Later Poems Selected and New

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Later Poems Selected and New Page 1

by Adrienne Rich




  Later Poems:

  Selected and New

  1971 – 2012

  ADRIENNE RICH

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Also by Adrienne Rich

  Diving into the Wreck (1971–1972)

  Trying to Talk with a Man

  When We Dead Awaken

  Incipience

  The Mirror in Which Two Are Seen As One

  From the Prison House

  Diving into the Wreck

  The Phenomenology of Anger

  For a Sister

  For the Dead

  Meditations for a Savage Child

  The Dream of a Common Language (1974–1977)

  Power

  Origins and History of Consciousness

  Hunger

  Cartographies of Silence

  Twenty-one Love Poems

  Upper Broadway

  Paula Becker to Clara Westhoff

  A Woman Dead in Her Forties

  Toward the Solstice

  A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far (1978–1981)

  Coast to Coast

  Integrity

  Transit

  For Memory

  What Is Possible

  For Ethel Rosenberg

  Heroines

  Grandmothers

  The Spirit of Place

  Frame

  A Vision

  Your Native Land, Your Life (1981–1985)

  Sources

  For the Record

  North American Time

  Virginia 1906

  Dreams Before Waking

  One Kind of Terror: A Love Poem

  What Was, Is; What Might Have Been, Might Be

  Poetry: I; II, Chicago; III

  Baltimore: a fragment from the Thirties

  Homage to Winter

  Blue Rock

  Yom Kippur 1984

  Edges

  Contradictions: Tracking Poems

  Time’s Power (1985–1988)

  Solfeggietto

  This

  Negotiations

  In a Classroom

  The Novel

  In Memoriam: D.K.

  Children Playing Checkers at the Edge of the Forest

  Sleepwalking Next to Death

  Delta

  6/21

  Dreamwood

  Harpers Ferry

  Living Memory

  An Atlas of the Difficult World (1988–1991)

  An Atlas of the Difficult World

  That Mouth

  Marghanita

  Tattered Kaddish

  Through Corralitos Under Rolls of Cloud

  Darklight

  For a Friend in Travail

  Final Notations

  Dark Fields of the Republic (1991–1995)

  What Kind of Times Are These

  What Kind of Times Are These

  In Those Years

  To the Days

  Miracle Ice Cream

  Rachel

  Amends

  Calle Visión

  Reversion

  Then or Now

  Food Packages: 1947

  Innocence: 1945

  Sunset, December, 1993

  Deportations

  And Now

  Six Narratives

  1. You drew up the story of your life I was in that story

  2. You drew up a story about me I fled that story

  3. You were telling a story about women to young men

  4. You were telling a story about love

  5. I was telling you a story about love

  6. You were telling a story about war it is our story

  Inscriptions

  One: comrade

  Two: movement

  Three: origins

  Four: history

  Five: voices

  Six: edgelit

  Midnight Salvage (1995–1998)

  The Art of Translation

  Midnight Salvage

  Char

  Modotti

  Shattered Head

  Letters to a Young Poet

  Camino Real

  Seven Skins

  Rusted Legacy

  A Long Conversation

  Fox (1998–2000)

  Victory

  For This

  Regardless

  Architect

  Fox

  Messages

  Fire

  Grating

  Noctilucent Clouds

  If Your Name Is on the List

  Terza Rima

  Four Short Poems

  Rauschenberg’s Bed

  Waiting for You at the Mystery Spot

  Ends of the Earth

  The School Among the Ruins (2000–2004)

  Centaur’s Requiem

  Equinox

  Tell Me

  The School Among the Ruins

  This Evening Let’s

  There Is No One Story and One Story Only

  Usonian Journals 2000

  Transparencies

  Ritual Acts

  Alternating Current

  Dislocations: Seven Scenarios

  Wait

  Screen Door

  Tendril

  Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth (2004–2006)

  Voyage to the Denouement

  Calibrations

  Wallpaper

  In Plain Sight

  Behind the Motel

  Archaic

  Long After Stevens

  Rhyme

  Hubble Photographs: After Sappho

  This Is Not the Room

  Unknown Quantity

  Tactile Value

  Director’s Notes

  Rereading The Dead Lecturer

  Letters Censored, Shredded, Returned to Sender or Judged Unfit to Send

  The University Reopens as the Floods Recede

  Draft #2006

  Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth

  Tonight No Poetry Will Serve (2007–2010)

  Waiting for Rain, for Music

  Reading the Iliad (As If) for the First Time

  Tonight No Poetry Will Serve

  Scenes of Negotiation

  From Sickbed Shores

  Axel Avákar

  Ballade of the Poverties

  Emergency Clinic

  Confrontations

  Circum/Stances

  Winterface

  Quarto

  Black Locket

  Generosity

  Powers of Recuperation

  New and Unpublished Poems (2010–2012)

  Itinerary

  For the Young Anarchists

  Fragments of an Opera

  Liberté

  Teethsucking Bird

  Undesigned

  Suspended Lines

  Tracings

  From Strata

  Endpapers

  Notes on the Poems

  Acknowledgments

  Index of Titles and First Lines

  Copyright

  These selections were chosen by Adrienne Rich before her death.

  The volume was assembled by her editor, and in creating the collection some reformatting of pages was necessary.

  Also by Adrienne Rich

  Tonight No Poetry Will Serve: Poems 2007–2010

  A Human Eye: Essays on Art and Society, 1997–2008

  Poetry & Commitment: An Essay

  Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth: Poems 2004–2006

  The School Among the Ruins: Poems 2000–2004

  What Is Found There: Notebooks on Poetry and Politics

  The Fact of a Doorframe: Poems 1950–2000

  Fox: Poems 1998–2000

  Arts of the Possible: Essays and Conversations

  Midnight Sa
lvage: Poems 1995–1998

  Dark Fields of the Republic: Poems 1991–1995

  Collected Early Poems 1950–1970

  An Atlas of the Difficult World: Poems 1988–1991

  Time’s Power: Poems 1985–1988

  Blood, Bread, and Poetry: Selected Prose 1979–1985

  Your Native Land, Your Life: Poems

  Sources

  A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far: Poems 1978–1981

  On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose, 1966–1978

  The Dream of a Common Language: Poems 1974–1977

  Twenty-one Love Poems

  Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution

  Poems: Selected and New, 1950–1974

  Diving into the Wreck: Poems 1971–1972

  The Will to Change: Poems 1968–1970

  Leaflets: Poems 1965–1968

  Necessities of Life

  Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law: Poems 1954–1962

  The Diamond Cutters and Other Poems

  A Change of World

  Diving into the Wreck

  * * *

  Trying to Talk with a Man

  Out in this desert we are testing bombs,

  that’s why we came here.

  Sometimes I feel an underground river

  forcing its way between deformed cliffs

  an acute angle of understanding

  moving itself like a locus of the sun

  into this condemned scenery.

  What we’ve had to give up to get here—

  whole LP collections, films we starred in

  playing in the neighborhoods, bakery windows

  full of dry, chocolate-filled Jewish cookies,

  the language of love-letters, of suicide notes,

  afternoons on the riverbank

  pretending to be children

  Coming out to this desert

  we meant to change the face of

  driving among dull green succulents

  walking at noon in the ghost town

  surrounded by a silence

  that sounds like the silence of the place

  except that it came with us

  and is familiar

  and everything we were saying until now

  was an effort to blot it out—

  Coming out here we are up against it

  Out here I feel more helpless

  with you than without you

  You mention the danger

  and list the equipment

  we talk of people caring for each other

  in emergencies—laceration, thirst—

  but you look at me like an emergency

  Your dry heat feels like power

  your eyes are stars of a different magnitude

  they reflect lights that spell out: EXIT

  when you get up and pace the floor

  talking of the danger

  as if it were not ourselves

  as if we were testing anything else.

  1971

  When We Dead Awaken

  (for E. Y.

  1. Trying to tell you how

  the anatomy of the park

  through stained panes, the way

  guerrillas are advancing

  through minefields, the trash

  burning endlessly in the dump

  to return to heaven like a stain—

  everything outside our skins is an image

  of this affliction:

  stones on my table, carried by hand

  from scenes I trusted

  souvenirs of what I once described

  as happiness

  everything outside my skin

  speaks of the fault that sends me limping

  even the scars of my decisions

  even the sunblaze in the mica-vein

  even you, fellow-creature, sister,

  sitting across from me, dark with love,

  working like me to pick apart

  working with me to remake

  this trailing knitted thing, this cloth of darkness,

  this woman’s garment, trying to save the skein.

  2. The fact of being separate

  enters your livelihood like a piece of furniture

  —a chest of seventeenth-century wood

  from somewhere in the North.

  It has a huge lock shaped like a woman’s head

  but the key has not been found.

  In the compartments are other keys

  to lost doors, an eye of glass.

  Slowly you begin to add

  things of your own.

  You come and go reflected in its panels.

  You give up keeping track of anniversaries,

  you begin to write in your diaries

  more honestly than ever.

  3. The lovely landscape of southern Ohio

  betrayed by strip mining, the

  thick gold band on the adulterer’s finger

  the blurred programs of the offshore pirate station

  are causes for hesitation.

  Here in the matrix of need and anger, the

  disproof of what we thought possible

  failures of medication

  doubts of another’s existence

  —tell it over and over, the words

  get thick with unmeaning—

  yet never have we been closer to the truth

  of the lies we were living, listen to me:

  the faithfulness I can imagine would be a weed

  flowering in tar, a blue energy piercing

  the massed atoms of a bedrock disbelief.

  1971

  Incipience

  1. To live, to lie awake

  under scarred plaster

  while ice is forming over the earth

  at an hour when nothing can be done

  to further any decision

  to know the composing of the thread

  inside the spider’s body

  first atoms of the web

  visible tomorrow

  to feel the fiery future

  of every matchstick in the kitchen

  Nothing can be done

  but by inches. I write out my life

  hour by hour, word by word

  gazing into the anger of old women on the bus

  numbering the striations

  of air inside the ice cube

  imagining the existence

  of something uncreated

  this poem

  our lives

  2. A man is asleep in the next room

  We are his dreams

  We have the heads and breasts of women

  the bodies of birds of prey

  Sometimes we turn into silver serpents

  While we sit up smoking and talking of how to live

  he turns on the bed and murmurs

  A man is asleep in the next room

  A neurosurgeon enters his dream

  and begins to dissect his brain

  She does not look like a nurse

  she is absorbed in her work

  she has a stern, delicate face like Marie Curie

  She is not/might be either of us

  A man is asleep in the next room

  He has spent a whole day

  standing, throwing stones into the black pool

  which keeps its blackness

  Outside the frame of his dream we are stumbling up the hill

  hand in hand, stumbling and guiding each other

  over the scarred volcanic rock

  1971

  The Mirror in Which Two Are Seen As One

  1.

  She is the one you call sister.

  Her simplest act has glamor,

  as when she scales a fish the knife

  flashes in her long fingers

  no motion wasted or when

  rapidly talking of love

  she steel-wool burnishes

  the battered kettle

  Love-apples cramp you sideways

  with sudden emptin
ess

  the cereals glutting you, the grains

  ripe clusters picked by hand

  Love: the refrigerator

  with open door

  the ripe steaks bleeding

  their hearts out in plastic film

  the whipped butter, the apricots

  the sour leftovers

  A crate is waiting in the orchard

  for you to fill it

  your hands are raw with scraping

  the sharp bark, the thorns

  of this succulent tree

  Pick, pick, pick

  this harvest is a failure

  the juice runs down your cheekbones

  like sweat or tears

  2.

  She is the one you call sister

  you blaze like lightning about the room

  flicker around her like fire

  dazzle yourself in her wide eyes

  listing her unfelt needs

  thrusting the tenets of your life

  into her hands

  She moves through a world of India print

  her body dappled

  with softness, the paisley swells at her hip

  walking the street in her cotton shift

  buying fresh figs because you love them

  photographing the ghetto because you took her there

  Why are you crying dry up your tears

  we are sisters

  words fail you in the stare of her hunger

  you hand her another book

  scored by your pencil

  you hand her a record

  of two flutes in India reciting

  3.

  Late summer night the insects

  fry in the yellowed lightglobe

  your skin burns gold in its light

  In this mirror, who are you? Dreams of the nunnery

  with its discipline, the nursery

  with its nurse, the hospital

  where all the powerful ones are masked

  the graveyard where you sit on the graves

  of women who died in childbirth

  and women who died at birth

  Dreams of your sister’s birth

  your mother dying in childbirth over and over

  not knowing how to stop

  bearing you over and over

  your mother dead and you unborn

  your two hands grasping your head

  drawing it down against the blade of life

  your nerves the nerves of a midwife

  learning her trade

  1971

  From the Prison House

  Underneath my lids another eye has opened

  it looks nakedly

  at the light

  that soaks in from the world of pain

  even when I sleep

  Steadily it regards

  everything I am going through

  and more

  it sees the clubs and rifle-butts

  rising and falling

  it sees

 

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