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    My Mother's Body


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      Also by Marge Piercy

      Poetry

      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 Robert Hershon, Emmett Jarrett, Dick Lourie)

      Hard Loving

      Breaking Camp

      Novels

      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

      Vida

      The High Cost of Living

      Woman on the Edge of Time

      Small Changes

      Dance the Eagle to Sleep

      Going Down Fast

      Other

      Sleeping with Cats, A Memoir

      So You Want to Write: How to Master the Craft of Writing Fiction and the Personal Narrative (with Ira Wood)

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

      Parti-Colored Blocks for a Quilt: Essays

      Early Ripening: American Women’s Poetry Now: An Anthology

      The Earth Shines Secretly: A Book of Days (with paintings by Nell Blaine)

      THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK

      PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.

      Copyright © 1977, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985 by Marge Piercy

      “What Makes It Good?” and “We Come Together” copyright © 1985 by Ira Wood, reprinted by permission.

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

      Some of these poems were previously published in Barnwood, Bits Press, Cedar Rock, Croton Review, Images, Jam To-Day, Kalliope, Manhattan Poetry Review, Mudfish, Negative Capability, Open Places, Poem the Nukes, Raccoon, Speculative Poetry Review, Star Line, Tarasque, Thirteenth Moon, and Woman of Power.

      “The Chuppah” first appeared in Lilith, the independent Jewish women’s magazine, 250 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019, © copyright Lilith Publication, Inc., 1983. All rights reserved.

      Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

      Piercy, Marge. My mother’s body. I. Title.

      PS3566.14M9 1985 811′.54 84-48661

      eISBN: 978-0-307-76139-2

      v3.1

      In Memory of my Mother

      Bert Bernice Bunnin Piercy

      and for my husband

      Ira Wood

      Contents

      Cover

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      WHAT REMAINS

      They inhabit me

      The Annuity

      Waking one afternoon in my best dress

      Out of the rubbish

      Of pumpkins and ghosts I sing

      Unbuttoning

      The sun and the moon in the morning sky of Charlotte

      Putting the good things away

      The Crunch

      What remains

      My mother’s body

      THE CHUPPAH

      Witnessing a wedding

      Touch tones

      The place where everything changed

      What Makes It Good?

      Why marry at all?

      We Come Together

      Every leaf is a mouth

      The Wine

      The Chuppah

      How we make nice

      House-keeping

      Return of the prodigal darling

      Down

      House built of breath

      The infidelity of sleep

      Nailing up the mezuzah

      CHIAROSCURO

      The good go down

      Homage to Lucille, Dr. Lord-Heinstein

      Where is my half-used tube of Tom’s fennel toothpaste tonight?

      Your cats are your children

      Mr. Big

      The maternal instinct at work

      Magic mama

      Nothing more will happen

      Blue Tuesday in August

      The Disinherited

      Cold head, cold heart

      Deferral

      Breaking out

      Paper birds

      Listening to a speech

      Making a will

      Still life

      From HoJo’s to Mr. Softee

      The longings of women

      Out of sight

      Does the light fail us, or do we fail the light?

      UNDERRATED PLEASURES

      Building is taming

      Cowering in a corner

      The Listmaker

      Going into town in the storm

      The clumsy season

      Silk confetti

      And whose creature am I?

      In praise of gazebos

      The Faithless

      If I had been called Sabrina or Ann, she said

      The night the moon got drunk

      Sweet ambush

      The high arch of summer

      What we fail to notice

      Tashlich

      This small and intimate place

      How grey, how wet, how cold

      Deer couchant

      Peaches in November

      Six underrated pleasures

      1. Folding sheets

      2. Picking pole beans

      3. Taking a hot bath

      4. Sleeping with cats

      5. Planting bulbs

      6. Canning

      A Note About the Author

      WHAT REMAINS

      They inhabit me

      I am pregnant with certain deaths

      of women who choked before they

      could speak their names

      could know their names

      before they had names to know.

      I am owl, the spirit said,

      I swim through the darkness on wide wings.

      I see what is behind me

      as well as what is before.

      In the morning a splash of blood

      on the snow marks where I found

      what I needed. In the mild

      light of day the crows mob

      me, cursing. Are you the daughter

      of my amber clock-tower eyes?

      I am pregnant with certain deaths

      of women whose hands were replaced

      by paper flowers, which must be kept

      clean, which could tear on a glance,

      which could not hold even water.

      I am cat. I rub your prejudices

      against the comfortable way they grow.

      I am fastidious, not as a careful

      housewife, but as a careful lover,

      keeping genitals as clean as face.

      I turn up my belly of warm sensuality

      to your fingers, purring my pleasure

      and letting my claws just tip out.

      Are you the daughter of the fierce

      aria of my passion scrawled on the night?

      I am pregnant with certain deaths

      of women who dreamed that the lover

      would strike like lightning and throw

      them over the saddle and carry them off.

      It was the ambulance that came.

      I am wolf. I call across the miles

      my messages of yearning and hunger,


      and the snow speaks to me constantly

      of food and want and friend and foe.

      The iron air is heavy with ice

      tweaking my nose and the sound

      of the wind is sharp and whetted.

      Commenting, chatting, calling,

      we run through the net of scents

      querying, Are you my daughter?

      I am pregnant with deaths of certain

      women who curled, wound in the skeins

      of dream, who secreted silk

      from spittle and bound themselves

      in swaddling clothes of shrouds.

      I am raccoon. I thrive in woods,

      I thrive in the alleys of your cities.

      With my little hands I open

      whatever you shut away from me.

      On your garbage I grow glossy.

      Among packs of stray dogs I bare

      my teeth, and the warring rats part.

      I flourish like the ailanthus tree;

      in your trashheaps I dig underground

      castles. Are you my daughter?

      I am pregnant with certain deaths

      of women who wander slamming doors

      and sighing as if to be overheard,

      talking to themselves like water left

      running, tears dried to table salt.

      They hide in my hair like crabs,

      they are banging on the nodes of my spine

      as on the door of a tardy elevator.

      They want to ride up to the observation

      platform and peer out my eyes for the view.

      All this wanting creates a black hole

      where ghosts and totems whirl and join

      passing through into antimatter of art,

      the alternate universe in which such certain

      deaths as theirs and mine throb with light.

      The Annuity

      1.

      When I was fifteen we moved

      from a tight asbestos shoebox

      to a loose drafty two-story house,

      my own tiny room prized under the eaves.

      My privacy formed like a bud from the wood.

      In my pale green womb I scribbled

      evolving from worm to feral cat,

      gobbling books, secreting bones,

      building a spine one segment

      at a time out of Marx and Freud.

      Across the hall the roomers lived,

      the couple from Appalachia who cooked

      bacon in their room. At a picnic

      she miscarried. I held her

      in foaming blood. Lost twins.

      Salesmen, drab, dirty in the bathroom,

      solitary, with girly magazines,

      detective stories and pads of orders,

      invoices, reports that I would inherit

      to write my poems on;

      overgrown boys dogging you

      out to the backyard with the laundry

      baskets; middle-aged losers with eyes

      that crawled under my clothes

      like fleas and made me itch;

      those who paid on time and those

      with excuses breaking out like pimples

      at the end of the month.

      I slammed my door and left them,

      ants on the dusty plain.

      For the next twenty years

      you toted laundry down two flights,

      cleaned their bathroom every morning,

      scrubbed at the butt burns,

      sponged up the acid of their complaints

      read their palms and gave common

      sense advice, fielded their girlfriends,

      commiserated with their ex-wives,

      lied to their creditors, brewed

      tisanes and told them to eat fruit.

      What did you do with their checks?

      Buy yourself dresses, candy, leisure?

      You saved, waiting for the next depression.

      You salted it away and Father took control,

      investing and then spending as he chose.

      2.

      Months before you died, you had us drive

      south to Florida because you insisted

      you wanted to give me things I must carry back.

      What were they? Some photographs, china

      animals my brother had brought home from

      World War II, a set of silverplate.

      Then the last evening while Father watched

      a game show, you began pulling out dollar

      bills, saying Shush, don’t let him

      see, don’t let him know. A five-dollar

      bill stuffed under the bobbypins,

      ten dollars furled in an umbrella,

      wads of singles in the bottom of closet

      dividers full of clothes. You shoved

      them in my hands, into my purse,

      you thrust them at Woody and me.

      Take, you kept saying, I want you to have

      it, now while I can, take.

      That night in the hotel room

      we sat on the floor counting money

      as if we had robbed a candy store:

      eighteen hundred in nothing larger

      than a twenty, squirreled away, saved

      I can’t stand to imagine how.

      That was the gift you had that felt

      so immense to you we would need a car

      to haul it back, maybe a trailer too,

      the labor of your small deceit

      that you might give me an inheritance,

      that limp wad salvaged from your sweat.

      Waking one afternoon in my best dress

      Until I tasted the blood spurt in my mouth

      bursting its sour clots, and the air

      forced my bucking lungs and I choked,

      I did not know I had been dead.

      The lint of voices consulting over me.

      Didn’t I leave myself to them,

      an inheritance of sugared almond memories,

      wedding cake slabs drying in their heads?

      They carried me home and they ate me,

      angel fluff with icing.

      Now I return coiling and striking

      on the slippery deck of dawn like a water

      snake caught in a net, all fangs

      and scales and slime and lashing tail.

      I have crawled up from dankness

      spitting headstones like broken teeth.

      My breath spoils milk. My eyes

      shine red as Antares in the scorpion’s tail

      and my touch sticks like mud.

      I have been nothing

      who now put on my body like an apron

      facing a sink of greasy dishes.

      Right here pain welded my ribs, here

      my heart still smokes. My life hangs triggered

      ready to trap me if I raise a hand.

      Dresses flap and flutter about me

      while my bones whistle

      and my flesh rusts neuter as iron.

      The rooms of my life wait

      to pack me in boxes.

      My eyes bleed. My eardrums

      are pierced with a hot wire of singing

      that only crows and hawks could harmonize.

      My best dress splits from neck to hem.

      Howling I trot for the brushlands with yellow

      teeth blinking, hair growing out like ragweed

      and new claws clicking on stone

      that I must wear dull

      before I can bear again

      the smell of kitchens

      the smell of love.

      Out of the rubbish

      Among my mother’s things I found

      a bottle-cap flower: the top

      from a ginger ale

      into which had been glued

      crystalline beads from a necklace

      surrounding a blue bauble.

      It is not unattractive,

      this star-shaped posy

      in the wreath of fluted

      aluminum, but it is not

      as a thing of beauty


      that I carried it off.

      A receding vista opens

      of workingclass making do:

      the dress that becomes

      a blouse that becomes

      a doll dress, potholders,

      rags to wash windows.

      Petunias in the tire.

      Remnants of old rugs

      laid down over the holes

      in rugs that had once

      been new when the remnants

      were first old.

      A three-inch birch-bark

      canoe labeled Muskegon,

      little wooden shoes

      souvenirs of Holland, Mich.,

      an ashtray from the Blue Hole,

      reputed bottomless.

      Look out the window

      at the sulphur sky.

      The street is grey as

      newspapers. Rats

      waddle up the alley.

      The air is brown.

      If we make curtains

      of the rose-bedecked table

      cloth, the stain won’t show

      and it will be cheerful,

      cheerful. Paint the wall lime.

      Paint it turquoise, primrose.

      How I used to dream

      in Detroit of deep cobalt,

      of ochre reds, of cadmium

      yellow. I dreamed of sea

      and burning sun, of red

      islands and blue volcanos.

      After she washed the floors

      she used to put down newspapers

      to keep them clean. When

      the newspapers had become

      dirty, the floor beneath

      was no longer clean.

      In the window, ceramic

      bunnies sprouted cactus.

      A burro offered fuchsia.

      In the hat, a wandering Jew.

      That was your grandfather.

      He spoke nine languages.

      Don’t you ever want to

      travel? I did when I

      was younger. Now, what

      would be the point?

      Who would want to meet me?

      I’d be ashamed.

      One night alone she sat

      at her kitchen table

      gluing baubles in a cap.

      When she had finished,

      pleased, she hid it away

      where no one could see.

      Of pumpkins and ghosts I sing

      Our Mardi Gras is this, not before

      a season of fasting dictated once

      by the bare cupboard of late winter,

     


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