Collected Poems

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Collected Poems Page 34

by Adrienne Rich


  did we invent him, conjure him

  over the charring log,

  nights, late, in the snowbound cabin

  did we dream or scry his face

  in the liquid embers,

  the man-who-would-dare-to-know-us?

  6.

  It was never the rapist:

  it was the brother, lost,

  the comrade/twin whose palm

  would bear a lifeline like our own:

  decisive, arrowy,

  forked-lightning of insatiate desire

  It was never the crude pestle, the blind

  ramrod we were after:

  merely a fellow-creature

  with natural resources equal to our own

  7.

  Meanwhile, another kind of being

  was constructing itself, blindly

  —a mutant, some have said:

  the blood-compelled exemplar

  of a “botched civilization”

  as one of them called it

  children picking up guns

  for that is what it means to be a man

  We have lived with violence for seven years

  It was not worth one single life—

  but the patriot’s fist is at her throat,

  her voice is in mortal danger

  and that kind of being has lain in our beds

  declaring itself our desire

  requiring women’s blood for life

  a woman’s breast to lay its nightmare on

  8.

  And that kind of being has other forms:

  a passivity we mistake

  —in the desperation of our search—

  for gentleness

  But gentleness is active

  gentleness swabs the crusted stump

  invents more merciful instruments

  to touch the wound beyond the wound

  does not faint with disgust

  will not be driven off

  keeps bearing witness calmly

  against the predator, the parasite

  9.

  I am tired of faintheartedness,

  their having to be exceptional

  to do what an ordinary woman

  does in the course of things

  I am tired of women stooping to half our height

  to bring the essential vein to light

  tired of the waste of what we bear

  with such cost, such elation, into sight

  (—for what becomes of what the miner probes

  and carves from the mountain’s body in her pain?)

  10.

  This is what I am: watching the spider

  rebuild—“patiently”, they say,

  but I recognize in her

  impatience—my own—

  the passion to make and make again

  where such unmaking reigns

  the refusal to be a victim

  we have lived with violence so long

  Am I to go on saying

  for myself, for her

  This is my body,

  take and destroy it?

  11.

  The enormity of the simplest things:

  in this cold barn tables are spread

  with china saucers, shoehorns

  of german silver, a gilt-edged book

  that opens into a picture-frame—

  a biscuit-tin of the thirties.

  Outside, the north lies vast

  with unshed snow, everything is

  at once remote and familiar

  each house contains what it must

  women simmer carcasses

  of clean-picked turkeys, store away

  the cleaned cutglass and soak the linen cloths

  Dark rushes early at the panes

  12.

  These things by women saved

  are all we have of them

  or of those dear to them

  these ribboned letters, snapshots

  faithfully glued for years

  onto the scrapbook page

  these scraps, turned into patchwork,

  doll-gowns, clean white rags

  for stanching blood

  the bride’s tea-yellow handkerchief

  the child’s height penciled on the cellar door

  In this cold barn we dream

  a universe of humble things—

  and without these, no memory

  no faithfulness, no purpose for the future

  no honor to the past

  13.

  There are words I cannot choose again:

  humanismandrogyny

  Such words have no shame in them, no diffidence

  before the raging stoic grandmothers:

  their glint is too shallow, like a dye

  that does not permeate

  the fibers of actual life

  as we live it, now:

  this fraying blanket with its ancient stains

  we pull across the sick child’s shoulder

  or wrap around the senseless legs

  of the hero trained to kill

  this weaving, ragged because incomplete

  we turn our hands to, interrupted

  over and over, handed down

  unfinished, found in the drawer

  of an old dresser in the barn,

  her vanished pride and care

  still urging us, urging on

  our works, to close the gap

  in the Great Nebula

  to help the earth deliver.

  14.

  The women who first knew themselves

  miners, are dead. The rainbow flies

  like a flying buttress from the walls

  of cloud, the silver-and-green vein

  awaits the battering of the pick

  the dark lode weeps for light

  My heart is moved by all I cannot save:

  so much has been destroyed

  I have to cast my lot with those

  who age after age, perversely,

  with no extraordinary power,

  reconstitute the world.

  1977

  TOWARD THE SOLSTICE

  The thirtieth of November.

  Snow is starting to fall.

  A peculiar silence is spreading

  over the fields, the maple grove.

  It is the thirtieth of May,

  rain pours on ancient bushes, runs

  down the youngest blade of grass.

  I am trying to hold in one steady glance

  all the parts of my life.

  A spring torrent races

  on this old slanting roof,

  the slanted field below

  thickens with winter’s first whiteness.

  Thistles dried to sticks in last year’s wind

  stand nakedly in the green,

  stand sullenly in the slowly whitening,

  field.

  My brain glows

  more violently, more avidly

  the quieter, the thicker

  the quilt of crystals settles,

  the louder, more relentlessly

  the torrent beats itself out

  on the old boards and shingles.

  It is the thirtieth of May,

  the thirtieth of November,

  a beginning or an end,

  we are moving into the solstice

  and there is so much here

  I still do not understand.

  If I could make sense of how

  my life is still tangled

  with dead weeds, thistles,

  enormous burdocks, burdens

  slowly shifting under

  this first fall of snow,

  beaten by this early, racking rain

  calling all new life to declare itself strong

  or die,

  if I could know

  in what language to address

  the spirits that claim a place

  beneath these low and simple ceilings,

  tenants that neither speak nor stir

  yet dwell i
n mute insistence

  till I can feel utterly ghosted in this house.

  If history is a spider-thread

  spun over and over though brushed away

  it seems I might some twilight

  or dawn in the hushed country light

  discern its greyness stretching

  from molding or doorframe, out

  into the empty dooryard

  and following it climb

  the path into the pinewoods,

  tracing from tree to tree

  in the failing light, in the slowly

  lucidifying day

  its constant, purposive trail,

  till I reach whatever cellar hole

  filling with snowflakes or lichen,

  whatever fallen shack

  or unremembered clearing

  I am meant to have found

  and there, under the first or last

  star, trusting to instinct

  the words would come to mind

  I have failed or forgotten to say

  year after year, winter

  after summer, the right rune

  to ease the hold of the past

  upon the rest of my life

  and ease my hold on the past.

  If some rite of separation

  is still unaccomplished

  between myself and the long-gone

  tenants of this house,

  between myself and my childhood,

  and the childhood of my children,

  it is I who have neglected

  to perform the needed acts,

  set water in corners, light and eucalyptus

  in front of mirrors,

  or merely pause and listen

  to my own pulse vibrating

  lightly as falling snow,

  relentlessly as the rainstorm,

  and hear what it has been saying.

  It seems I am still waiting

  for them to make some clear demand

  some articulate sound or gesture,

  for release to come from anywhere

  but from inside myself.

  A decade of cutting away

  dead flesh, cauterizing

  old scars ripped open over and over

  and still it is not enough.

  A decade of performing

  the loving humdrum acts

  of attention to this house

  transplanting lilac suckers,

  washing panes, scrubbing

  wood-smoke from splitting paint,

  sweeping stairs, brushing the thread

  of the spider aside,

  and so much yet undone,

  a woman’s work, the solstice nearing,

  and my hand still suspended

  as if above a letter

  I long and dread to close.

  1977

  TRANSCENDENTAL ETUDE

  For Michelle Cliff

  This August evening I’ve been driving

  over backroads fringed with queen anne’s lace

  my car startling young deer in meadows—one

  gave a hoarse intake of her breath and all

  four fawns sprang after her

  into the dark maples.

  Three months from today they’ll be fair game

  for the hit-and-run hunters, glorying

  in a weekend’s destructive power.

  triggers fingered by drunken gunmen, sometimes

  so inept as to leave the shattered animal

  stunned in her blood. But this evening deep in summer

  the deer are still alive and free,

  nibbling apples from early-laden boughs

  so weighted, so englobed

  with already yellowing fruit

  they seem eternal, Hesperidean

  in the clear-tuned, cricket-throbbing air.

  Later I stood in the dooryard,

  my nerves singing the immense

  fragility of all this sweetness,

  this green world already sentimentalized, photographed,

  advertised to death. Yet, it persists

  stubbornly beyond the fake Vermont

  of antique barnboards glazed into discothèques,

  artificial snow, the sick Vermont of children

  conceived in apathy, grown to winters

  of rotgut violence,

  poverty gnashing its teeth like a blind cat at their lives.

  Still, it persists. Turning off onto a dirt road

  from the raw cuts bulldozed through a quiet village

  for the tourist run to Canada,

  I’ve sat on a stone fence above a great, soft, sloping field

  of musing heifers, a farmstead

  slanting its planes calmly in the calm light,

  a dead elm raising bleached arms

  above a green so dense with life,

  minute, momentary life—slugs, moles, pheasants, gnats,

  spiders, moths, hummingbirds, groundhogs, butterflies—

  a lifetime is too narrow

  to understand it all, beginning with the huge

  rockshelves that underlie all that life.

  No one ever told us we had to study our lives,

  make of our lives a study, as if learning natural history

  or music, that we should begin

  with the simple exercises first

  and slowly go on trying

  the hard ones, practicing till strength

  and accuracy became one with the daring

  to leap into transcendence, take the chance

  of breaking down in the wild arpeggio

  or faulting the full sentence of the fugue.

  —And in fact we can’t live like that: we take on

  everything at once before we’ve even begun

  to read or mark time, we’re forced to begin

  in the midst of the hardest movement,

  the one already sounding as we are born.

  At most we’re allowed a few months

  of simply listening to the simple line

  of a woman’s voice singing a child

  against her heart. Everything else is too soon,

  too sudden, the wrenching-apart, that woman’s heartbeat

  heard ever after from a distance,

  the loss of that ground-note echoing

  whenever we are happy, or in despair.

  Everything else seems beyond us,

  we aren’t ready for it, nothing that was said

  is true for us, caught naked in the argument,

  the counterpoint, trying to sightread

  what our fingers can’t keep up with, learn by heart

  what we can’t even read. And yet

  it is this we were born to. We aren’t virtuosi

  or child prodigies, there are no prodigies

  in this realm, only a half-blind, stubborn

  cleaving to the timbre, the tones of what we are

  —even when all the texts describe it differently.

  And we’re not performers, like Liszt, competing

  against the world for speed and brilliance

  (the 79-year-old pianist said, when I asked her

  What makes a virtuoso?—Competitiveness.)

  The longer I live the more I mistrust

  theatricality, the false glamour cast

  by performance, the more I know its poverty beside

  the truths we are salvaging from

  the splitting-open of our lives.

  The woman who sits watching, listening,

  eyes moving in the darkness

  is rehearsing in her body, hearing-out in her blood

  a score touched off in her perhaps

  by some words, a few chords, from the stage:

  a tale only she can tell.

  But there come times—perhaps this is one of them—

  when we have to take ourselves more seriously or die;

  when we have to pull back from the incantations,

  rhythms we’ve moved to thoughtlessly,

>   and disenthrall ourselves, bestow

  ourselves to silence, or a deeper listening, cleansed

  of oratory, formulas, choruses, laments, static

  crowding the wires. We cut the wires,

  find ourselves in free-fall, as if

  our true home were the undimensional

  solitudes, the rift

  in the Great Nebula.

  No one who survives to speak

  new language, has avoided this:

  the cutting-away of an old force that held her

  rooted to an old ground

  the pitch of utter loneliness

  where she herself and all creation

  seem equally dispersed, weightless, her being a cry

  to which no echo comes or can ever come.

  But in fact we were always like this,

  rootless, dismembered: knowing it makes the difference.

  Birth stripped our birthright from us,

  tore us from a woman, from women, from ourselves

  so early on

  and the whole chorus throbbing at our ears

  like midges, told us nothing, nothing

  of origins, nothing we needed

  to know, nothing that could re-member us.

  Only: that it is unnatural,

  the homesickness for a woman, for ourselves,

  for that acute joy at the shadow her head and arms

  cast on a wall, her heavy or slender

  thighs on which we lay, flesh against flesh,

  eyes steady on the face of love; smell of her milk, her sweat,

  terror of her disappearance, all fused in this hunger

  for the element they have called most dangerous, to be

  lifted breathtaken on her breast, to rock within her

  —even if beaten back, stranded again, to apprehend

  in a sudden brine-clear thought

  trembling like the tiny, orbed, endangered

 

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