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Collected Poems

Page 35

by Adrienne Rich


  egg-sac of a new world:

  This is what she was to me, and this

  is how I can love myself—

  as only a woman can love me.

  Homesick for myself, for her—as, after the heatwave

  breaks, the clear tones of the world

  manifest: cloud, bough, wall, insect, the very soul of light:

  homesick as the fluted vault of desire

  articulates itself: I am the lover and the loved,

  home and wanderer, she who splits

  firewood and she who knocks, a stranger

  in the storm, two women, eye to eye

  measuring each other’s spirit, each other’s

  limitless desire,

  a whole new poetry beginning here.

  Vision begins to happen in such a life

  as if a woman quietly walked away

  from the argument and jargon in a room

  and sitting down in the kitchen, began turning in her lap

  bits of yarn, calico and velvet scraps,

  laying them out absently on the scrubbed boards

  in the lamplight, with small rainbow-colored shells

  sent in cotton-wool from somewhere far away,

  and skeins of milkweed from the nearest meadow—

  original domestic silk, the finest findings—

  and the darkblue petal of the petunia,

  and the dry darkbrown lace of seaweed;

  not forgotten either, the shed silver

  whisker of the cat,

  the spiral of paper-wasp-nest curling

  beside the finch’s yellow feather.

  Such a composition has nothing to do with eternity,

  the striving for greatness, brilliance—

  only with the musing of a mind

  one with her body, experienced fingers quietly pushing

  dark against bright, silk against roughness,

  pulling the tenets of a life together

  with no mere will to mastery,

  only care for the many-lived, unending

  forms in which she finds herself,

  becoming now the sherd of broken glass

  slicing light in a corner, dangerous

  to flesh, now the plentiful, soft leaf

  that wrapped round the throbbing finger, soothes the wound;

  and now the stone foundation, rockshelf further

  forming underneath everything that grows.

  1977

  A WILD PATIENCE

  HAS TAKEN ME

  THIS FAR

  (1978–1981)

  THE IMAGES

  Close to your body, in the

  pain of the city

  I turn. My hand half-sleeping reaches, finds

  some part of you, touch knows you before language

  names in the brain. Out in the dark

  a howl, police sirens, emergency

  our 3 a.m. familiar, ripping the sheath of sleep

  registering pure force as if all transpired—

  the swell of cruelty and helplessness—

  in one block between West End

  and Riverside. In my dreams the Hudson

  rules the night like a right-hand margin

  drawn against the updraft

  of burning life, the tongueless cries

  of the city. I turn again, slip my arm

  under the pillow turned for relief,

  your breathing traces my shoulder. Two women sleeping

  together have more than their sleep to defend.

  And what can reconcile me

  that you, the woman whose hand

  sensual and protective, brushes me in sleep,

  go down each morning into such a city?

  I will not, cannot withhold

  your body or my own from its chosen danger

  but when did we ever choose

  to see our bodies strung

  in bondage and crucifixion across the exhausted air

  when did we choose

  to be lynched on the queasy electric signs

  of midtown when did we choose

  to become the masturbator’s fix

  emblem of rape in Riverside Parkthe campground

  at Bandol the beach at Sydney?

  We are trying to live

  in a clearheaded tenderness—

  I speak not merely of us, our lives

  are “moral and ordinary”

  as the lives of numberless women—

  I pretend the Hudson is a right-hand margin

  drawn against fear and woman-loathing

  (water as purification, river as boundary)

  but I know my imagination lies:

  in the name of freedom of speech

  they are lynching us no law is on our side

  there are no boundaries

  no-man’s-land does not exist.

  I can never romanticize language again

  never deny its power for disguise for mystification

  but the same could be said for music

  or any form created

  painted ceilings beaten gold worm-worn Pietàs

  reorganizing victimizationfrescoes translating

  violence into patterns so powerful and pure

  we continually fail to ask are they true for us.

  When I walked among time-battered stones

  thinking already of you

  when I sat near the sea

  among parched yet flowering weeds

  when I drew in my notebook

  the thorned purple-tongued flower, each petal

  protected by its thorn-leaf

  I was mute

  innocent of grammar as the waves

  irrhythmically washingI felt washed clean

  of the guilt of wordsthere was no word to read

  in the book of that earthno perjury

  the tower of Babel fallen once and for all

  light drank at my body

  thinking of you I felt free

  in the cicadas’ pulse, their encircling praise.

  When I saw hér face, she of the several faces

  staringindrawnin judgmentlaughing for joy

  her serpents twistingher arms raised

  her breastsgazing

  when I looked into hér world

  I wished to cry loose my soul

  into her, to become

  free of speechat last.

  And so I came homea woman starving

  for images

  to say my hunger is so old

  so fundamental, that all the lost

  crumbledburntsmashedshattereddefaced

  overpaintedconcealed and falsely named

  faces of every past we have searched together

  in all the ages

  could risereassemblere-collectre-member

  themselves as I recollected myself in that presence

  as every night close to your body

  in the pain of the city, turning

  I am remembered by you, remember you

  even as we are dismembered

  on the cinema screens, the white expensive walls

  of collectors, the newsrags blowing the streets

  —and it would not be enough.

  This is the war of the images.

  We are the thorn-leaf guarding the purple-tongued flower

  each to each.

  1976–1978

  COAST TO COAST

  There are days when housework seems the only

  outletold funnel I’ve poured caldrons through

  old servitudeIn grief and fury bending

  to the accustomed tasksthe vacuum cleaner plowing

  realms of dustthe mirror scouredgrey webs

  behind framed photographsbrushed away

  the grey-seamed sky enormous in the west

  snow gathering in cornersof the north

  Seeing through the prism

  you who gave it me

  You, bearing ceaselessly

  yourselfthe witness

 
; Rainbow dissolves the HudsonThis chary, stinting

  skin of late wintericeforming and breaking up

  The unprotected seeing it through

  with their ordinary valor

  Rainbow composed of ordinary light

  February-flat

  grey-white of a cheap enamelled pan

  breaking into veridian, azure, violet

  You write: Three and a half weeks lost from writing.…

  I think of the word protection

  who it is we try to protectand why

  Seeing through the prismYour face, fog-hollowedburning

  cold of eucalyptus hung with butterflies

  lavender of rockbloom

  O and your anger uttered in silence word and stammer

  shattering the foglances of sun

  piercing the grey Pacificunanswerable tide

  carving itself in clefts and fissures of the rock

  Beauty of your breastsyour hands

  turning a stone a shell a weed a prismin coastal light

  traveller and witness

  the passion of the speechless

  driving your speech

  protectless

  If you can read and understand this poem

  send something back: a burning strand of hair

  a still-warm, still-liquid drop of blood

  a shell

  thickened from being battered year on year

  send something back.

  1978

  INTEGRITY

  the quality or state of being complete: unbroken condition: entirety

  —Webster’s

  A wild patience has taken me this far

  as if I had to bring to shore

  a boat with a spasmodic outboard motor

  old sweaters, nets, spray-mottled books

  tossed in the prow

  some kind of sun burning my shoulder-blades.

  Splashing the oarlocks. Burning through.

  Your fore-arms can get scalded, licked with pain

  in a sun blotted like unspoken anger

  behind a casual mist.

  The length of daylight

  this far north, in this

  forty-ninth year of my life

  is critical.

  The light is critical: of me, of this

  long-dreamed, involuntary landing

  on the arm of an inland sea.

  The glitter of the shoal

  depleting into shadow

  I recognize: the stand of pines

  violet-black really, green in the old postcard

  but really I have nothing but myself

  to go by; nothing

  stands in the realm of pure necessity

  except what my hands can hold.

  Nothing but myself? … My selves.

  After so long, this answer.

  As if I had always known

  I steer the boat in, simply.

  The motor dying on the pebbles

  cicadas taking up the hum

  dropped in the silence.

  Anger and tenderness: my selves.

  And now I can believe they breathe in me

  as angels, not polarities.

  Anger and tenderness: the spider’s genius

  to spin and weave in the same action

  from her own body, anywhere—

  even from a broken web.

  The cabin in the stand of pines

  is still for sale. I know this. Know the print

  of the last foot, the hand that slammed and locked that door,

  then stopped to wreathe the rain-smashed clematis

  back on the trellis

  for no one’s sake except its own.

  I know the chart nailed to the wallboards

  the icy kettle squatting on the burner.

  The hands that hammered in those nails

  emptied that kettle one last time

  are these two hands

  and they have caught the baby leaping

  from between trembling legs

  and they have worked the vacuum aspirator

  and stroked the sweated temples

  and steered the boat here through this hot

  misblotted sunlight, critical light

  imperceptibly scalding

  the skin these hands will also salve.

  1978

  Culture and Anarchy

  Leafshade stirring on lichened bark

  Daylilies

  run wild, “escaped” the botanists call it

  from dooryard to meadow to roadside

  Life-tingle of angled light

  late summer

  sharpening toward fall, each year more sharply

  This headlong, loved, escaping life

  Rainy days at the kitchen table typing,

  heaped up letters, a dry moth’s

  perfectly mosaiced wings, pamphlets on rape,

  forced sterilization, snapshots in color

  of an Alabama woman still quilting in her nineties,

  The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony….

  I stained and varnished

  the library bookcase today and superintended

  the plowing of the orchard….

  Fitted out a fugitive slave for Canada

  with the help of Harriet Tubman….

  The women’s committee failed

  to report. I am mortified to death for them….

  Washed every window in the house today.

  Put a quilted petticoat in the frame.

  Commenced Mrs. Browning’s Portuguese

  Sonnets. Have just finished

  Casa Guidi Windows, a grand poem

  and so fitting to our struggle….

  To forever blot out slavery is the only

  possible compensation for this

  merciless war….

  The all-alone feeling will creep over me. …

  Upstairs, long silence, then

  again, the sudden torrent of your typing

  Rough drafts we share, each reading

  her own page over the other’s shoulder

  trying to see afresh

  An energy I cannot even yet

  take for granted: picking up a book

  of the nineteenth century, reading there the name

  of the woman whose book you found

  in the old town Athenaeum

  beginning to stitch together

  Elizabeth Ellet

  Elizabeth Barrett

  Elizabeth Blackwell

  Frances Kemble

  Ida B. Wells-Barnett

  Susan B. Anthony

  On Saturday Mrs. Ford took us to Haworth,

  the home of the Brontë sisters….

  A most sad day it was to me

  as I looked into the little parlor where

  the sisters walked up and down

  with their arms around each other

  and planned their novels….

  How much the world of literature has lost

  because of their short and ill-environed lives

  we can only guess.…

  Anarchy of August: as if already

  autumnal gases glowed in darkness underground

  the meadows roughen, grow guttural

  with goldenrod, milkweed’s late-summer lilac,

  cat-tails, the wild lily brazening,

  dooryards overflowing in late, rough-headed

  bloom: bushes of orange daisies, purple mallow,

  the thistle blazing in her clump of knives,

  and the great SUNFLOWER turns

  Haze wiping out the hills. Mornings like milk,

  the mind wading, treading water, the line of vision blind

  the pages of the book cling to the hand

  words hang in a suspension

  the prism hanging in the windowframe

  is blank

  A stillness building all day long to thunder

  as the weedpod swells and thickens

  No one can call this calm

  Jane Addams, ma
rking time

  in Europe: During most

  of that time I was absolutely at sea

  so far as any moral purpose was concerned

  clinging only to the desire to live

  in a really living world

  refusing to be content

  with a shadowy intellectual

  or aesthetic reflection

  finally the bursting of the sky

  power, release

  by sheets by ropes of water, wind

  driving before or after

  the book laid face-down on the table

  spirit travelling the lines of storm

  leaping the torrentall that water

  already smelling of earth

  Elizabeth Barrett to Anna Jameson:

  … and is it possible you think

  a woman has no business with questions

  like the question of slavery?

  Then she had better use a pen no more.

  She had better subside into slavery

  and concubinage herself, I think, …

  and take no rank among thinkers and speakers.

  Early dark; still raining; the electricity

  out. On the littered table

  a transparent globe half-filled

  with liquid light, the soaked wick quietly

  drinking, turning to flame

  that faintly stains the slim glass chimney:

  ancient, fragile contrivance

  light welling, searching the shadows

  Matilda Joslyn Gage; Harriet Tubman;

  Ida B. Wells-Barnett; Maria Mitchell;

  Anna Howard Shaw; Sojourner Truth;

  Elizabeth Cady Stanton; Harriet Hosmer;

  Clara Barton; Harriet Beecher Stowe;

  Ida Husted Harper; Ernestine Rose

  and all those without names

  because of their short and ill-environed lives

  False dawn. Gossamer tents in wet grass: leaflets

  dissolving within hours,

  spun of necessity and

  leaving no trace

  The heavy volumes, calf, with titles in smooth

  leather, red and black, gilt letters spelling:

  THE HISTORY OF HUMAN SUFFERING

  I brush my hand across my eyes

  —this is a dream, I think—and read:

  THE HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE

 

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