Authors: Lorine Niedecker
Audubon
Tried selling my pictures. In jail
twice for debt. My companion
a sharp, frosty gale.
In England unpacked
them with fear:
must I migrate back
to the woods unknown, strange
to all but the birds
I paint?
Dear Lucy, the servants here
move quiet
as killdeer.
van Gogh
At times I sit in the dunes,
faint, not enough to eat.
The path thru the dunes
is like a desert…the family's shoes
patched and worn and many more
such views.
What a woman!—hooks men like rugs,
clips as she hooks, prefers old wool, but all
childlike, lost, houseowning or pensioned men
her prey. She covets the gold in her husband's teeth.
She'd sell dirt, she'd sell your eyes fried in deep grief.
The brown muskrat, noiseless,
swims the white stream,
stretched out as if already
a woman's neck-piece.
In Red Russia the Russians
at a mile a minute
pitch back Nazi wildmen
wearing women.
The broad-leaved Arrow-head
grows vivid and strong
in my book, says: underneath
the surface of the stream the leaves
are narrow, long.
I don't investigate,
mark the page…I suppose
if I sat down beside a frost
and had no printed sign
I'd be lost. Well, up
from lying double in a book,
go long like a tree
and broad as the library.
“New Goose” Manuscript
To a Maryland editor, 1943:
The enclosed poems are sepa-
rated by stars to save paper.
Dear MacCloud:
the poems called Goose
separated by stars
to save the sun—
“We couldn't get away
with these down here
in the south on the brow
of Washington”—
appeared: your night's
folk-tongue.
Summer's away, I traded my chicks for trees
so winter's tea-kettle on the high wood stove
my feet to the heat
my back in the shade
will tally with the tit-wit that sang
from the upmost branch.
She was a mourner too. Now she's gone
to the earth's core,
with organ notes, buried by church that buries the live,
intoning: That torture called by men delight
touches her no more.
So calm she looked, half smiling: Heaven?
No, restore
my matter, never free from motion,
to the soil's roar.
Seven years a charming woman wore
her coat, removed the collar where it tore,
little warmth but honor in her loose
thin coat, without knowing why
she's so. Charming? Well, she's destitute.
The land of four o'clocks is here
the five of us together
looking for our supper.
Half past endive, quarter to beets,
seven milks, ten cents cheese,
lost, our land, forever.
Just before she died
my little grandma with her long, long hair
put her hand on mine: I'm nearly there.
What'll I do all my life,
I cried, my work's cut short; I've a share
in the speed-up; a long, long race to spare.