What makes it good
Is that we came to this
Having each tasted freely
Of the sweet plum flesh of others.
So your head will not turn?
It may turn.
But my feet won't follow.
What makes it good
Is that we came to this slowly
Not blind or in white fever
Tearing off our clothes running
But walking arm around shoulder
Friends.
So you will not fight?
We will fight
Fists balled, throats
Full to choking
But we have learned
How to stop
Before the blade hits the throat.
What makes it good
Is that we give each other
Freedom, for the laughter
Of others.
So you've never had to give up friends?
I have given up
My gang of boys.
They wanted me to trade
Her for them
But why trade
When you have what you want?
What makes it good
Is that neither dawdles thinking
My lover kept me back.
So you are not ambitious?
I am ambitious.
And what will you do about her?
Take her with me.
And if you go nowhere?
It is no fault of hers.
What makes it good
Is that we
Both
Want it bad,
To be good.
Ira Wood
Why mar what has grown up between the cracks
and flourished, like a weed
that discovers itself to bear rugged
spikes of magenta blossom in August,
ironweed sturdy and bold,
a perennial that endures winters to persist?
Why register with the State?
Why enlist in the legions of the respectable?
Why risk the whole apparatus of roles
and rules, of laws and liabilities?
Why license our bed at the foot
like our Datsun truck: will the mileage improve?
Why encumber our love with patriarchal
word stones, with the old armor
of husband and the corset stays
and the chains of wife? Marriage
meant buying a breeding womb
and sole claim to enforced sexual service.
Marriage has built boxes in which women
have burst their hearts sooner
than those walls; boxes of private
slow murder and the fading of the bloom
in the blood; boxes in which secret
bruises appear like toadstools in the morning.
But we cannot invent a language
of new grunts. We start where we find
ourselves, at this time and place
which is always the crossing of roads
that began beyond the earth's curve
but whose destination we can now alter.
This is a public saying to all our friends
that we want to stay together. We want
to share our lives. We mean to pledge
ourselves through times of broken stone
and seasons of rose and ripe plum;
we have found out, we know, we want to continue.
We come together
Pure and ample
Top-heavy woman
Stocky man
Midwestern half-breed
Long Island Jew.
Jew with eyes of jade
Jew with eyes of almonds
Jews with tempers
Like the blue serpent tongue
Of the lightning that cracks
The sky over our land.
We come together strong
Strong as our passion to lie
Skin pressed to skin, quivering.
Strong as our hunger
To tell, to taste, to know.
I am lucky to have you
I know it.
But with each windfall
Comes the tax
With each rainfall
The weeds
To kneel and pull.
We give and take
With no line between.
We grow our food.
We heal our wounds.
You remind me
Good writing takes time,
I bolster you
When the world attacks.
We came together
Each an other,
Sister brother
Mother son
Father daughter
Man and woman.
We lick each other's skins like lost kittens.
Fight like starving strays.
We talk deep into the night
Make each other coffee
Keep each other straight.
We are scrub oak
Strong and low
Peony
Full bodied, brilliant
Feast for the butterfly
Feast for the ant.
Our love is like the land.
We work to keep it fertile.
                              Â
Ira Wood
The way the grain of you runs
wavy and strong as maple.
Black grapes warm in the hand,
the bloom on them like mist,
breathe their scent in gusts:
dusk of a summer evening.
In sleep you shimmer heat
banked like a Russian stove.
How wide you open to me,
a volcano gaping its belly
of fire all the way to the molten
core; a tree whose every leaf
is a mouth drinking sunshine
whose roots are all mouths.
Our life is a daily fugue
polyphonic, with odd harmonies
that make the bones vibrate
secretly, sweetly in the flesh
the way a divining rod shivers
over veins of water, or power.
Red is the body's own deep song,
the color of lips, of our busy
organs, heart and stomach and lungs,
the color of our roused genitals,
the color of tongues and the flag of our blood.
Red is the loudest color
and the most secret
lurking inside the clothes' cocoon,
banked in the dark of the nightly bed
like coals shimmering in a stove.
It is the hot color, the active
that dances into your eye leaping,
that goads and pricks you
with its thorn of fire,
that shouts and urges and commands.
But red coils in the wineglass
head into tail like a dozing cat
whose eyes have shut but who purrs still
the pleasure of your hand, whose
warmth gently loosens the wine's aroma
so it rises like a perfumed ghost
inside the chambers of your nose.
In the mouth wine opens
its hundred petals like a damask rose
and then subsides, swallowed to afterglow.
In the wine press of the bed
of all the salty flows of our bodies,
the heat of our love ferments
our roundness into the midnight red
flowering of the wine
that can make drunken and make warm
that can comfort and quicken the sluggish
that can ease the weary body into sleep
that can frame the dark bread and cheese
into feast, that can celebrate
and sing through the wine of the body,
its own bright blood that rushes
to every cranny and cove of the flesh
and dark of the bone, the joy in love
that is the wine of life.
The chuppah stands on four poles.
The home has its four corners.
The chuppah stands on four poles.
The marriage stands on four legs.
Four points loose the winds
that blow on the walls of the house,
the south wind that brings the warm rain,
the east wind that brings the cold rain,
the north wind that brings the cold sun
and the snow, the long west wind
bringing the weather off the far plains.
Here we live open to the seasons.
Here the winds caress and cuff us
contrary and fierce as bears.
Here the winds are caught and snarling
in the pines, a cat in a net clawing
breaking twigs to fight loose.
Here the winds brush your face
soft in the morning as feathers
that float down from a dove's breast.
Here the moon sails up out of the ocean
dripping like a just washed apple.
Here the sun wakes us like a baby.
Therefore the chuppah has no sides.
It is not a box.
It is not a coffin.
It is not a dead end.
Therefore the chuppah has no walls
We have made a home together
open to the weather of our time.
We are mills that turn in the winds of struggle
converting fierce energy into bread.
The canopy is the cloth of our table
where we share fruit and vegetables
of our labor, where our care for the earth
comes back and we take its body in ours.
The canopy is the cover of our bed
where our bodies open their portals wide,
where we eat and drink the blood
of our love, where the skin shines red
as a swallowed sunrise and we burn
in one furnace of joy molten as steel
and the dream is flesh and flower.
O my love O my love we dance
under the chuppah standing over us
like an animal on its four legs,
like a table on which we set our love
as a feast, like a tent
under which we work
not safe but no longer solitary
in the searing heat of our time.
Before we clean, we scream
accusatory, rowdy as gulls.
We screech, we bark, we flap.
Abruptly we subside and start.
Always it is two weeks past
the last endurable point.
It is destiny we grovel to,
that if we do not clean
we will smother in our own dirt.
We mutter and swot and heave.
We scrub and spray and haul out.
The vacuum cleaner chokes on a tissue
ball, its bag exploding; some cat
vomited behind the heaviest couch.
Dusted cobwebs fall on the scrubbed counter.
O house, neat as a stamp collection,
everything in its place ordained
glimmering with propriety at last.
Invite all our friends to dinner,
summon the neighbors who call
this the jungle. Let in the cats
to roll on the clean carpets.
By the next day it looks like
a rummage sale at five o'clock.
This box of house, like a child's
treasure trove of colored stones, blue jay
and pheasant feathers, random playing cards,
is irrational in the pleasure it proffers
those who fill it slowly
with the detritus and the clothing
of their living. It is the burrow
of a sand worm decorated with pebble
and shell the tides bring in.
This house is part toy: we move lamps
and chairs about exactly as I did
in my dollhouse, where I first played
at creation and fashioned dramas,
gave names to china animals, like Adam;
and like a god, invented rules.
This house is part clothing, a warm
coat that keeps us snug from the cold,
a huge raincoat that covers us dry.
It is our facade to friend and stranger,
stuck over with emblems of our taste,
our friends, our flush times, our travels,
our previous misadventures.
This house displays our virtue to each other.
I swept the kitchen floor twice this week.
But
I
took the trash to the dump Tuesday.
I am putting up shelves, so kiss me.
See how the freshly polished table shines
like a red, red apple with love.
This house is a nest in which the eggs
of worries hatch fledglings
of cowbird's young who usurp the care
and push the right nestlings out.
This house eats money and shits bills.
Bed, table, desk: here is the hearth of love.
I am territorial as my cats. When I return
I stroll the house singing arias of the familiar.
I leave here on a long tether that pulls
hard in the day and harder at night.
At two a rabbit screamed.
A splash of blood on the floodlit needles.
The mice of the ashy dawn
nibbled my salted eyelashes.
Outside, the rough gears of the world
clanked on, bodies smashed
on every spoke and sprocket
oiling those grim wheels.
I dreamed your step, your warmth
against my side and woke to see
the weird grey stars of terror
wheeling around the pole of midnight.
The tears I spouted sleepless nights,
they are spangled on the grasses
among the small webs like flimsy tents,
now traps and prisms of the sun.
I am entire, grafted together,
satiated with you and shining
inside and outside, a hot orange,
liquid all through with joy.
Let me web and petal you with kisses,
let me deck you with love baubles
like a rich Christmas tree, hung
with totems and birds and lights.
My love is peeled to its prickly
bleeding quick. I want to lick you over
like a mother cat. Each hair of your
head is numbered in my love.
Come let us raise our tent of skin.
Let me wrap you in the night of my hair
so our legs climb each other like pea vines.
The tiger lily is open on the freckled hour.
Bite into its ruddiness, a peach
splitting with ripeness and juice.
I stood in the sugar cane
near Cienfuegos and bit on the green
fibrous stem and the sweetness flowed.
We plunge into each other as into a pool
that closes over our heads. We float
suspended in liquid velvet.
The light comes from behind the eyes,
red, soft, thick as blood, ancient as sleep.
We build each other with our hands.
That is where flesh is translucent as water.
That is where flesh shines with its own light.
That is where flesh ripples as you walk
through it like fog and it closes around you.
That is where boundaries fail and wink out.
Flesh dreams down to rock and up to fire.
Here ego dissolves, a slug in vinegar,
although its loud demands will come back
like a bounced check as soon as we rise.
But this dim red place that waits at the pit
of the pool is real as the bone in the flesh
and there we make love as you make a table
where the blood roars like an ocean in the ears
remembering its source, and we remember
how we are bound and body of each other.