Dreamers
A woman races dusty rows,
deposits bundles of butter lettuce
from the bowls of her arms
into white plastic bins roadside.
Past the burn scar scorched
into the horizon in the thick air
of another fire season,
a small breath of wind kisses
her face silkened in sweat,
cooling down her body
as temples pulse, nose burns,
throat tightens at day’s end
with the ache of the field
pulsing every muscle
as crows eye new seeds
in furrows thirsting for water.
At home her little girl waits
at the open window for her,
elbows at the sill, hands cupping
chin,
her wide eyes pitched upward
past the cresting sun toward a sky
waiting to darken then fill
the page of night she reads
as stars full of wishes and dreams.
She’d Sit and Sew
A curious gladness
shook me.—Stanley Kunitz
Evenings she’d sit
there rocking and sewing,
darning a sock,
stitching a tattered button hole,
hemming a skirt, or
the more elaborate projects
crocheting a hat,
shawl, or throw as if this
private piece work
were its own peace.
Even as repetition
weakened her weary hands,
she sometimes reached
down to tousle my hair
as I slumped in a
sleepy heap at her feet,
and when through the dusty blind slats
a thin thread of light streaked across my lap,
it was then that curious gladness shook me.
What a Doll!
Barbie was everything we didn’t want
to be…everything
the feminist movement was trying to
escape.—Gloria Steinem
They keep hawking her,
the busty Barbie
with wasp waist
and tiny feet,
once a bachelor party
gag gift in
lingerie
and peek-a-boo box.
They keep pushing her
inside the Dream House,
inside a body the dream
for a future to travel
bare and smooth, passport
her boobs and buttocks.
They keep propping her up
as rock star, reporter, pilot,
engineer (of washing machines)
or tech head computing code
(for drawing puppies).
What a hustle these token
blue-collar and black face Barbies,
the dentist, president, astronaut,
all donning careers like hats,
sporting tights and spikes,
and always fashion forward.
What a hype this dolly
for fixing bodies by starving,
waxing, plumping, binding,
and slicing, this Barbie,
in all the wrong proportions,
in too many ways to measure.
She, the queen bee marries winter
—a Cento honoring Sylvia Plath, 1932-1963
(from last lines in her books Colossus and Ariel)
The forgetful surf creaming on those
ledges,
each wave-tip glitters like a knife.
Gulls
mulled in the greenest light
face
the bald-faced sun
with
their gifts to a difficult borning.
Clear
vowels rising like balloons:
I
shall be good as new, love, love my season.
Will
you marry it, marry it, marry it.
I
eat men like air that kill, that kill, that kill.
The
queen bee marries the winter of your year.
Eye, the cauldron of mourning,
starless and fatherless, a dark water
asks
nothing of life,
of
the profane grail, the dreaming skull,
the
mausoleum, the wax house.
The
box is only temporary.
All the Ways I Do Not Wish to Die
Not alone, sprawled out on the floor
like my mother, woozy enough to slip
and hit her head on a coal bucket
door stop after a stay in a hospital
she said would be her last and was.
Not so weak in bed like my brother,
too exhausted to pick up the phone
to tell me he loved me, papers signed
to have life support removed. Not alone
in the bathroom like my father,
who survived wanderlust,
brain surgery, electro shock therapy,
but not throwing up into a toilet
clutching his chest.
Not coughing and choking
like my hard hatted grandfathers,
lungs closing inside mines and mills
so children and grandchildren
could breathe fresh air.
Not from a stray road rage bullet
or gang initiation or sniping revenge
dispensing a forlorn childhood
on victims at movies, ballgames,
concerts, schools, grocery stores.
Not mysteriously, like the poet Neruda,
soul sparring from the ground
against exhumation for historical
curiosity, in his eye sockets
tango dancers in a
final soltada.
Not burning at the stake like my
ancestral
sister witches, high on lysergic acid
from fungus in bread, hated and scorned
under Salem’s unrepentant sky
bleeding down on their screams.
Not alone, the way it is, the way it
must be,
in a world that is a beautiful
place
to be born into, if you don’t mind
the smiling mortician at the door.
And
when death knocks there, I plan
to
stand and declare: all my life I was a bride
married
to amazement. I was the bridegroom
taking
the world into my arms.
Author’s Note: lines in the penultimate stanza are from Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
lines
in the final stanza from Mary Oliver.
Andrena Zawinski,
veteran teacher of writing and activist poet, lives in the San Francisco Bay
Area. Her poetry has received awards for lyricism, form, spirituality, and
social concern. Her latest book is Landings from Kelsay Books; others
are Something About from Blue Light Press (a PEN Oakland Award) and Traveling
in Reflected Light from Pig Iron Press (a Kenneth Patchen Prize) along with
several chapbooks and work appearing widely online and in print.
No comments:
Post a Comment