Later Poems Selected and New

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Later Poems Selected and New Page 6

by Adrienne Rich


  start up

  I hear your voice: disloyalty betrayal

  stinging the wires

  I stuff the old leaves into sacks

  and still they fall and still

  I see my work undone

  One shivering rainswept afternoon

  and the whole job to be done over

  I can’t know what you know

  unless you tell me

  there are gashes in our understandings

  of this world

  We came together in a common

  fury of direction

  barely mentioning difference

  (what drew our finest hairs

  to fire

  the deep, difficult troughs

  unvoiced)

  I fell through a basement railing

  the first day of school and cut my forehead open—

  did I ever tell you? More than forty years

  and I still remember smelling my own blood

  like the smell of a new schoolbook

  And did you ever tell me

  how your mother called you in from play

  and from whom? To what? These atoms filmed by ordinary dust

  that common life we each and all bent out of orbit from

  to which we must return simply to say

  this is where I came from

  this is what I knew

  The past is not a husk yet change goes on

  Freedom. It isn’t once, to walk out

  under the Milky Way, feeling the rivers

  of light, the fields of dark—

  freedom is daily, prose-bound, routine

  remembering. Putting together, inch by inch

  the starry worlds. From all the lost collections.

  1979

  What Is Possible

  A clear night if the mind were clear

  If the mind were simple, if the mind were bare

  of all but the most classic necessities:

  wooden spoon knife mirror

  cup lamp chisel

  a comb passing through hair beside a window

  a sheet

  thrown back by the sleeper

  A clear night in which two planets

  seem to clasp each other in which the earthly grasses

  shift like silk in starlight

  If the mind were clear

  and if the mind were simple you could take this mind

  this particular state and say

  This is how I would live if I could choose:

  this is what is possible

  A clear night. But the mind

  of the woman imagining all this the mind

  that allows all this to be possible

  is not clear as the night

  is never simple cannot clasp

  its truths as the transiting planets clasp each other

  does not so easily

  work free from remorse

  does not so easily

  manage the miracle

  for which mind is famous

  or used to be famous

  does not at will become abstract and pure

  this woman’s mind

  does not even will that miracle

  having a different mission

  in the universe

  If the mind were simple if the mind were bare

  it might resemble a room a swept interior

  but how could this now be possible

  given the voices of the ghost-towns

  their tiny and vast configurations

  needing to be deciphered

  the oracular night

  with its densely working sounds

  If it could ever come down to anything like

  a comb passing through hair beside a window

  no more than that

  a sheet

  thrown back by the sleeper

  but the mind

  of the woman thinking this is wrapped in battle

  is on another mission

  a stalk of grass dried feathery weed rooted in snow

  in frozen air stirring a fierce wand graphing

  Her finger also tracing

  pages of a book

  knowing better than the poem she reads

  knowing through the poem

  through ice-feathered panes

  the winter

  flexing its talons

  the hawk-wind

  poised to kill

  1980

  For Ethel Rosenberg

  convicted, with her husband, of “conspiracy to commit espionage”: killed in the electric chair June 19, 1953

  1.

  Europe 1953:

  throughout my random sleepwalk

  the words

  scratched on walls, on pavements

  painted over railway arches

  Liberez les Rosenberg!

  Escaping from home I found

  home everywhere:

  the Jewish question, Communism

  marriage itself

  a question of loyalty

  or punishment

  my Jewish father writing me

  letters of seventeen pages

  finely inscribed harangues

  questions of loyalty

  and punishment

  One week before my wedding

  that couple gets the chair

  the volts grapple her, don’t

  kill her fast enough

  Liberez les Rosenberg!

  I hadn’t realized

  our family arguments were so important

  my narrow understanding

  of crime of punishment

  no language for this torment

  mystery of that marriage

  always both faces

  on every front page in the world

  Something so shocking so

  unfathomable

  it must be pushed aside

  2.

  She sank however into my soul A weight of sadness

  I hardly can register how deep

  her memory has sunk that wife and mother

  like so many

  who seemed to get nothing out of any of it

  except her children

  that daughter of a family

  like so many

  needing its female monster

  she, actually wishing to be an artist

  wanting out of poverty

  possibly also really wanting

  revolution

  that woman strapped in the chair

  no fear and no regrets

  charged by posterity

  not with selling secrets to the Communists

  but with wanting to distinguish

  herself being a bad daughter a bad mother

  And I walking to my wedding

  by the same token a bad daughter a bad sister

  my forces focussed

  on that hardly revolutionary effort

  Her life and death the possible

  ranges of disloyalty

  so painful so unfathomable

  they must be pushed aside

  ignored for years

  3.

  Her mother testifies against her

  Her brother testifies against her

  After her death

  she becomes a natural prey for pornographers

  her death itself a scene

  her body sizzling half-strapped whipped like a sail

  She becomes the extremest victim

  described nonetheless as rigid of will

  what are her politics by then no one knows

  Her figure sinks into my soul

  a drowned statue

  sealed in lead

  For years it has lain there unabsorbed

  first as part of that dead couple

  on the front pages of the world the week

  I gave myself in marriage

  then slowly severing drifting apart

  a separate death a life unto itself

  no longer the Rosenbergs

  no longer the chosen scapegoat
/>
  the family monster

  till I hear how she sang

  a prostitute to sleep

  in the Women’s House of Detention

  Ethel Greenglass Rosenberg would you

  have marched to take back the night

  collected signatures

  for battered women who kill

  What would you have to tell us

  would you have burst the net

  4.

  Why do I even want to call her up

  to console my pain (she feels no pain at all)

  why do I wish to put such questions

  to ease myself (she feels no pain at all

  she finally burned to death like so many)

  why all this exercise of hindsight?

  since if I imagine her at all

  I have to imagine first

  the pain inflicted on her by women

  her mother testifies against her

  her sister-in-law testifies against her

  and how she sees it

  not the impersonal forces

  not the historical reasons

  why they might have hated her strength

  If I have held her at arm’s length till now

  if I have still believed it was

  my loyalty, my punishment at stake

  if I dare imagine her surviving

  I must be fair to what she must have lived through

  I must allow her to be at last

  political in her ways not in mine

  her urgencies perhaps impervious to mine

  defining revolution as she defines it

  or, bored to the marrow of her bones

  with “politics”

  bored with the vast boredom of long pain

  small; tiny in fact; in her late sixties

  liking her room her private life

  living alone perhaps

  no one you could interview

  maybe filling a notebook herself

  with secrets she has never sold

  1980

  Heroines

  Exceptional

  even deviant

  you draw your long skirts

  across the nineteenth century

  Your mind

  burns long after death

  not like the harbor beacon

  but like a pyre of driftwood

  on the beach

  You are spared

  illiteracy

  death by pneumonia

  teeth which leave the gums

  the seamstress’ clouded eyes

  the mill-girl’s shortening breath

  by a collection

  of circumstances

  soon to be known as

  class privilege

  The law says you can possess nothing

  in a world

  where property is everything

  You belong first to your father

  then to him who

  chooses you

  if you fail to marry

  you are without recourse

  unable to earn

  a workingman’s salary

  forbidden to vote

  forbidden to speak

  in public

  if married you are legally dead

  the law says

  you may not bequeath property

  save to your children

  or male kin

  that your husband

  has the right

  of the slaveholder

  to hunt down and re-possess you

  should you escape

  You may inherit slaves

  but have no power to free them

  your skin is fair

  you have been taught that light

  came

  to the Dark Continent

  with white power

  that the Indians

  live in filth

  and occult animal rites

  Your mother wore corsets

  to choke her spirit

  which if you refuse

  you are jeered for refusing

  you have heard many sermons

  and have carried

  your own interpretations

  locked in your heart

  You are a woman

  strong in health

  through a collection

  of circumstances

  soon to be known

  as class privilege

  which if you break

  the social compact

  you lose outright

  When you open your mouth in public

  human excrement

  is flung at you

  you are exceptional

  in personal circumstance

  in indignation

  you give up believing

  in protection

  in Scripture

  in man-made laws

  respectable as you look

  you are an outlaw

  Your mind burns

  not like the harbor beacon

  but like a fire

  of fiercer origin

  you begin speaking out

  and a great gust of freedom

  rushes in with your words

  yet still you speak

  in the shattered language

  of a partial vision

  You draw your long skirts

  deviant

  across the nineteenth century

  registering injustice

  failing to make it whole

  How can I fail to love

  your clarity and fury

  how can I give you

  all your due

  take courage from your courage

  honor your exact

  legacy as it is

  recognizing

  as well

  that it is not enough?

  1980

  Grandmothers

  1. Mary Gravely Jones

  We had no petnames, no diminutives for you,

  always the formal guest under my father’s roof:

  you were “Grandmother Jones” and you visited rarely.

  I see you walking up and down the garden,

  restless, southern-accented, reserved, you did not seem

  my mother’s mother or anyone’s grandmother.

  You were Mary, widow of William, and no matriarch,

  yet smoldering to the end with frustrate life,

  ideas nobody listened to, least of all my father.

  One summer night you sat with my sister and me

  in the wooden glider long after twilight,

  holding us there with streams of pent-up words.

  You could quote every poet I had ever heard of,

  had read The Opium Eater, Amiel and Bernard Shaw,

  your green eyes looked clenched against opposition.

  You married straight out of the convent school,

  your background was country, you left an unperformed

  typescript of a play about Burr and Hamilton,

  you were impotent and brilliant, no one cared

  about your mind, you might have ended

  elsewhere than in that glider

  reciting your unwritten novels to the children.

  2. Hattie Rice Rich

  Your sweetness of soul was a mystery to me,

  you who slip-covered chairs, glued broken china,

  lived out of a wardrobe trunk in our guestroom

  summer and fall, then took the Pullman train

  in your darkblue dress and straw hat, to Alabama,

  shuttling half-yearly between your son and daughter.

  Your sweetness of soul was a convenience for everyone,

  how you rose with the birds and children, boiled your own egg,

  fished for hours on a pier, your umbrella spread,

  took the street-car downtown shopping

  endlessly for your son’s whims, the whims of genius,

  kept your accounts in ledgers, wrote letters daily.

  All through World War Two the forbidden word

  Jew
ish was barely uttered in your son’s house;

  your anger flared over inscrutable things.

  Once I saw you crouched on the guestroom bed,

  knuckles blue-white around the bedpost, sobbing

  your one brief memorable scene of rebellion:

  you didn’t want to go back South that year.

  You were never “Grandmother Rich” but “Anana”;

  you had money of your own but you were homeless,

  Hattie, widow of Samuel, and no matriarch,

  dispersed among the children and grandchildren.

  3. Granddaughter

  Easier to encapsulate your lives

  in a slide-show of impressions given and taken,

  to play the child or victim, the projectionist,

  easier to invent a script for each of you,

  myself still at the center,

  than to write words in which you might have found

  yourselves, looked up at me and said

  “Yes, I was like that; but I was something more. . . .”

  Danville, Virginia; Vicksburg, Mississippi;

  the “war between the states” a living memory

  its aftermath the plague-town closing

  its gates, trying to cure itself with poisons.

  I can almost touch that little town. . . .

  a little white town rimmed with Negroes,

  making a deep shadow on the whiteness.

  Born a white woman, Jewish or of curious mind

  —twice an outsider, still believing in inclusion—

  in those defended hamlets of half-truth

  broken in two by one strange idea,

  “blood” the all-powerful, awful theme—

  what were the lessons to be learned? If I believe

  the daughter of one of you—Amnesia was the answer.

  1980

  The Spirit of Place

  For Michelle Cliff

  I.

  Over the hills in Shutesbury, Leverett

  driving with you in spring road

  like a streambed unwinding downhill

  fiddlehead ferns uncurling

  spring peepers ringing sweet and cold

  while we talk yet again

  of dark and light, of blackness, whiteness, numbness

  rammed through the heart like a stake

  trying to pull apart the threads

  from the dried blood of the old murderous uncaring

  halting on bridges in bloodlight

  where the freshets call out freedom

  to frog-thrilling swamp, skunk-cabbage

  trying to sense the conscience of these hills

  knowing how the single-minded, pure

  solutions bleached and dessicated

  within their perfect flasks

  for it was not enough to be New England

  as every event since has testified:

  New England’s a shadow-country, always was

  it was not enough to be for abolition

  while the spirit of the masters

  flickered in the abolitionist’s heart

  it was not enough to name ourselves anew

 

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