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    Made in Detroit: Poems


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      ALSO BY MARGE PIERCY

      POETRY

      The Hunger Moon: New & Selected Poems

      The Crooked Inheritance

      Colors Passing Through Us

      The Art of Blessing the Day

      Early Grrrl

      What Are Big Girls Made Of?

      Mars and Her Children

      Available Light

      My Mother’s Body

      Stone, Paper, Knife

      Circles on the Water (Selected poems)

      The Moon Is Always Female

      The Twelve-Spoked Wheel Flashing

      Living in the Open

      To Be of Use

      4-Telling (with Bob Hershon, Emmett Jarrett and Dick Lourie)

      Hard Loving

      Breaking Camp

      NOVELS

      Sex Wars

      The Third Child

      Three Women

      Storm Tide (with Ira Wood)

      City of Darkness, City of Light

      The Longings of Women

      He, She and It

      Summer People

      Gone to Soldiers

      Fly Away Home

      Braided Lives (republished 2013)

      Vida (republished 2011)

      The High Cost of Living

      Woman on the Edge of Time

      Small Changes

      Dance the Eagle to Sleep (republished 2012)

      Small Changes

      OTHER

      The Cost of Lunch, Etc. (A collection of short stories)

      Pesach for the Rest of Us

      So You Want to Write: How to Master the Craft of Writing Fiction and Personal Narrative (with Ira Wood), 1st & 2nd editions

      The Last White Class: A Play (with Ira Wood)

      Sleeping with Cats: A Memoir

      Parti-Colored Blocks for a Quilt (Essays)

      Early Ripening: American Women’s Poetry Now (Anthology)

      THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK

      PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

      Copyright 2015 © by Marge Piercy

      All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random House companies.

      www.aaknopf.com/poetry

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

      Original publication information for the previously published poems included in this collection is located on this page.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Piercy, Marge.

      [Poems. Selections]

      Made in Detroit : poems / Marge Piercy. — First edition.

      pages; cm

      “This is a Borzoi Book.”

      ISBN 978-0-385-35388-5 (hardcover) — ISBN 978-0-385-35389-2 (ebook)

      I. Title.

      PS8566.I4A6 2015

      811’.54—dc23

      2014026429

      Jacket image: Library, courtesy of Lori Nix and Kathleen Gerber

      Jacket design by Abby Weintraub

      v3.1

      CONTENTS

      Cover

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      I Made in Detroit

      Made in Detroit

      The frontroom

      Detroit, February 1943

      Things that will never happen here again

      Detroit fauna

      Family vacation to Yellowstone

      The rented lakes of my childhood

      Thirteen

      She held forth

      The scent of apple cake

      By the river of Detroit

      The street that was

      City bleeding

      Mehitabel & me

      What my mother gave me

      Our neverending entanglement

      Ashes in their places

      II Ignorance bigger than the moon

      January orders

      We have come through

      How I gained respect for night herons

      Remnants still visible

      The constant exchange

      May opens wide

      Wisteria can pull down a house

      June 15th, 8 p.m.

      Hard rain and potent thunder

      Ignorance bigger than the moon

      Little house with no door

      There were no mountains in Detroit [haibun]

      But soon there will be none

      Missing, missed

      Death’s charming face

      The frost moon

      December arrives like an unpaid bill

      III The poor are no longer with us

      The suicide of dolphins

      The poor are no longer with us

      Don’t send dead flowers

      A hundred years since the Triangle Fire

      Ethics for Republicans

      Another obituary

      What it means

      How have the mighty …

      We know

      The passion of a fan

      In pieces

      Ghosts

      One of the expendables

      Let’s meet in a restaurant

      My time in better dresses

      Come fly without me

      These bills are long unpaid

      Hope is a long, slow thing

      IV Working at it

      The late year

      Erev New Years

      Head of the year

      May the new year continue our joy

      Late that afternoon they come

      N’eilah

      The wall of cold descends

      How she learned

      Working at it

      The order of the seder

      The two cities

      Where silence waits

      I say Kaddish but still mourn

      V That was Cobb Farm

      Little diurnal tragedies

      The next evolutionary step

      That was Cobb Farm

      They meet

      A cigarette left smoldering

      Discovery motion

      Sun in January

      Little rabbit’s dream song

      Different voices, one sentence

      Cotton’s wife

      That summer day

      Insomniac prayer at 2 a.m.

      The body in the hot tub

      VI Looking back in utter confusion

      Looking back in utter confusion

      Why did the palace of excess have cockroaches?

      In the Peloponnesus one April afternoon

      The end not yet in sight

      Loving clandestinely

      The visible and the in-

      What’s left

      Corner of Putnam and Pearl

      Bang, crash over

      Sins of omission

      Even if we try not to let go

      Afterward

      The wonder of it

      Marinade for an elderly rabbit

      Contemplating my breasts

      Words hard as stones

      Absence wears out the heart

      A republic of cats

      What do they expect?

      Decades of intimacy creating

      We used to be close, I said

      A wind suddenly chills you

      Why she frightens me

      My sweetness, my desire

      They come, they go in the space of a breath

      In storms I can hear the surf a mile away

      Acknowledgments

      A Note About the Author

      I

      Made in Detroit

      Made in Detroit

      My first lessons were kisses and a hammer.

      I was fed with mother’s milk and rat poison.

      I learned to walk on a tightrope over a pit

      where snakes’ warnings were my rattles.

      The night I was
    born the sky burned red

      over Detroit and sirens sharpened their knives.

      The elms made tents of solace over grimy

      streets and alley cats purred me to sleep.

      I dived into books and their fables

      closed over my head and hid me.

      Libraries were my cathedrals. Librarians

      my priests promising salvation.

      I was formed by beating like a black

      smith’s sword, and my edge is still

      sharp enough to cut both you and me.

      I sought love in dark and dusty corners

      and sometimes I even found it

      however briefly. Every harsh, every

      tender word entered my flesh and lives

      there still, bacteria inside my gut.

      I suckled Detroit’s steel tits. When

      I escaped to college I carried it with

      me, shadow and voice, pressure

      that hardened me to coal and flame.

      The frontroom

      In the tiny livingroom of my parents’ house

      that my mother, brought up in tenements

      always called the frontroom, stood

      a maroon couch with rough itchy

      upholstery that marked my tender

      thighs if ever I sat on it.

      On every surface, wooden shoes,

      Eiffel tower, leather teepee,

      ceramic dolls in costume—

      souvenirs of places they had

      gone or she wished she had.

      She hated an empty space.

      Emptiness meant poverty. With

      money she would have collected

      paintings, objets d’art which these

      were to her, emblems of times away

      from our asbestos shack where she

      imagined a richer life. Out of library

      books, images like genii rose murmuring

      your wish is my etcetera. But she

      commanded nothing except my child

      labor rubbing, scrubbing what could

      never be clean, as factory soot

      drifted down like ebony snow.

      Detroit, February 1943

      When there was wind, it found

      every crack and chink in the walls.

      On winter mornings, the windows

      were etched with landscapes

      of frost eerie and delicate.

      Rising from my cold bed

      into the cold room, my clothes

      laid out for school stiff, rustling

      with cold, I would run to stand

      over the hot air register, hoping

      the furnace had been fed coal.

      My father’s cigarette cough

      rattled from their room.

      I smelled oatmeal. Once we

      ate it for three weeks of hunger.

      My clothes were shaped

      by other bodies, my books

      had corners turned down,

      notes I could not read.

      Rummage sales were our malls.

      My mother fed birds, talking

      with them as they flew to perch

      near her, leftovers, stale bread,

      crumbs. We too survived

      on what no one else wanted.

      Things that will never happen here again

      I remember hauling carpets out to the clothes

      lines in the yard and knocking the dust out

      in great cough-making clouds with wire

      carpet beaters like diagrams of cellos.

      Defrosting the refrigerator required much

      boiling of water on the stove and flat pans

      into which fingers of ice fell. Every five

      minutes water cooled and needed refilling.

      The coal truck came and down the chute

      into the coal bin the black rocks

      clattered and thundered. The floors

      upstairs shook in a local quake.

      The furnace with its many arms lurked

      in the basement and every few days

      clinkers must be removed, often still

      smoking, and ashes hauled out.

      During the war we collected cans

      and stomped them underfoot, handing

      them in. We bundled newspapers,

      magazines for distant factories.

      I miss none of this. They were chores

      not pleasures, but still I remember

      and my age hangs on me like icicles

      that bear down the branches of pine.

      Detroit fauna

      I am old enough to remember the sad

      horses that pulled open-sided carts

      loaded with vegetables and fruit,

      the knife sharpener’s whirring stone,

      the rag man in the alley, the closed

      dripping wagon of the ice man.

      They were always brown or grey.

      They walked and stopped, walked

      on then stopped, their heads bowed

      under the burden of dragging

      heaviness across hot asphalt, day

      after day for what scant reward?

      Police horses are bigger and glossy.

      I never pitied them when they

      charged us. They were the enemy

      grim as war horses that snuffled

      fire as they trampled the infantry,

      stallions bred to die on pikes.

      Even the glass bottles of milk

      were carried to our breakfasts

      by horses. The photographer

      went house to house with his pony

      black and white spotted, adorned

      with bells, but the working stiffs

      never had tails plaited or manes

      brushed out. I spoke to them

      and their red-rimmed eyes would

      turn to me. Then off they would clop

      clop in the harness we were

      each supposed to grow into.

      Family vacation to Yellowstone

      I kept a diary my twelfth summer

      when we took our first long trip

      since before the war. I wrote up

      every meal, a skinny pale blue

      child with sprouting sore breasts

      I slumped to hide. Always hungry.

      “For lunch at a place called The

      Green Frog I had fried cat

      fish, corn bread and mashed

      potatoes. For dessert I ate

      strawberry ice cream!! It

      was all very delicious.”

      Besides every piece of food

      I mentioned only animals. An owl

      tethered at a restaurant in Frankenmuth

      Michigan, an owl called Jerry

      a woman bathed and dried.

      I described a horse who whinnied

      at me over a fence in Wyoming.

      I lovingly listed cattle and eagles,

      antelope and elk, bison. Animals

      I trusted as frightened children

      do. My father’s temper. My mother’s

      anger. I would have run away

      with a wolf pack. In Yellowstone

      I decided my future as a ranger.

      I would live among pine trees

      and follow bison through

      the tall grass. We met a man

      who lived up in a fire tower

      and I wanted to become him.

      I wanted a tower not like Rapunzel

      to coax a lover to climb,

      but to rise up and hide, high

      above smoky buzzing Detroit

      streets, the tiny asbestos shack

      thrumming with unpaid bills

      and the marriage of the cat

      and dog with their unloved

      offspring thin as a knife—

      all of us with edges that

      made each other bleed.

      The rented lakes of my childhood

      I remember the lakes of my Michigan

      childhood. Here they are called ponds.

      Lakes belonged to summer, two-week


      vacations that my father was granted by

      Westinghouse when we rented some cabin.

      Never mind the dishes with spiderweb

      cracks, the crooked aluminum sauce

      pans, the crusted black frying pans.

      Never mind the mattresses shaped

      like the letter V. Old jangling springs.

      Moldy bathrooms. Low ceilings

      that leaked. The lakes were mysteries

      of sand and filmy weeds and minnows

      flickering through my fingers. I rowed

      into freedom. Alone on the water

      that freckled into small ripples,

      that raised its hackles in storms,

      that lay glassy at twilight reflecting

      the sunset then sucking up the dark,

      I was unobserved as the quiet doe

      coming with her fauns to drink

      on the opposite shore. I let the row-

      boat drift as the current pleased, lying

      faceup like a photographer’s plate

      the rising moon turned to a ghost.

      And though the voices called me

      back to the rented space we shared

      I was sure I left my real self there—

      a tiny black pupil in the immense

      eye of a silver pool of silence.

      Thirteen

      The girl was closed on herself

      tight as a winter bud on a sugar

      maple, protecting what lay within.

      She imagined herself a foundling—

      secret offspring of some kind, rich

      parents, but the mirror contradicted.

      Her shoulders hunched over newly

      sprouted breasts sour as crab

      apples and as hard to the touch.

      Her shoulders hunched over dreams

      cradled within like wet birds

     


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