The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010

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The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010 Page 16

by Lucille Clifton


  7

  gloria mundi

  so knowing,

  what is known?

  that we carry our baggage

  in our cupped hands

  when we burst through

  the waters of our mother.

  that some are born

  and some are brought

  to the glory of this world.

  that it is more difficult

  than faith

  to serve only one calling

  one commitment

  one devotion

  in one life.

  brothers

  (being a conversation in eight poems between an aged Lucifer and God, though only Lucifer is heard. The time is long after.)

  1

  invitation

  come coil with me

  here in creation’s bed

  among the twigs and ribbons

  of the past. i have grown old

  remembering this garden,

  the hum of the great cats

  moving into language, the sweet

  fume of man’s rib

  as it rose up and began to walk.

  it was all glory then,

  the winged creatures leaping

  like angels, the oceans claiming

  their own. let us rest here a time

  like two old brothers

  who watched it happen and wondered

  what it meant.

  2

  how great Thou art

  listen, You are beyond

  even Your own understanding.

  that rib and rain and clay

  in all its pride,

  its unsteady dominion,

  is not what You believed

  You were,

  but it is what You are;

  in Your own image as some

  lexicographer supposed.

  the face, both he and she,

  the odd ambition, the desire

  to reach beyond the stars

  is You. all You, all You

  the loneliness, the perfect

  imperfection.

  3

  as for myself

  less snake than angel

  less angel than man

  how come i to this

  serpent’s understanding?

  watching creation from

  a hood of leaves

  i have foreseen the evening

  of the world.

  as sure as she,

  the breast of Yourself

  separated out and made to bear,

  as sure as her returning,

  i too am blessed with

  the one gift you cherish;

  to feel the living move in me

  and to be unafraid.

  4

  in my own defense

  what could i choose

  but to slide along beside them,

  they whose only sin

  was being their father’s children?

  as they stood with their backs

  to the garden,

  a new and terrible luster

  burning their eyes,

  only You could have called

  their ineffable names,

  only in their fever

  could they have failed to hear.

  5

  the road led from delight

  into delight. into the sharp

  edge of seasons, into the sweet

  puff of bread baking, the warm

  vale of sheet and sweat after love,

  the tinny newborn cry of calf

  and cormorant and humankind.

  and pain, of course,

  always there was some bleeding,

  but forbid me not

  my meditation on the outer world

  before the rest of it, before

  the bruising of his heel, my head,

  and so forth.

  6

  “the silence of God is God.”

  —Carolyn Forché

  tell me, tell us why

  in the confusion of a mountain

  of babies stacked like cordwood,

  of limbs walking away from each other,

  of tongues bitten through

  by the language of assault,

  tell me, tell us why

  You neither raised Your hand

  nor turned away, tell us why

  You watched the excommunication of

  that world and You said nothing.

  7

  still there is mercy, there is grace

  how otherwise

  could i have come to this

  marble spinning in space

  propelled by the great

  thumb of the universe?

  how otherwise

  could the two roads

  of this tongue

  converge into a single

  certitude?

  how otherwise

  could i, a sleek old

  traveler,

  curl one day safe and still

  beside You

  at Your feet, perhaps,

  but, amen, Yours.

  8

  “............is God.”

  so.

  having no need to speak

  You sent Your tongue

  splintered into angels.

  even i,

  with my little piece of it

  have said too much.

  to ask You to explain

  is to deny You.

  before the word

  You were.

  You kiss my brother mouth.

  the rest is silence.

  Uncollected Poems

  (1993)

  hometown 1993

  think of it; the landscape

  potted as if by war, think of

  the weeds, the boarded buildings,

  the slivers of window abandoned

  in the streets, and behind one

  glass, my little brother, dying.

  think of how he must have

  bounded into our mothers arms,

  held hard to our fathers swollen hand,

  never looking back, glad to be gone

  from the contempt, the terrible night

  of buffalo.

  ones like us

  enter a blurry world,

  fetish tight around our

  smallest finger, mezuzah

  gripped in our good child hand.

  we feel for our luck

  but everywhere is menace menace

  until we settle ourselves

  against the bark of trees, against

  the hide of fierce protection

  and there, in the shadow,

  words call us. words call us

  and we go.

  for wayne karlin

  5/28/93

  The Terrible Stories

  (1996)

  for marilyn marlow

  telling our stories

  the fox came every evening to my door

  asking for nothing. my fear

  trapped me inside, hoping to dismiss her

  but she sat till morning, waiting.

  at dawn we would, each of us,

  rise from our haunches, look through the glass

  then walk away.

  did she gather her village around her

  and sing of the hairless moon face,

  the trembling snout, the ignorant eyes?

  child, i tell you now it was not

  the animal blood i was hiding from,

  it was the poet in her, the poet and

  the terrible stories she could tell.

  1. A Dream of Foxes

  fox

  . . . The foxes are hungry, who could blame them for what they do? . . .

  — “Foxes in Winter”

  Mary Oliver

  who

  can blame her for hunkering

  into the doorwells at night,

  the only blaze in the dark

  the brush of her hopeful tail,

  the only starlight

  her little bared teeth?
>
  and when she is not satisfied

  who can blame her for refusing to leave,

  for raising the one paw up and barking,

  Master Of The Hunt, why am i

  not feeding, not being fed?

  the coming of fox

  one evening i return

  to a red fox

  haunched by my door.

  i am afraid

  although she knows

  no enemy comes here.

  next night again

  then next then next

  she sits in her safe shadow

  silent as my skin bleeds

  into long bright flags

  of fur.

  dear fox

  it is not my habit

  to squat in the hungry desert

  fingering stones, begging them

  to heal, not me but the dry mornings

  and bitter nights.

  it is not your habit

  to watch. none of this

  is ours, sister fox.

  tell yourself that anytime now

  we will rise and walk away

  from somebody else’s life.

  any time.

  leaving fox

  so many fuckless days and nights.

  only the solitary fox

  watching my window light

  barks her compassion.

  i move away from her eyes,

  from the pitying brush

  of her tail

  to a new place and check

  for signs. so far

  i am the only animal.

  i will keep the door unlocked

  until something human comes.

  one year later

  what if,

  then,

  entering my room,

  brushing against the shadows,

  lapping them into rust,

  her soft paw extended,

  she had called me out?

  what if,

  then,

  i had reared up baying,

  and followed her off

  into vixen country?

  what then of the moon,

  the room, the bed, the poetry

  of regret?

  a dream of foxes

  in the dream of foxes

  there is a field

  and a procession of women

  clean as good children

  no hollow in the world

  surrounded by dogs

  no fur clumped bloody

  on the ground

  only a lovely line

  of honest women stepping

  without fear or guilt or shame

  safe through the generous fields

  2. From the Cadaver

  amazons

  when the rookery of women

  warriors all

  each cupping one hand around

  her remaining breast

  daughters of dahomey

  their name fierce on the planet

  when they came to ask

  who knows what you might have

  to sacrifice poet amazon

  there is no choice

  then when they each

  with one nipple lifted

  beckoned to me

  five generations removed

  i rose

  and ran to the telephone

  to hear

  cancer early detection no

  mastectomy not yet

  there was nothing to say

  my sisters swooped in a circle dance

  audre was with them and i

  had already written this poem

  lumpectomy eve

  all night i dream of lips

  that nursed and nursed

  and the lonely nipple

  lost in loss and the need

  to feed that turns at last

  on itself that will kill

  its body for its hunger’s sake

  all night i hear the whispering

  the soft

  love calls you to this knife

  for love for love

  all night it is the one breast

  comforting the other

  consulting the book of changes: radiation

  each morning you will cup

  your breast in your hand

  then cover it and ride

  into the federal city.

  if there are no cherry blossoms

  can there be a cherry tree?

  you will arrive at the house

  of lightning. even the children there

  will glow in the arms of their kin.

  where is the light in one leaf

  falling?

  you will wait to hear your name,

  wish you were a child with kin,

  wish some of the men you loved

  had loved you.

  what is the splendor of one breast

  on one woman?

  you will rise to the machine.

  if someone should touch you now

  his hand would flower.

  after, you will stop to feed yourself.

  you have always had to feed yourself.

  will i begin to cry?

  if you do, you will cry forever.

  1994

  i was leaving my fifty-eighth year

  when a thumb of ice

  stamped itself hard near my heart

  you have your own story

  you know about the fear the tears

  the scar of disbelief

  you know that the saddest lies

  are the ones we tell ourselves

  you know how dangerous it is

  to be born with breasts

  you know how dangerous it is

  to wear dark skin

  i was leaving my fifty-eighth year

  when i woke into the winter

  of a cold and mortal body

  thin icicles hanging off

  the one mad nipple weeping

  have we not been good children

  did we not inherit the earth

  but you must know all about this

  from your own shivering life

  scar

  we will learn

  to live together.

  i will call you

  ribbon of hunger

  and desire

  empty pocket flap

  edge of before and after.

  and you

  what will you call me?

  woman i ride

  who cannot throw me

  and i will not fall off.

  hag riding

  why

  is what i ask myself

  maybe it is the afrikan in me

  still trying to get home

  after all these years

  but when i wake to the heat of the morning

  galloping down the highway of my life

  something hopeful rises in me

  rises and runs me out into the road

  and i lob my fierce thigh high

  over the rump of the day and honey

  i ride i ride

  down the tram

  hell is like this first stone

  then rock so wonderful

  you forget you have no faith

  some pine some scrub brush

  just enough to clench green

  in the air

  yes it is always evening

  there are stars there is sky

  you stand there silent

  in the long approach

  watching as caverns

  tense into buildings

  wondering who could live here

  knowing whatever they have done

  they must be beautiful

  rust

  we don’t like rust,

  it reminds us that we are dying.

  —Brett Singer

  are you saying that iron understands

  time is another name for God?

  that the rain-licked pot is holy?

  that the pan abandoned in the house

  is holy? are you saying that they

&nbs
p; are sanctified now, our girlhood skillets

  tarnishing in the kitchen?

  are you saying we only want to remember

  the heft of our mothers’ handles,

  their ebony patience, their shine?

  from the cadaver

  for bill palmer

  the arm you hold up

  held a son he became

  taller than his father

  if he is watching there

  in my dim lit past

  let him see

  what a man comes to

  doctor or patient

  criminal or king

  pieces of baggage

  cold in a stranger’s hand

  3. A Term in Memphis

  shadows

  in the latter days

  you will come to a place

  called memphis

  there you will wait for a while

  by the river mississippi

 

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