#Americans #Jews #Women
Ash falls on the roof of my house. I have cursed you enough in the lines of my poems & between them,
You call me courageous, I who grew up gnawing on books, as some kids
‘Why do you have stripes in your forehead, Mama? Are you
Could I unthink you, little heart, what would I do? throw you out with last night’s garbage,
Because she wants to touch him, she moves away. Because she wants to talk to him, she keeps silent. Because she wants to kiss him,
Out in the world, the child cries for the mother as the wound cries for salt as the lover cries for her unrequited lover
A man so sick that the sexual soup cannot save him - the chicken soup of sex which cures everything: tossed mane of noodles,
(a flip through BRIDE’s) The silver spoons were warbling their absurd musical names when, drawing back
We used to meet on this corner in the same wind. It fought us up the hill to your house,
Broken ivories playing the blue piano of the sea. We have come
the sky sinks its blue teeth into the mountains. Rising on pure will (the lurch & lift-off, the sudden swing
Mute marriages: the ten-ton block of ice obstructing the throat, the heart, the red filter of the liver, the clogged life.
‘Death is our eternal companion,’… —Carlos Castaneda My death looks exactly like me. She lives to my left,
You-the purest pleasure of my life, the split pit that proves the ripeness of the fruit,
For all those who died– stripped naked, shaved, shorn. For all those who screamed in vain to the Great Goddess only to have their tongues