Strike Sparks: Selected Poems, 1980–2002
The Unswept Room
Blood, Tin, Straw
The Wellspring
The Father
The Gold Cell
The Dead and the Living
Satan Says
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
Copyright © 2008 by Sharon Olds
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Olds, Sharon.
One secret thing / by Sharon Olds.—1st ed.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-80437-2
I. Title.
PS
3565.l34
O
54 2008
811′.54—dc22
2008019607
v3.1
Special thanks to the editors of the following publications where these poems, some of which have been revised, first appeared:
The American Poetry Review
: “Money,” “Maiden Name,”
“Paterfamilias,” “When Our Firstborn Slept In,” “The Scare,”
“Pansy Coda,” “The Music,” “Two Late Dialogues,” “Little End Ode,” “Last Hour,” “Mom as Comet”
Antioch Review
: “Free Shoes”
Brick
: “The Float”
Five Points
: “Behavior Chart,” “Good Measure”
Massachusetts Review
: “The Body”
The Missouri Review
: “What Could Happen”
Ms.
: “One Secret Thing”
The New England Review
: “The Leader”
The New Yorker
: “Easter 1960,” “The Space Heater,” “Self-Exam,” “The Last Evening,” “Her Creed”
The Paris Review
: “Calvinist Parents”
Ploughshares
: “The Couldn’t”
Poetry
: “Legless Fighter Pilot,” “When He Came for the Family,” “The Signal,” “Home Ec,” “Still Life”
Poetry London
: “Animal Dress,” “Satin Maroon”
Tin House
: “At Night”
Tri-Quarterly
: “Western Wind”
Most of us are never conceived.
Many of us are never born—
we live in a private ocean for hours,
weeks, with our extra or missing limbs,
or holding our poor second head,
growing from our chest, in our arms. And many of us,
sea-fruit on its stem, dreaming kelp
and whelk, are culled in our early months.
And some who are born live only for minutes,
others for two, or for three, summers,
or four, and when they go, everything
goes—the earth, the firmament—
and love stays, where nothing is, and seeks.
They are crowded in a line being shoved toward a truck.
Some seem stunned, some sick with fear.
She stands slightly outside the line,
black hat clamped on her head,
mouth compressed. In her hands she holds
an oversized lettuce, its white stems and
great, pale, veined leaves
unfolded in the dense air. She stares
directly at the camera, the large, delicate
plant in her grip, its glowing vanes
reaching out. Furious, she takes her
last chance to look right at us.
He takes his right calf in his hand,
lifts the whole leg up, straight,
turns, and swings it into the cockpit,
sliding into the seat. The left leg he
bends by hand at the knee, pulls it in, and
slams the hatch, then in his aircraft
he rises over the hills. In the sky
no one can walk, everyone
is a sitting duck, he banks and begins to hunt.
He is not afraid of anything now,
not even his coffin—hell, he is part
native oak already, and if he
lost his arms he’d replace them. All he
wants is to bag as many as he can,
crash them into the ground like birds into a sack with their
useless legs trailing out the mouth of it.
When the men and women went into hiding,
they knew what could happen if the others caught them.
They knew their bodies might be undone,
their sexual organs taken as if
to destroy the mold so the human could not
be made anymore. They knew what the others
went for—the center of the body,
and not just for the agony and horror but to
send them crudely barren into death,
throwing those bodies down in the village at dawn
to show that all was ended. But each
time the others dumped a body in the square,
a few more people took to the woods,
as if springing up, there,
from the loam dark as the body’s wound.
The ground was frozen, the coffin-wood burned
for fuel. So the dead were covered with something
and taken on a child’s sled to the cemetery
in the subzero air. They lay on the snow,
some wrapped in rough cloth
bound with rope, like the tree’s ball of roots
when it waits to be planted; others wound
in sheets, their gauze, tapered shapes
stiff as cocoons which will split down the center
when the new life inside is prepared;
but most lay like corpses, their coverings
coming loose, naked calves
hard as corded wood spilling
from under a tarp, a hand reaching out
as if to the bread made of glue and sawdust,
to the icy winter, and the siege.
They looked at their daughter standing with her music
in her hand, the page covered with dots and
lines, with its shared language. They knew
families had been taken. What they did not know
was the way he would pick her cello up
by the scroll neck and take its amber
torso-shape and lift it and break it
against the fireplace. The brickwork crushed the
close-grained satiny wood, they stood and
stared at him.
When they brought his body back, they told
his wife how he’d died:
the general thought they had taken the beach,
and sent in his last reserves. In the smokescreen,
the boats moved toward shore. Her husband
was the first man in the first boat
to move through the smoke and see the sand
dark with bodies, the tanks burning,
the guns thrown down, the landing craft
wrecked and floored with blood. In the path of the
bullets and shells from the shore, her husband had
put on a pair of white gloves
and turned his back on the enemy,
motioning to the boats behind him
to turn back. After everyone else
on his boat was dead
he continued to signal, then he, too,
was killed, but the other boats had seen him
and turned back. They gave his wife the medal,
and she buried him, and at night floated through
a wall of smoke, and saw him at a distance
standing in a boat, facing her,
the gloves blazing on his hands as he motioned her back.
Seeing the wind at the airport blowing on his hair,
lifting it up where it was slicked down, you
want to say to the wind, Stop, that’s
the leader’s hair, but the wind keeps lifting it
and separating the thin strands and
fanning it out like a weed-head in the air.
His brows look bright in the airport glare,
his eyes are crinkled up against the sun, you
want to say to his eyes, Stop, you are
the leader’s eyes, close yourselves, but they are
on his side, no part of his body
can turn against him. His thumbnail is long and
curved—it will not slit his throat for the
sake of the million children; his feet in their
polished shoes won’t walk him into the
propeller and end the war. His heart won’t
cease to beat, even if it knows
whose heart it is—it has no loyalty to
other hearts, it has no future outside his body.
And you can’t suddenly tell his mind that it is
his mind, get out while it can,
it already knows that it’s his mind—
much of its space is occupied with the
plans for the marble memorial statues
when he dies of old age. They’ll place one
in every capital city of his nation
around the world—Lagos, Beijing,
São Paolo, New York, London, Baghdad,
Sydney, Paris, Jerusalem,
a giant statue of him, Friend to the Children
of the leader’s country—
which will mean all children, then,
all those living.