Book Read Free

The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton 1965-2010

Page 9

by Lucille Clifton


  she could see the peril of an

  unexamined life.

  she closed her eyes, afraid to look for her

  authenticity

  but the light insists on itself in the world;

  a voice from the nondead past started talking,

  she closed her ears and it spelled out in her hand

  “ you might as well answer the door, my child,

  the truth is furiously knocking.”

  the light that came to lucille clifton

  testament

  in the beginning

  was the word.

  the year of our lord,

  amen. i

  lucille clifton

  hereby testify

  that in that room

  there was a light

  and in that light

  there was a voice

  and in that voice

  there was a sigh

  and in that sigh

  there was a world.

  a world a sigh a voice a light and

  i

  alone

  in a room.

  incandescence

  formless form

  and the soft

  shuffle of sound

  who are these strangers

  peopleing this light?

  lucille

  we are

  the Light

  mother, i am mad.

  we should have guessed

  a twelve-fingered flower

  might break. my knowing

  flutters to the ground.

  mother i have managed to unlearn

  my lessons. i am left

  in otherness. mother

  someone calling itself Light

  has opened my inside.

  i am flooded with brilliance

  mother,

  someone of it is answering to

  your name.

  perhaps

  i am going blind.

  my eyes exploding,

  seeing more than is there

  until they burst into nothing

  or going deaf, these sounds

  the feathered hum of silence

  or going away from my self, the cool

  fingers of lace on my skin

  the fingers of madness

  or perhaps

  in the palace of time

  our lives are a circular stair

  and i am turning

  explanations

  anonymous water can slide under the ground.

  the wind can shiver with desire.

  this room can settle.

  this body can settle.

  but can such a sound

  cool as a circle

  surround and

  pray

  or promise

  or prophesy?

  friends come

  explaining to me that my mind

  is the obvious assassin

  the terrorist of voices

  who has waited

  to tell me miraculous lies

  all my life. no

  i say

  friends

  the ones who talk to me

  their words thin as wire

  their chorus fine as crystal

  their truth direct as stone,

  they are present as air.

  they are there.

  to joan

  joan

  did you never hear

  in the soft rushes of france

  merely the whisper of french grass

  rubbing against leathern

  sounding now like a windsong

  now like a man?

  did you never wonder

  oh fantastical joan,

  did you never cry in the sun’s face

  unreal unreal? did you never run

  villageward

  hands pushed out toward your apron?

  and just as you knew that your mystery

  was broken for all time

  did they not fall then

  soft as always

  into your ear

  calling themselves michael

  among beloved others?

  and you

  sister sister

  did you not then sigh

  my voices my voices of course?

  confession

  father

  i am not equal to the faith required.

  i doubt.

  i have a woman’s certainties;

  bodies pulled from me,

  pushed into me.

  bone flesh is what i know.

  father

  the angels say they have no wings.

  i woke one morning

  feeling how to see them.

  i could discern their shadows

  in the shadow. i am not

  equal to the faith required.

  father

  i see your mother standing now

  shoulderless and shoeless by your side.

  i hear her whisper truths i cannot know.

  father i doubt.

  father

  what are the actual certainties?

  your mother speaks of love.

  the angels say they have no wings.

  i am not equal to the faith required.

  i try to run from such surprising presence;

  the angels stream before me

  like a torch.

  in populated air

  our ancestors continue.

  i have seen them.

  i have heard

  their shimmering voices

  singing.

  Next

  (1987)

  This one or that one dies but never the singer . . . one singer falls but the next steps into the empty place and sings . . .

  “December Day in Honolulu”

  Galway Kinnell

  we are all next

  album

  for lucille chan hall

  1 it is 1939.

  our mothers are turning our hair

  around rags.

  our mothers

  have filled our shirley temple cups.

  we drink it all.

  2 1939 again.

  our shirley temple curls.

  shirley yellow.

  shirley black.

  our colors are fading.

  later we had to learn ourselves

  back across 2 oceans

  into bound feet and nappy hair.

  3 1958 and 9.

  we have dropped daughters,

  afrikan and chinese.

  we think

  they will be beautiful.

  we think

  they will become themselves.

  4 it is 1985.

  she is.

  she is.

  they are.

  winnie song

  a dark wind is blowing

  the townships into town.

  they have burned your house

  winnie mandela

  but your house has been on fire

  a hundred years.

  they have locked your husband

  in a cage

  and it has made him free.

  Mandela. Mandala. Mandala

  is the universe. the universe

  is burning. a dark wind is blowing

  the homelands into home.

  there

  there in the homelands

  they are arresting children.

  they are beating children

  and shooting children.

  in jo’burg

  a woman sits on her veranda.

  watching her child.

  her child is playing on their lawn.

  her man comes home from

  arresting children. she smiles.

  she offers him a drink.

  each morning i practice for

  getting that woman.

  when her sister calls me sister

  i remind myself

  she is there.

  what spells raccoon to me

  spells more than just his

  bandit’s eyes

 
squinting as his furry woman

  hunkers down among the fists

  of berries.

  oh coon

  which gave my grandfather a name

  and fed his wife on more then one

  occasion

  i can no more change my references

  than they can theirs.

  this belief

  in the magic of whiteness,

  that it is the smooth

  pebble in your hand,

  that it is the godmother’s

  best gift,

  that it explains,

  allows,

  assures,

  entitles,

  that it can sprout singular blossoms

  like jack’s bean

  and singular verandas from which

  to watch them rise,

  it is a spell

  winding round on itself,

  grimms’ awful fable,

  and it turns into capetown and johannesburg

  as surely as the beanstalk leads

  to the giant’s actual country

  where jack lies broken at the

  meadow’s edge

  and the land is in ruins,

  no magic, no anything.

  why some people be mad at me sometimes

  they ask me to remember

  but they want me to remember

  their memories

  and i keep on remembering

  mine.

  sorrow song

  for the eyes of the children,

  the last to melt,

  the last to vaporize,

  for the lingering

  eyes of the children, staring,

  the eyes of the children of

  buchenwald,

  of viet nam and johannesburg,

  for the eyes of the children

  of nagasaki,

  for the eyes of the children

  of middle passage,

  for cherokee eyes, ethiopian eyes,

  russian eyes, american eyes,

  for all that remains of the children,

  their eyes,

  staring at us, amazed to see

  the extraordinary evil in

  ordinary men.

  I. at creation

  and i and my body rise

  with the dusky beasts

  with eve and her brother

  to gasp in

  the insubstantial air

  and evenly begin the long

  slide out of paradise.

  all life is life.

  all clay is kin and kin.

  I. at gettysburg

  if, as they say, this is somehow about myself,

  this clash of kin across good farmland, then

  why are the ghosts of the brothers and cousins

  rising and wailing toward me in their bloody voices,

  who are you, nigger woman, who are you?

  I. at nagasaki

  in their own order

  the things of my world

  glisten into ash. i

  have done nothing

  to deserve this,

  only been to the silver birds

  what they have made me.

  nothing.

  I. at jonestown

  on a day when i would have believed

  anything, i believed that this white man,

  stern as my father, neutral in his coupling

  as adam, was possibly who he insisted he was.

  now he has brought me to the middle of the

  jungle of my life. if i have been wrong, again,

  father may even this cup in my hand turn against me.

  them bones

  them bones will

  rise again

  them bones

  them bones will

  walk again

  them bones

  them bones will

  talk again

  now hear

  the word of The Lord

  —Traditional

  atlantic is a sea of bones,

  my bones,

  my elegant afrikans

  connecting whydah and new york,

  a bridge of ivory.

  seabed they call it.

  in its arms my early mothers sleep.

  some women leapt with babies in their arms.

  some women wept and threw the babies in.

  maternal armies pace the atlantic floor.

  i call my name into the roar of surf

  and something awful answers.

  cruelty. don’t talk to me about cruelty

  or what I am capable of.

  when i wanted the roaches dead i wanted them dead

  and i killed them. i took a broom to their country

  and smashed and sliced without warning

  without stopping and i smiled all the time i was doing it.

  it was a holocaust of roaches, bodies,

  parts of bodies, red all over the ground.

  i didn’t ask their names.

  they had no names worth knowing.

  now i watch myself whenever i enter a room.

  i never know what i might do.

  the woman in the camp

  cbs news

  lebanon

  1983

  they murdered

  27 of my family

  counting the babies

  in the wombs.

  some of the men

  spilled seed on the ground.

  how much is a thousand

  thousand?

  i had a child.

  i taught her to love.

  i should have taught her

  to fear.

  i have learned about blood

  and bullets,

  where is the love

  in my education?

  a woman in this camp

  has 1 breast and 2 babies.

  a woman in this camp

  has breasts like mine.

  a woman in this camp

  watched the stealing

  of her husband.

  a woman in this camp

  has eyes like mine.

  alive

  i never thought of other women.

  if i am ever alive again

  i will hold out my female hands.

  the lost women

  i need to know their names

  those women I would have walked with

  jauntily the way men go in groups

  swinging their arms, and the ones

  those sweating women whom I would have joined

  after a hard game to chew the fat

  what would we have called each other laughing

  joking into our beer? where are my gangs,

  my teams, my mislaid sisters?

  all the women who could have known me,

  where in the world are their names?

  4 daughters

  i am the sieve she strains from

  little by little

  everyday.

  i am the rind

  she is discarding.

  i am the riddle

  she is trying to answer.

  something is moving

  in the water.

  she is the hook.

  i am the line.

  grown daughter

  someone is helping me with onions

  who peels in the opposite direction

  without tears and promises

  different soup. i sit with her

  watching her learning to love her but

  who is she who is she who

  here is another bone to pick with you

  o mother whose bones I worry for scraps,

  nobody warned me about daughters;

  how they bewitch you into believing

  you have thrown off a pot that is yourself

  then one night you creep into their rooms and

  their faces have hardened into odd flowers

  their voices are choosing in foreign elections and

  their legs are open to strange unwieldy men.

  female

&n
bsp; there is an amazon in us.

  she is the secret we do not

  have to learn.

  the strength that opens us

  beyond ourselves.

  birth is our birthright.

  we smile our mysterious smile.

  if our grandchild be a girl

  i wish for her

  fantastic hands,

  twelve spiky fingers

  symbols of our tribe.

  she will do magic

  with them,

  she will turn personal

  abracadabra

  remembered from

  dahomean women

  wearing

  extravagant gloves.

  this is the tale

  i keep on telling

  trying to get it right;

  the feast of women,

  the feeding and

  being fed.

  my dream about being white

  hey music and

  me

  only white,

  hair a flutter of

  fall leaves

  circling my perfect

 

‹ Prev