Read Circles on the Water Online
Authors: Marge Piercy
We are all hustling and dealing
as we broil on the iron grates of the city.
Our minds charred, we collide and veer off.
Hard and spiny, we taste of DDT.
We trade each other in.
Talk is a poker game,
bed is a marketplace,
love is a soggy trap.
Property breeds theft and possession,
betrayal, the vinegar of contempt.
This woman, does she measure up?
This man, can I do better?
Each love is a purchase that can be returned
if it doesn’t fit.
Hard as building a wall of sand.
Hard as gathering blackberries naked
in the thorny sprawl of a bramble.
Hard as saying I’ve made a mistake
and you were right.
How hard to love.
How painful to be friends.
My life frays into refuse,
parts of broken appliances,
into tapes recorded over, photographs
of people I no longer talk to
even on the phone.
How loud too the clash of my needs
in my pockets as I run to you
keys and coins jangling.
My hungers yowl and scrap in the gutter.
I will wring you for a few drops of reassurance.
My fears are telling the beads of your spine.
To hear your voice over the subway roar
of my will requires discipline.
No more lovers, no more husbands,
no masters or mistresses, contracts, no affairs,
only friends.
No more trade-ins or betrayals,
only the slow accretion of community,
hand on hand.
Help me to be clear and useful.
Help me to help you.
You are not my insurance, not my vacation,
not my romance, not my job, not my garden.
You wear your own flags and colors and your own names.
I will never have you.
I am a friend who loves you.
I awoke with the room cold and my cat
Arofa kneading my belly.
I had been walking around the lower east side
while from every alley and fruit market and stoop,
out from under the ravaged cars,
the cats came running to me.
All the cats had heard I was moving to the country
because of my lungs
and they began to cough and sneeze and whine.
All the starving rat-gnawed rickety spavined cats
of the lower east side with their fleas and worms
and their siren of hunger
followed me through the teeming blocks.
They threw themselves under the wheels of trucks
in an effort to keep up.
They were rubbing my ankles and yowling
that I must take every one of them along.
They wanted to breathe air that was not stained.
They wanted to roll on wet grass.
They wanted to chase a bird that wasn’t a dirty pigeon.
Then the demands of the cats were drowned out.
As I ran, all of the eleven and twelve and thirteen year olds
who had died of skag in the smoking summer
began to miaou and miaou and miaou
till all of New York was white with pain like snow.
On the beach where we had been idly
telling the shell coins
cat’s paw, cross-barred Venus, china cockle,
we both saw at once
the sea bird fall to the sand
and flap grotesquely.
He had taken a great barbed hook
out through the cheek and fixed
in the big wing.
He was pinned to himself to die,
a royal tern with a black crest blown back
as if he flew in his own private wind.
He felt good in my hands, not fragile
but muscular and glossy and strong,
the beak that could have split my hand
opening only to cry
as we yanked on the barbs.
We borrowed a clippers, cut and drew out the hook.
Then the royal tern took off, wavering,
lurched twice,
then acrobat returned to his element, dipped,
zoomed, and sailed out to dive for a fish.
Virtue: what a sunrise in the belly.
Why is there nothing
I have ever done with anybody
that seems to me so obviously right?
Finally I have a house
where I return.
House half into the hillside,
wood that will weather to the wind’s grey,
house built on sand
drawing water like a tree from its roots
where my roots too are set
and I return.
Where the men rode crosscountry on their dirt bikes in October
the hog cranberry will not grow back.
This land is vulnerable like my own flesh.
In New York the land seems cast out by a rolling mill
except where ancient gneiss pokes through.
Plains and mountain dwarf the human, seeming permanent,
but Indians were chasing mammoth with Folsom points
before glacial debris piled up Cape Cod where I return.
The colonists found beech and oak trees high as steeples
and chopped them down.
When Thor eau hiked from Sandwich outward
he crossed a desert
for they had farmed the land until it blew away
and slaughtered the whales and seals extinct.
Here you must make the frail dirt where your food grows.
Fertility is created of human castings and the sea’s.
In the intertidal beach around each sand grain
swims a minute world dense with life.
Each oil slick wipes out galaxies.
Here we all lie on the palm of the poisoned sea our mother
where life began and is now ending
and we return.
Like mail order brides
they are lacking in glamor.
Drooping and frail and wispy,
they are orphaned waifs of some green catastrophe
from which only they have been blown to safety
swaddled in a few wraiths of sphagnum moss.
Windbreaks, orchards, forests of the mind
they huddle in the dirt
smaller than our cats.
The catalog said they would grow
to stand one hundred feet tall.
I could plant them in the bathroom.
I could grow them in window pots,
twelve trees to an egg carton.
I could dig four into the pockets of my jeans.
I could wear some in my hair
or my armpits.
Ah, for people like us, followed
by forwarding addresses and dossiers and limping causes
it takes a crazy despairing faith
full of teeth as a jack o’lantern
to plant pine and fir and beech
for somebody else’s grandchildren,
if there are any.
We breed plants, order seeds from
the opulent pornography of the catalogs,
plant, weed, fertilize, water.
But the flowers do not shine for us.
Forty days of life, working like a housewife
with six kids in diapers, at it like an oil rig pumping.
With condescension we pass on: busy as a bee.
Yet for them the green will of the plants
has thrust out colors, odors, the shapely trumpets and cups.
As the sun strikes the petals, the flower uncurls,
the bees come glinting and singing.
Now she crawls into the crimson rooms of the rose
where perfume reddens the air to port wine.
Marigolds sturdy in the grass barking like golden chow dogs
cry their wares to her. Enter. Devour me!
In her faceted eyes each image reverberates.
Cumulus clouds of white phlox
pile up for her in the heat of the sunburnt day.
Down into the soft well of the summer lilies,
cerise, citron, umber, rufous orange,
anthers with their palate of pollen
tremble as she enters.
She rubs her quivering fur
into each blue bell of the borage.
In the chamber of the peony she is massaged with silk.
Forty days she is drunk with nectar.
Each blossom utters fragrance to entice her,
offers up its soft flanks, its maddening colors,
its sweet and pungent fluids.
She never mates: her life is orgasm of all senses.
She dies one morning exhausted in the lap of the rose.
Like love letters turned up in an attic trunk
her honey remains to sweeten us.
June is the floodtide of green,
wet and lush and leafy, heavyladen.
In full summer the grass bleaches
to sand, hue of grasshoppers on the dunes.
The marsh begins to bronze.
Hot salty afternoons: the sun
stuns. Drops on our heads like a stone.
Among the pitch pines the sparse shade
simmers with resin.
Crickets shiver the air.
The path is white sand shimmering
leading down from the hill of scrub oak
crusty with lichens, reindeer moss,
ripe earth stars scattering their spores.
Nothing commands the eye
except the sea at the horizon.
We must actively look: textures
of ground cover, poverty grass, bearberry,
lowbush blueberry, wood lily, Virginia rose.
The dusty beach plums range on the gnarled branch
from soft dull green through blush and purple
like a tourist’s sunset in miniature.
Sandy, dwarfed, particular
this landscape yields nothing from a car.
A salt marsh must be learned on foot, wading,
lumbering in the muck, hopping tussocks of salt meadow grass,
hay arising sideways from last year’s fallen harvest.
The marsh clicks and rustles
with fiddler crabs scuttling to their holes.
The blue-eyed grass has bloomed.
Now we find fat joints of samphire
turning orange, the intricate sea lavender.
Under us the tide undulates
percolating through the layers, slithering
with its smell of life feeding and renewing
like my own flesh after sex.
We go in this landscape together learning it
barefoot and studious with our guides in a knapsack
catching Fowler’s toads and letting them go.
Victim not of an accident
but of a life that was accidental
she sprawls on the nursing
home bed: has a photo
of herself at seventeen with long
brown hair, face paprikaed
with freckles, like a granddaughter
who may live
in San Diego. In Decatur
love picked her up
by the scruff and after
out of work wandering dumped
her in Back of the Yards Chicago.
A broken nose, the scar of love;
stretch marks and a tooth lost
each child, love like
tuberculosis, it happens.
And generation used
her like a rutted highway
the heavy trucks trundling
their burdens all day and all
night. Her body was a thing
stuffed, swollen, convulsed
empty, producing for the state
and Jesus three soldiers and one
sailor, two more breeding wombs
and a (defunct) prostitute.
The surviving corporal drives
hack, one mother waits tables;
the other typed, married into
the suburbs and is den
mother to cubscouts.
The husband, cocksman, luckless
horse and numbersplayer, security
guard and petty thief, died
at fifty-six of cancer
of the colon.
Now like an abandoned car
she has been towed here
to fall apart.
She wastes, drugged,
in a spreading pool
of urine.
Surely she could be used,
her eyes, her heart
still strangely sturdy,
her one good kidney
could be salvaged for the rich
who are too valuable at seventy-four
to throw away.
Do you remember the first raw winter
of our women’s group, both of us fierce as mother bears?
Every day came down like a pile driver in the morning
shaking the bed empty
stomping sleep like a run-over bag.
Our pain was new, a too sharp kitchen knife.
We bled on everything we touched.
I could hardly type for scars.
Rage sang like a coloratura doing trills
in my head as I ricocheted up male streets.
You came on like a sergeant of marines.
You were freshly ashamed of your beauty
believing if you frowned a lot no one
would notice your face.
The group defined us the strong ones
loved us, hated us, baited us, set us
one on the other. We met
almost clandestinely. You brought flowers.
We praised lesbian love intellectually, looking
hard in each other’s black eyes, and each stayed
on her side of the kitchen exuding
a nervous whine like an avalanche of white mice.
What a rutted road through thick gassy clouds of nightmare,
political bedlam. Each has let
the other down and picked her up.
We will never be lovers; too scared
of losing each other. What tantalizes past flesh
—too mirrored, lush, dark haired and soft in the belly—
is the strange mind rasping, clanging, engaging.
What we fantasize—rising like a bird kite
on the hot afternoon air—is work together.
Projects, battles, schemes, manifestoes
are born from the brushing of wills
like small sparks from loose hair,
and will we let them fade, static electricity?