Book Read Free

Strike Sparks

Page 1

by Sharon Olds




  ALSO BY SHARON OLDS

  Satan Says

  The Dead and the Living

  The Gold Cell

  The Father

  The Wellspring

  Blood, Tin, Straw

  The Unswept Room

  One Secret Thing

  THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK

  PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

  Copyright © 2004 by Sharon Olds

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed by Random House, Inc., New York.

  www.aaknopf.com

  Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  Grateful acknowledgment is made to the University of Pittsburgh Press for permission to reprint “Indictment of Senior Officials,” “The Sisters of Sexual Treasure,” “Station,” “Monarchs,” “Infinite Bliss,” “The Language of the Brag,” “The Talk,” and “I Could Not Tell” from Satan Says by Sharon Olds. Copyright © 1980 by Sharon Olds. Reprinted by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press.

  All other poems in this collection have been previously published in the following Alfred A. Knopf works: The Dead and the Living (1984); The Gold Cell (1987); The Father (1992); The Wellspring (1996); Blood, Tin, Straw (1999); The Unswept Room (2002)

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Olds, Sharon.

  Strike sparks: selected poems, 1980–2002 / Sharon Olds.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-54760-6

  I. Title.

  PS3565.l34A6 2004

  811′.5—dc2

  2004044150

  Published October 4, 2004

  v3.1

  For Phil and Franny

  I

  take them up like the male and female

  paper dolls and bang them together

  at the hip, like chips of flint, as if to

  strike sparks from them, I say

  Do what you are going to do, and I will tell about it.

  Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  from Satan Says (1980)

  Indictment of Senior Officers

  The Sisters of Sexual Treasure

  Station

  Monarchs

  Infinite Bliss

  The Language of the Brag

  The Talk

  I Could Not Tell

  from The Dead and the Living (1984)

  Ideographs

  Photograph of the Girl

  Race Riot, Tulsa, 1921

  Of All the Dead That Have Come to Me, This Once

  Miscarriage

  My Father Snoring

  The Moment

  The Connoisseuse of Slugs

  New Mother

  Sex Without Love

  Ecstasy

  Exclusive

  Rite of Passage

  35/10

  The Missing Boy

  Bestiary

  The One Girl at the Boys’ Party

  from The Gold Cell (1987)

  Summer Solstice, New York City

  On the Subway

  The Food-Thief

  The Girl

  The Pope’s Penis

  When

  I Go Back to May 1937

  Alcatraz

  Why My Mother Made Me

  After 37 Years My Mother Apologizes for My Childhood

  Cambridge Elegy

  Topography

  I Cannot Forget the Woman in the Mirror

  The Moment the Two Worlds Meet

  Little Things

  The Month of June: 13½

  Looking at Them Asleep

  from The Father (1992)

  The Glass

  His Stillness

  The Lifting

  The Race

  Wonder

  The Feelings

  His Ashes

  Beyond Harm

  The Underlife

  Natural History

  The Ferryer

  I Wanted to Be There When My Father Died

  Waste Sonata

  My Father Speaks to Me from the Dead

  from The Wellspring (1996)

  My Parents’ Wedding Night, 1937

  Japanese-American Farmhouse, California, 1942

  Killing My Sister’s Fish

  Mrs. Krikorian

  First

  Adolescence

  May 1968

  Bathing the New Born

  41, Alone, No Gerbil

  Physics

  My Son the Man

  First Formal

  High School Senior

  The Pediatrician Retires

  This Hour

  Full Summer

  Am and Am Not

  True Love

  from Blood, Tin, Straw (1999)

  The Promise

  Know-Nothing

  Dear Heart,

  19

  That Day

  After Punishment Was Done with Me

  What Is the Earth?

  Leaving the Island

  The Prepositions

  1954

  Cool Breeze

  For and Against Knowledge

  The Spouses Waking Up in the Hotel Mirror

  You Kindly

  Where Will Love Go?

  The Protestor

  The Summer-Camp Bus Pulls Away from the Curb

  The Talkers

  First Thanksgiving

  The Native

  The Knowing

  from The Unswept Room (2002)

  Kindergarten Abecedarian

  Bible Study: 71 B.C.E.

  5¢ a Peek

  Grey Girl

  Still Life in Landscape

  The Wedding Vow

  His Costume

  First Weeks

  The Clasp

  Diaphragm Aria

  The Window

  Fish Oil

  Wonder as Wander

  The Shyness

  April, New Hampshire

  The Untangling

  The Learner

  Heaven to Be

  The Tending

  Psalm

  The Unswept

  A Note About the Author

  from Satan Says

  Indictment of Senior Officers

  In the hallway above the pit of the stairwell

  my sister and I would meet, at night,

  eyes and hair dark, bodies

  like twins in the dark. We did not talk of

  the two who had brought us there, like generals,

  for their own reasons. We sat, buddies in cold

  war, her living body the proof of

  my living body, our backs to the mild

  shell hole of the stairs, down which

  we would have to go, knowing nothing

  but what we had learned there,

  so that now

  when I think of my sister, the holes of the needles

  in her hips and in the creases of her elbows,

  and the marks from the doctor husband’s beatings,

  and the scars of the operations, I feel the

  rage of a soldier standing over the body of

  someone sent to the front lines

  without training

  or a weapon.

  The Sisters of Sexual Treasure

  As soon as my sister and I got out of our

  mother’s house, all we wanted to

  do was fuck, obliterate

  her tiny sparrow body and narrow

  grasshopper legs. The men’s bodies

 
were like our father’s body! The massive

  hocks, flanks, thighs, male

  structure of the hips, knees, calves—

  we could have him there, the steep forbidden

  buttocks, backs of the knees, the cock

  in our mouth, ah the cock in our mouth.

  Like explorers who

  discover a lost city, we went

  nuts with joy, undressed the men

  slowly and carefully, as if

  uncovering buried artifacts that

  proved our theory of the lost culture:

  that if Mother said it wasn’t there,

  it was there.

  Station

  Coming in off the dock after writing,

  I approached the house,

  and saw your fine grandee face

  lit by a lamp with a parchment shade

  the color of flame.

  An elegant hand on your beard. Your tapered

  eyes found me on the lawn. You looked

  as the lord looks down from a narrow window

  and you are descended from lords. Calmly, with no

  hint of shyness, you examined me,

  the wife who runs out on the dock to write

  as soon as one of the children is in bed,

  leaving the other to you.

  Your thin

  mouth, flexible as an archer’s bow,

  did not curve. We spent a long moment

  in the truth of our situation, the poems

  heavy as poached game hanging from my hands.

  Monarchs

  (for P. W.)

  All morning, as I sit, thinking of you,

  the Monarchs are passing. Seven stories up,

  to the left of the river, they are making their way

  south, their wings the dry red of

  your hands like butchers’ hands, the raised

  veins of their wings like your scars.

  I could scarcely feel your massive rough

  palms on me, your touch was so light,

  the chapped scrape of an insect’s leg

  across my breast. No one had ever

  touched me before. I didn’t know enough to

  open my legs, but felt your thighs,

  feathered with red, gold hairs,

  opening

  between my legs

  like a pair of wings.

  The hinged print of my blood on your thighs—

  a winged creature, pinned there—

  and then you left, as you were to leave

  over and over, the butterflies moving

  in masses past my window, floating

  south to their transformation, crossing over

  borders in the night, the diffuse blood-red

  cloud of them, my body under yours,

  the beauty and silence of the great migrations.

  Infinite Bliss

  When I first saw snow cover the air

  with its delicate hoofprints, I said I would never

  live where it did not snow, and when

  the first man tore his way into me,

  and tore up the passageway,

  and came to the small room, and pulled the

  curtain aside that I might enter, I knew I could

  never live apart from them

  again, the strange race with their massive

  bloodied hooves. Today we lay in our

  small bedroom, dark gold with

  reflected snow, and while the flakes climbed

  delicately down the sky, you

  came into me, pressing aside

  the curtain, revealing the small room,

  dark gold with reflected snow,

  where we lay, and where you entered me and

  pressed the curtain aside, revealing

  the small room, dark gold with

  reflected snow, where we lay.

  The Language of the Brag

  I have wanted excellence in the knife-throw,

  I have wanted to use my exceptionally strong and accurate arms

  and my straight posture and quick electric muscles

  to achieve something at the center of a crowd,

  the blade piercing the bark deep,

  the haft slowly and heavily vibrating like the cock.

  I have wanted some epic use for my excellent body,

  some heroism, some American achievement

  beyond the ordinary for my extraordinary self,

  magnetic and tensile, I have stood by the sandlot

  and watched the boys play.

  I have wanted courage, I have thought about fire

  and the crossing of waterfalls, I have dragged around

  my belly big with cowardice and safety,

  stool charcoal from the iron pills,

  huge breasts leaking colostrum,

  legs swelling, hands swelling,

  face swelling and reddening, hair

  falling out, inner sex

  stabbed again and again with pain like a knife.

  I have lain down.

  I have lain down and sweated and shaken

  and passed blood and shit and water and

  slowly alone in the center of a circle I have

  passed the new person out

  and they have lifted the new person free of the act

  and wiped the new person free of that

  language of blood like praise all over the body.

  I have done what you wanted to do, Walt Whitman,

  Allen Ginsberg, I have done this thing,

  I and the other women this exceptional

  act with the exceptional heroic body,

  this giving birth, this glistening verb,

  and I am putting my proud American boast

  right here with the others.

  The Talk

  In the sunless wooden room at noon

  the mother had a talk with her daughter.

  The rudeness could not go on, the meanness

  to her little brother, the selfishness.

  The eight-year-old sat on the bed

  in the corner of the room, her irises distilled as

  the last drops of something, her firm

  face melting, reddening,

  silver flashes in her eyes like distant

  bodies of water glimpsed through woods.

  She took it and took it and broke, crying out

  I hate being a person! diving

  into the mother

  as if

  into

  a deep pond—and she cannot swim,

  the child cannot swim.

  I Could Not Tell

  I could not tell I had jumped off that bus,

  that bus in motion, with my child in my arms,

  because I did not know it. I believed my own story:

  I had fallen, or the bus had started up

  when I had one foot in the air.

  I would not remember the tightening of my jaw,

  the irk that I’d missed my stop, the step out

  into the air, the clear child

  gazing about her in the air as I plunged

  to one knee on the street, scraped it, twisted it,

  the bus skidding to a stop, the driver

  jumping out, my daughter laughing

  Do it again.

  I have never done it

  again. I have been very careful.

  I have kept an eye on that nice young mother

  who lightly leapt

  off the moving vehicle

  onto the stopped street, her life

  in her hands, her life’s life in her hands.

  from The Dead and the Living

  Ideographs

  (a photograph of China, 1905)

  The handmade scaffolds, boards in the form of

  ideographs the size of a person

  lean against a steep wall

  of dressed stone. One is the simple

  shape of a man. The man on it

  is asleep, his arms nailed to the wood.


  No timber is wasted; his fingertips

  curl in at the very end of the plank

  as a child’s hand opens in sleep.

  The other man is awake—he looks

  directly at us. He is fixed to a more

  complex scaffold, a diagonal crosspiece

  pointing one arm up, one down,

  and his legs are bent, the spikes through his ankles

  holding them up, off the ground,

  his knees cocked, the folds of his robe flowing

  sideways as if he were suspended in the air

  in flight, his naked legs bared.

  They await execution, tilted to the wall

  as you’d prop up a tool until you needed it.

  They’ll be shouldered up over the crowd and

  carried through the screaming. The sleeper will wake.

  The twisted one will fly above the faces, his

  garment rippling.

  Here there is still the backstage quiet,

  the shadow at the bottom of the wall, the props

  leaning in the grainy half-dusk.

  He looks at us in the silence. He says

  Save me, there is still time.

  Photograph of the Girl

  The girl sits on the hard ground,

  the dry pan of Russia, in the drought

  of 1921, stunned,

  eyes closed, mouth open,

  raw, hot wind blowing

  sand in her face. Hunger and puberty

  are taking her together. She leans on a sack,

  layers of clothes fluttering in the heat,

  the new radius of her arm curved.

  She cannot be not beautiful, but she is

  starving. Each day she grows thinner, and her bones

  grow longer, porous. The caption says

  she is going to starve to death that winter

  with millions of others. Deep in her body

  the ovaries let out her first eggs,

  golden as drops of grain.

  Race Riot, Tulsa, 1921

  The blazing white shirts of the white men

  are blanks on the page, looking at them is like

  looking at the sun, you could go blind.

  Under the snouts of the machine guns,

  the dark glowing skin of the women and

  men going to jail. You can look at the

  gleaming horse chestnuts of their faces the whole day.

 

‹ Prev