Later Poems Selected and New

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Later Poems Selected and New Page 7

by Adrienne Rich

while the spirit of the masters

  calls the freedwoman to forget the slave

  With whom do you believe your lot is cast?

  If there’s a conscience in these hills

  it hurls that question

  unquenched, relentless, to our ears

  wild and witchlike

  ringing every swamp

  II.

  The mountain laurel in bloom

  constructed like needlework

  tiny half-pulled stitches piercing

  flushed and stippled petals

  here in these woods it grows wild

  midsummer moonrise turns it opal

  the night breathes with its clusters

  protected species

  meaning endangered

  Here in these hills

  this valley we have felt

  a kind of freedom

  planting the soil have known

  hours of a calm, intense and mutual solitude

  reading and writing

  trying to clarify connect

  past and present near and far

  the Alabama quilt

  the Botswana basket

  history the dark crumble

  of last year’s compost

  filtering softly through your living hand

  but here as well we face

  instantaneous violence ambush male

  dominion on a back road

  to escape in a locked car windows shut

  skimming the ditch your split-second

  survival reflex taking on the world

  as it is not as we wish it

  as it is not as we work for it

  to be

  III.

  Strangers are an endangered species

  In Emily Dickinson’s house in Amherst

  cocktails are served the scholars

  gather in celebration

  their pious or clinical legends

  festoon the walls like imitations

  of period patterns

  (. . . and, as I feared, my “life” was made a “victim”)

  The remnants pawed the relics

  the cult assembled in the bedroom

  and you whose teeth were set on edge by churches

  resist your shrine

  escape

  are found

  nowhere

  unless in words (your own)

  All we are strangers—dear—The world is not

  acquainted with us, because we are not acquainted

  with her. And Pilgrims!—Do you hesitate? and

  Soldiers oft—some of us victors, but those I do

  not see tonight owing to the smoke.—We are hungry,

  and thirsty, sometimes—We are barefoot—and cold—

  This place is large enough for both of us

  the river-fog will do for privacy

  this is my third and last address to you

  with the hands of a daughter I would cover you

  from all intrusion even my own

  saying rest to your ghost

  with the hands of a sister I would leave your hands

  open or closed as they prefer to lie

  and ask no more of who or why or wherefore

  with the hands of a mother I would close the door

  on the rooms you’ve left behind

  and silently pick up my fallen work

  IV.

  The river-fog will do for privacy

  on the low road a breath

  here, there, a cloudiness floating on the blacktop

  sunflower heads turned black and bowed

  the seas of corn a stubble

  the old routes flowing north, if not to freedom

  no human figure now in sight

  (with whom do you believe your lot is cast?)

  only the functional figure of the scarecrow

  the cut corn, ground to shreds, heaped in a shape

  like an Indian burial mound

  a haunted-looking, ordinary thing

  The work of winter starts fermenting in my head

  how with the hands of a lover or a midwife

  to hold back till the time is right

  force nothing, be unforced

  accept no giant miracles of growth

  by counterfeit light

  trust roots, allow the days to shrink

  give credence to these slender means

  wait without sadness and with grave impatience

  here in the north where winter has a meaning

  where the heaped colors suddenly go ashen

  where nothing is promised

  learn what an underground journey

  has been, might have to be; speak in a winter code

  let fog, sleet, translate; wind, carry them.

  V.

  Orion plunges like a drunken hunter

  over the Mohawk Trail a parallelogram

  slashed with two cuts of steel

  A night so clear that every constellation

  stands out from an undifferentiated cloud

  of stars, a kind of aura

  All the figures up there look violent to me

  as a pogrom on Christmas Eve in some old country

  I want our own earth not the satellites, our

  world as it is if not as it might be

  then as it is: male dominion, gangrape, lynching, pogrom

  the Mohawk wraiths in their tracts of leafless birch

  watching: will we do better?

  The tests I need to pass are prescribed by the spirits

  of place who understand travel but not amnesia

  The world as it is: not as her users boast

  damaged beyond reclamation by their using

  Ourselves as we are in these painful motions

  of staying cognizant: some part of us always

  out beyond ourselves

  knowing knowing knowing

  Are we all in training for something we don’t name?

  to exact reparation for things

  done long ago to us and to those who did not

  survive what was done to them whom we ought to honor

  with grief with fury with action

  On a pure night on a night when pollution

  seems absurdity when the undamaged planet seems to turn

  like a bowl of crystal in black ether

  they are the piece of us that lies out there

  knowing knowing knowing

  1980

  Frame

  Winter twilight. She comes out of the lab-

  oratory, last class of the day

  a pile of notebooks slung in her knapsack, coat

  zipped high against the already swirling

  evening sleet. The wind is wicked and the

  busses slower than usual. On her mind

  is organic chemistry and the issue

  of next month’s rent and will it be possible to

  bypass the professor with the coldest eyes

  to get a reference for graduate school,

  and whether any of them, even those who smile

  can see, looking at her, a biochemist

  or a marine biologist, which of the faces

  can she trust to see her at all, either today

  or in any future. The busses are worm-slow in the

  quickly gathering dark. I don’t know her. I am

  standing though somewhere just outside the frame

  of all this, trying to see. At her back

  the newly finished building suddenly looks

  like shelter, it has glass doors, lighted halls

  presumably heat. The wind is wicked. She throws a

  glance down the street, sees no bus coming and runs

  up the newly constructed steps into the newly

  constructed hallway. I am standing all this time

  just beyond the frame, trying to see. She runs

  her hand through the crystals of sleet about to melt

  on her hair. She shifts the weight of the books

>   on her back. It isn’t warm here exactly but it’s

  out of that wind. Through the glass

  door panels she can watch for the bus through the thickening

  weather. Watching so, she is not

  watching for the white man who watches the building

  who has been watching her. This is Boston 1979.

  I am standing somewhere at the edge of the frame

  watching the man, we are both white, who watches the building

  telling her to move on, get out of the hallway.

  I can hear nothing because I am not supposed to be

  present but I can see her gesturing

  out toward the street at the wind-raked curb

  I see her drawing her small body up

  against the implied charges. The man

  goes away. Her body is different now.

  It is holding together with more than a hint of fury

  and more than a hint of fear. She is smaller, thinner

  more fragile-looking than I am. But I am not supposed to be

  there. I am just outside the frame

  of this action when the anonymous white man

  returns with a white police officer. Then she starts

  to leave into the wind-raked night but already

  the policeman is going to work, the handcuffs are on her

  wrists he is throwing her down his knee has gone into

  her breast he is dragging her down the stairs I am unable

  to hear a sound of all this all that I know is what

  I can see from this position there is no soundtrack

  to go with this and I understand at once

  it is meant to be in silence that this happens

  in silence that he pushes her into the car

  banging her head in silence that she cries out

  in silence that she tries to explain she was only

  waiting for a bus

  in silence that he twists the flesh of her thigh

  with his nails in silence that her tears begin to flow

  that she pleads with the other policeman as if

  he could be trusted to see her at all

  in silence that in the precinct she refuses to give her name

  in silence that they throw her into the cell

  in silence that she stares him

  straight in the face in silence that he sprays her

  in her eyes with Mace in silence that she sinks her teeth

  into his hand in silence that she is charged

  with trespass assault and battery in

  silence that at the sleet-swept corner her bus

  passes without stopping and goes on

  in silence. What I am telling you

  is told by a white woman who they will say

  was never there. I say I am there.

  1980

  A Vision

  (thinking of Simone Weil)

  You. There, with your gazing eyes

  Your blazing eyes

  A hand or something passes across the sun. Your eyeballs slacken,

  you are free for a moment. Then it comes back: this

  test of the capacity to keep in focus

  this

  unfair struggle with the forces of perception

  this enforced

  (but at that word your attention changes)

  this enforced loss of self

  in a greater thing of course, who has ever

  lost herself in something smaller?

  You with your cornea and iris and their power

  you with your stubborn lids that have stayed open

  at the moment of pouring liquid steel

  you with your fear of blinding

  Here it is. I am writing this almost

  involuntarily on a bad, a junky typewriter that skips

  and slides the text

  Still these are mechanical problems, writing to you

  is another kind of problem

  and even so the words create themselves

  What is your own will that it

  can so transfix you

  why are you forced to take this test

  over and over and call it God

  why not call it you and get it over

  you with your hatred of enforcement

  and your fear of blinding?

  1981

  Your Native Land, Your Life

  * * *

  Sources

  For Helen Smelser

  since 1949

  I

  Sixteen years. The narrow, rough-gullied backroads

  almost the same. The farms: almost the same,

  a new barn here, a new roof there, a rusting car,

  collapsed sugar-house, trailer, new young wife

  trying to make a lawn instead of a dooryard,

  new names, old kinds of names: Rocquette, Desmarais,

  Clark, Pierce, Stone. Gossier. No names of mine.

  The vixen I met at twilight on Route 5

  south of Willoughby: long dead. She was an omen

  to me, surviving, herding her cubs

  in the silvery bend of the road

  in nineteen sixty-five.

  Shapes of things: so much the same

  they feel like eternal forms: the house and barn

  on the rise above May Pond; the brow of Pisgah;

  the face of milkweed blooming,

  brookwater pleating over slanted granite,

  boletus under pine, the half-composted needles

  it broke through patterned on its skin.

  Shape of queen anne’s lace, with the drop of blood.

  Bladder-campion veined with purple.

  Multifoliate heal-all.

  II

  I refuse to become a seeker for cures.

  Everything that has ever

  helped me has come through what already

  lay stored in me. Old things, diffuse, unnamed, lie strong

  across my heart.

  This is from where

  my strength comes, even when I miss my strength

  even when it turns on me

  like a violent master.

  III

  From where? the voice asks coldly.

  This is the voice in cold morning air

  that pierces dreams. From where does your strength come?

  Old things . . .

  From where does your strength come, you Southern Jew?

  split at the root, raised in a castle of air?

  Yes. I expected this. I have known for years

  the question was coming. From where

  (not from these, surely,

  Protestant separatists, Jew-baiters, nightriders

  who fired in Irasburg in nineteen-sixty-eight

  on a black family newly settled in these hills)

  From where

  the dew grows thick late August on the fierce green grass

  and on the wooden sill and on the stone

  the mountains stand in an extraordinary

  point of no return though still are green

  collapsed shed-boards gleam like pewter in the dew

  the realms of touch-me-not fiery with tiny tongues

  cover the wild ground of the woods

  IV

  With whom do you believe your lot is cast?

  From where does your strength come?

  I think somehow, somewhere

  every poem of mine must repeat those questions

  which are not the same. There is a whom, a where

  that is not chosen that is given and sometimes falsely given

  in the beginning we grasp whatever we can

  to survive

  V

  All during World War II

  I told myself I had some special destiny:

  there had to be a reason

  I was not living in a bombed-out house

  or cellar hiding out with rats

  there had to be a reason

  I was growing up safe, American

/>   with sugar rationed in a Mason jar

  split at the root white-skinned social christian

  neither gentile nor Jew

  through the immense silence

  of the Holocaust

  I had no idea of what I had been spared

  still less of the women and men my kin

  the Jews of Vicksburg or Birmingham

  whose lives must have been strategies no less

  than the vixen’s on Route 5

  VI

  If they had played the flute, or chess

  I was told I was not told what they told

  their children when the Klan rode

  how they might have seen themselves

  a chosen people

  of shopkeepers

  clinging by strategy to a way of life

  that had its own uses for them

  proud of their length of sojourn in America

  deploring the late-comers the peasants from Russia

  I saw my father building

  his rootless ideology

  his private castle in air

  in that most dangerous place, the family home

  we were the chosen people

  In the beginning we grasp whatever we can

  VII

  For years I struggled with you: your categories, your theories, your will, the cruelty which came inextricable from your love. For years all arguments I carried on in my head were with you. I saw myself, the eldest daughter raised as a son, taught to study but not to pray, taught to hold reading and writing sacred: the eldest daughter in a house with no son, she who must overthrow the father, take what he taught her and use it against him. All this in a castle of air, the floating world of the assimilated who know and deny they will always be aliens.

  After your death I met you again as the face of patriarchy, could name at last precisely the principle you embodied, there was an ideology at last which let me dispose of you, identify the suffering you caused, hate you righteously as part of a system, the kingdom of the fathers. I saw the power and arrogance of the male as your true watermark; I did not see beneath it the suffering of the Jew, the alien stamp you bore, because you had deliberately arranged that it should be invisible to me. It is only now, under a powerful, womanly lens, that I can decipher your suffering and deny no part of my own.

  VIII

  Back there in Maryland the stars

  showed liquescent, diffuse

  in the breathless summer nights

  the constellations melted

  I thought I was leaving a place of enervation

  heading north where the Drinking Gourd

  stood cold and steady at last

  pointing the way

  I thought I was following a track of freedom

  and for awhile it was

  IX

  Why has my imagination stayed

 

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