Collected Poems

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Collected Poems Page 61

by Adrienne Rich


  Document Window

  Could I just show what’s happening. Not that shooting, civil disturbance, whatever it was. I’d like you to see how differently we’re all moving, how the time allowed to let things become known grows shorter and shorter, how quickly things and people get replaced. How interchangeable it all could get to seem. Could get to seem … the kind of phrase we use now, avoiding the verb to be. There’s a sense in which, we say, dismissing other senses.

  Rimbaud called for the rational derangement of all the senses in the name of poetry. Marx: capitalism deranges all the senses save the sense of property.

  Keeping my back against unimportant walls I moved out of range of the confusion, away from the protection of the police. Having seen nothing I could swear to I felt at peace with my default. I would, at least, not be engaged in some mess not my own.

  This is what I mean though: how differently we move now, rapidly deciding what is and isn’t ours. Indifferently.

  Voices

  Wreathed around the entrance to a shopping mall, a student dining hall, don’t pause for a word, or to articulate an idea. What hangs a moment in the air is already dead: That’s history.

  The moment—Edwin Denby describes it—when a dancer, leaping, stands still in the air. Pause in conversation when time would stop, an idea hang suspended, then get taken up and carried on. (Then that other great style of conversation: everyone at once, each possessed with an idea.) This newer conversation: I am here and talking, talking, here and talking … Television the first great lesson: against silence. “I thought she’d never call and I went aaah! to my friend and she went give it a week, she’ll call you all right and you did”—“ And you went waowh! and I went, right, I went O.K., it’s only I was clueless? so now can we grab something nearby, cause I’m due on in forty-five?”

  A neighbor painting his garage yelling in cell phone from the driveway: voice that penetrates kitchen-window glass. “Fucking worst day of my fucking life, fucking wife left me for another man, both on coke and, you know? I don’t CARE! thought it was only maryjane she was, do you KNOW the prison term for coke? Fucking dealer, leaves me for him because she’s HOOKED and I’m supposed to CARE? Do they know what they’ll GET?”

  Private urgencies made public, not collective, speaker within a bubble. In the new restaurant: “Marty? Thought I’d never get through to you. We need to move quickly with SZ-02, there are hounds on the trail. Barney won’t block you at all. Just give him what we talked about.”

  USonian speech. Men of the upwardly mobilizing class needing to sound boyish, an asset in all the newness of the new: upstart, startup, adventurist, pirate lad’s nasal bravado in the male vocal cords. Voices of girls and women screeking to an excitable edge of brightness. In an excessively powerful country, grown women sound like girls without authority or experience. Male, female voices alike pitched fastforward commercial, one timbre, tempo, intonation.

  Mirrors

  Possible tones of the human voice, their own possible physical beauty—no recognition. The fish-eye lens bobbles faces back.

  Bodies heavy with sad or enraged feminine or macho brooding mimic stand-up comics, celebrities; grimace, gesticulate. The nakedest generation of young USonians with little intuition of the human history of nakedness, luminous inventions of skin and musculature. Their surfaces needlepointed with conventionally outrageous emblems, what mirror to render justly their original beauty back to them?

  You touched me in places so deep I wanted to ignore you.

  Artworks (I)

  Painting on a gallery wall: people dwelling on opposite sides of a pane of glass. None of their eyes exchanging looks. Yellow flashes off the rug in the room and from the orchard beyond. Houses of people whose eyes do not meet.

  White people doing and seeing no evil.

  (Photograph of family reunion, eyes on the wide-lens camera unmeeting.) “In fact I’ve lived here all along.”

  That was them not us. We were at the time in the time of our displacement, being torn from a false integrity. We stared at the pictures in the gallery knowing they were not us, we were being driven further for something else and who knew how far and for how long and what we were to do.

  Stranger

  Isolation begins to form, moves in like fog on a clear afternoon. Arrives with the mail, leaves its messages on the phone machine. If you hadn’t undergone this so often it could take you by surprise, but its rime-white structure is the simple blueprint of your displacement. You: who pride yourself on not giving in, keep discovering in dreams new rooms in an old house, drawing new plans: living with strangers, enough for all, wild tomato plants along the road, redness for hunger and thirst. (Unrest, too, in the house of dreams: the underworld lashing back.)

  But this fog blanks echoes, blots reciprocal sounds. The padded cell of a moribund democracy, or just your individual case?

  Artworks (II)

  Early summer lunch with friends, talk rises: poetry, urban design and planning, film. Strands of interest and affection binding us differently around the table. If an uneasy political theme rears up—the meaning of a show of lynching photographs in New York, after Mapplethorpe’s photos, of sociopathic evil inside the California prison industry—talk fades. Not a pause but: a suppression. No one is monitoring this conversation but us. We know the air is bad in here, maybe want not to push that knowledge, ask what is to be done? How to breathe? What will suffice? Draft new structures or simply be aware? If art is our only resistance, what does that make us? If we’re collaborators, what’s our offering to corruption—an aesthetic, anaesthetic, dye of silence, withdrawal, intellectual disgust?

  This fade-out/suspension of conversation: a syndrome of the past decades? our companionate immune systems under siege, viral spread of social impotence producing social silence?

  Imagine written language that walks away from human conversation. A written literature, back turned to oral traditions, estranged from music and body. So what might reanimate, rearticulate, becomes less and less available.

  Incline

  Dreamroad rising steeply uphill; David is driving. I see it turning into a perpendicular structure salvaged from a long metal

  billboard: we will have to traverse this at a ninety-degree angle, then at the top go over and down the other side. There are no exits. Around is the Mojave Desert: open space. D.’s car begins to lose momentum as the incline increases; he tries shifting into a lower gear and gunning the engine. There is no way off this incline now, we’re forced into a situation we hadn’t reckoned on—a road now become something that is no road, something designated as “commercial space.” I suggest rolling (ourselves in) the car down the steep dusty shoulder into the desert below, and out. For both of us, the desert isn’t vacancy or fear, it’s life, a million forms of witness. The fake road, its cruel deception, is what we have to abandon.

  Mission Statement

  The Organization for the Abolition of Cruelty has an air deployment with bases on every continent and on obscurer tracts of land. Airstrips and hangars have been constructed to accommodate large and small aircraft for reconnoiter and rescue missions whether on polar ice or in desert or rainforest conditions. Many types of craft are of course deployed to urban clusters. The mission of the Organization is not to the First, Third, or any other World. It is directed toward the investigation and abrogation of cruelty in every direction, including present and future extraterrestrial locations.

  It is obvious that the destruction of despair is still our most urgent task. In this regard, we employ paramilitary methods with great care and watchfulness.

  The personnel dedicated to this new program are responsible to the mission, not to any national body. We are apprised of all new technologies as soon as available. Hence we have a unique fusion of policy and technology, unique in that its purpose is the abolition of cruelty.

  Ours is the first project of its kind to be fully empowered through the new paranational charters. In principle, it is now recognized tha
t both agents and objects of cruelty must be rescued and transformed, and that they sometimes merge into each other.

  In response to your inquiry: this is a complex operation. We have a wide range of specializations and concerns. Some are especially calibrated toward language

  because of its known and unknown powers

  to bind and to dissociate

  because of its capacity

  to ostracize the speechless

  because of its capacity

  to nourish self-deception

  because of its capacity

  for rebirth and subversion

  because of the history

  of torture

  against human speech

  2000–2002

  III

  Territory Shared

  ADDRESS

  Orientation of the word toward its addressee has an extremely high significance. In point of fact, word is a two-sided act. It is determined equally by whose word it is and for whom it is meant. … Each and every word expresses the “one” in relation to the “other.” … A word is territory shared by both addressor and addressee, by the speaker and his interlocutor.

  —V. N. Voloshinov, Marxism and the Philosophy of Language

  If all we would speak is ideology

  believable walking past pent-up Christmas trees

  in a California parking lotday before Thanksgivinghot sun

  on faint

  scent of sprucein the supermarket

  mixed metaphors of food

  faces expectant, baffled, bitter, distracted

  wandering aisles or like me and the man ahead of me buying

  only milk

  my car door grabbed open by a woman

  thinking it her husband’s car honking for her somewhere else

  —and I think it true indeed I know

  I who came only for milk am speaking it:though

  would stand somewhere beyond

  this civic nausea

  : desiring not to stand apart

  like Jeffers giving up on his kindloving only unhuman creatures

  because they transcend ideologyin eternity as he thought

  but he wasn’t writing to them

  nor today’s gull perched on the traffic light

  Nor can this be about remorse

  staring over its shopping cart

  feeling its vague ideological thoughts

  nor about lines of credit

  blanketing shame and fear

  nor being conscripted for violence

  from withoutbeckoning at rage within

  I know what it cannot be

  But whoat the checkout this one day

  do I addresswho is addressing me

  what’s the approach whose the manners

  whose dignity whose truth

  when the change purse is tipped into the palm

  for an exact amount without which

  2002

  TRANSPARENCIES

  That the meek word like the righteous word can bully

  that an Israeli soldier interviewed years

  after the first Intifada could mourn on camera

  what under orders he did, saw done, did not refuse

  that another leaving Beit Jala could scrawl

  on a wall: We are truely sorry for the mess we made

  is merely routineword that would cancel deed

  That human equals innocent and guilty

  That we grasp for innocence whether or no

  is elementaryThat words can translate into broken bones

  That the power to hurl words is a weapon

  That the body can be a weapon

  any child on playground knowsThat asked your favorite word

  in a game

  you always named a thing, a quality, freedom or river

  (never a pronoun never God or War)

  is taken for grantedThat word and body

  are all we have to lay on the line

  That words are windowpanes in a ransacked hut, smeared

  by time’s dirty rains, we might argue

  likewise that words are clear as glass till the sun strikes it blinding

  But that in a dark windowpane you have seen your face

  That when you wipe your glasses the text grows clearer

  That the sound of crunching glass comes at the height of the

  wedding

  That I can look through glass

  into my neighbor’s house

  but not my neighbor’s life

  That glass is sometimes broken to save lives

  That a word can be crushed like a goblet underfoot

  is only what it seems, part question, part answer: how

  you live it

  2002

  LIVRESQUE

  There hangs a space between the man

  and his words

  like the space around a few snowflakes

  just languidly beginning

  space

  where an oil rig has dissolved in fog

  man in self-arrest

  between word and act

  writing agape, agape

  with a silver fountain pen

  2002

  COLLABORATIONS

  I

  Thought of this “our” nation : : thought of war

  ghosts of war fugitive

  in labyrinths of amnesia

  veteransout-of-date textbooks in a library basement

  evidence trundled offplutoniumunder tarps after dark

  didn’t realize it until I wrote it

  August nowapples have started

  severing from the tree

  over the deckby night their dim impact

  thuds into dreams

  by daylight bruisedstarting to stew in sun

  saying “apple” to nose and tongue

  to memory

  Word following sense, the way it should be

  and if you don’t speak the word

  do you lose your senses

  And isn’t this just one speck, one atom

  on the glazed surface we call

  America

  from which I write

  the war ghosts treading in their shredded

  disguises above the clouds

  and the price we pay here still opaque as the fog

  these mornings

  we always say will break open?

  II

  Try this on your tongue: “the poetry of the enemy”

  If you read it will you succumb

  Will the enemy’s wren fly through your window

  and circle your room

  Will you smell the herbs hung to dry in the house

  he has had to rebuild in words

  Would it weaken your will to hear

  riffs of the instruments he loves

  rustling of rivers remembered

  where faucets are dry

  “The enemy’s water”is there a phrase

  for that in your language?

  And youwhat do you write

  now in your borrowed housetuned in

  to the broadcasts of horror

  under a sagging arbor, dimdumim

  do you grope for poetry

  to embrace all this

  —not describe, embracestaggering

  in its arms, Jacob-and-angel-wise?

  III

  Do you understand why I want your voice?

  At the seder table it’s said

  you reclined and said nothing

  now in the month of Elul is your throat so dry

  your dreams so stony

  you wake with their grit in your mouth?

  There was a beautiful life here once

  Our enemies poisoned it?

  Make a list of what’s lost but don’t

  call it a poem

  that’s for the scriptors of nostalgia

  bent to their copying-desks

  Make a list of what you love well

  twist itinsert it

  into a bottle of old Roman glass
/>
  go to the edge of the sea

  at Haifa where the refugee ships lurched in

  and the ships of deportation wrenched away

  IV

  For Giora Leshem

  Drove upcoastfirst day of another yearno rain

  oxalis gold lakes floating

  on January green

  Can winter tides off the Levant

  churn up wilder spume?

  Think Crusades, remember Acre

  wind driving at fortress walls

  everything returns in time except the

  utterly disappeared

  What thou lovest well can well be reft from thee

  What does not change / is the will

  to vanquish

  the fascination with what’s easiest

  see it in any video arcade

  is this what the wind is driving at?

  Where are you Giora?whose hands

  lay across mine a moment

  Can you still believe that afternoon

 

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