

  extraordinary hearings for there are

  too many languages for

  one mortal tongue.

  God waits for the wandering world.

  he expects us when we enter,

  late or soon.

  he will not mind my coming after hours.

  his patience is his promise.

  the light that came to lucille clifton

  came in a shift of knowing

  when even her fondest sureties

  faded away. it was the summer

  she understood that she had not understood

  and was not mistress even

  of her own off eye. then

  the man escaped throwing away his tie and

  the children grew legs and started walking and

 

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