Read Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful Online
Authors: Alice Walker
off the floor
and feel my stomach muscles
rebel:
they are mutinous
there are rumblings
of dissent.
I have other things
to show,
but mostly, my body.
“Don’t you see that person
staring at you?” I ask my breasts,
which are still capable
of staring back.
“If I didn’t exercise
you couldn’t look up
that far.
Your life would be nothing
but shoes.”
“Let us at least say we’re doing it
for ourselves”;
my fingers are eloquent;
they never sweat.
Letting go
in order to hold on
I gradually understand
how poems are made.
There is a place the fear must go.
There is a place the choice must go.
There is a place the loss must go.
The leftover love.
The love that spills out
of the too full cup
and runs and hides
its too full self
in shame.
I gradually comprehend
how poems are made.
To the upbeat flight of memories.
The flagged beats of the running
heart.
I understand how poems are made.
They are the tears
that season the smile.
The stiff-neck laughter
that crowds the throat.
The leftover love.
I know how poems are made.
There is a place the loss must go.
There is a place the gain must go.
The leftover love.
If I had erased my life there
where the touchdown more than race
holds attention now
how martyred he would have been
his dedication to his work
how unquestionable!
But I am stoned and do not worry
—sitting in this motel room—
for when his footsteps at last disturb
the remnants of my self-pity
there will be nothing here
to point to his love of me
not even my appreciation.
When you remember me, my child,
be sure to recall that Mama was
a sinner. Her soul was lost
(according to her mama) the very
first time she questioned God. (It
weighed heavily on her, though she
did not like to tell.)
But she wanted to live and what is more
be happy
a concept not understood before the age
of twenty-one.
She was not happy
with fences.
I cradle my four-year-old daughter
in my arms
alarmed that already she smells
of Love-Is-True perfume.
A present from
her grandmother,
who loves her.
At twenty-nine my own gifts
of seduction
have been squandered. I rise
to Romance
as if it is an Occasional Test
in which my lessons of etiquette
will, thankfully, allow me to fail.
My father and mother both
used to warn me
that “a whistling woman and a crowing
hen would surely come to
no good end.” And perhaps I should
have listened to them.
But even at the time I knew
that though my end probably might
not
be good
I must whistle
like a woman undaunted
until I reached it.
love is not concerned
with whom you pray
or where you slept
the night you ran away
from home
love is concerned
that the beating of your heart
should kill no one.
She said: “When I was with him,
I used to dream of them together.
Making love to me, he was
making love to her.
That image made me come
every time.”
A woman lies alone
outside our door.
I know she dreams us
making love;
you inside me,
her lips on my breasts.
When I no longer have your heart
I will not request your body
your presence
or even your polite conversation.
I will go away to a far country
separated from you by the sea
—on which I cannot walk—
and refrain even from sending
letters
describing my pain.
With their money they bought ignorance
and killed the dreamer.
But you, Chenault,* have killed
the dreamer’s mother.
They tell me you smile happily
on
TV
,
mission “half-accomplished.”
I can no longer observe such pleased mad
faces.
The mending heart breaks
to break again.
* The assassin of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s mother, Mrs. Alberta King. His plan had been to murder Martin Luther King, Sr., as well.
What is the point
of being artists
if we cannot save our life?
That is the cry
that wakes us
in our sleep.
Being happy is not the only
happiness.
And how many gadgets
can one person manage
at one time?
Over in the Other World
the women count
their wealth
in empty
calabashes.
How to transport
food
from watering hole
to watering
hole
has ceased to be
a problem
since the animals
died
and seed grain shrunk
to fit the pocket.
Now
it is just a matter
of who can create
the finest
decorations
on the empty
pots.
They say in Nicaragua
the whole
government
writes,
makes music
and paints,
saving their own
and helping the people save
their own lives.
(I ask you to notice
who, songless,
rules us
here.)
They say in Nicaragua
the whole
government
writes
and makes
music
saving its own
and helping the people save
their own lives.
These are not containers
void of food.
These are not decorations
on empty pots.
Today I am at home
writing poems.
My life goes well:
only a few sirens herald disaster
in the ghetto
down the street.
In the world, people die
of hunger.
On my block we lose
jobs, housing and breasts.
But in the world
children are lost;
whole countries of children
starved to death
before the age
of five
each year;
their mothers squatted
in the filth
around the empty cooking pot
wondering:
But I cannot pretend
to know
what they wonder.
A walled horror
instead of thought
would be my mind.
And our children
gladly starve themselves.
Thinking of the food I eat
every day
I want to vomit, like
people who throw up
at will,
understanding that whether
they digest or not
they must consume.
Can you imagine?
Rather than let the hungry
inside the restaurants
Let them eat vomit, they say.
They are applauded
for this.
They are light.
But
wasn’t there a time
when food was sacred?
When a dead child
starved naked
among the oranges
in the marketplace
spoiled
the appetite?
How I miss my father.
I wish he had not been
so tired
when I was
born.
Writing deposit slips and checks
I think of him.
He taught me how.
This is the form,
he must have said:
the way it is done.
I learned to see
bits of paper
as a way
to escape
the life he knew
and even in high school
had a savings
account.
He taught me
that telling the truth
did not always mean
a beating;
though many of my truths
must have grieved him
before the end.
How I miss my father!
He cooked like a person
dancing
in a yoga meditation
and craved the voluptuous
sharing
of good food.
Now I look and cook just like him:
my brain light;
tossing this and that
into the pot;
seasoning none of my life
the same way twice; happy to feed
whoever strays my way.
He would have grown
to admire
the woman I’ve become:
cooking, writing, chopping wood,
staring into the fire.
I said to Poetry: “I’m finished
with you.”
Having to almost die
before some weird light
comes creeping through
is no fun.
“No thank you, Creation,
no muse need apply.
I’m out for good times—
at the very least,
some painless convention.”
Poetry laid back
and played dead
until this morning.
I wasn’t sad or anything,
only restless.
Poetry said: “You remember
the desert, and how glad you were
that you have an eye
to see it with? You remember
that, if ever so slightly?”
I said: “I didn’t hear that.
Besides, it’s five o’clock in the a.m.
I’m not getting up
in the dark
to talk to you.”
Poetry said: “But think about the time
you saw the moon
over that small canyon
that you liked much better
than the grand one—and how surprised you were
that the moonlight was green
and you still had
one good eye
to see it with.
Think of that!”
“I’ll join the church!” I said, huffily,
turning my face to the wall.
“I’ll learn how to pray again!”
“Let me ask you,” said Poetry.
“When you pray, what do you think
you’ll see?”
Poetry had me.
“There’s no paper
in this room,” I said.
“And that new pen I bought
makes a funny noise.”
“Bullshit,” said Poetry.
“Bullshit,” said I.
I have a friend
who is turning gray,
not just her hair,
and I do not know
why this is so.
Is it a lack of vitamin E
pantothenic acid, or B-12?
Or is it from being frantic
and alone?
“How long does it take you to love someone?”
I ask her.
“A hot second,” she replies.
“And how long do you love them?”
“Oh, anywhere up to several months.”
“And how long does it take you
to get over loving them?”
“Three weeks,” she said, “tops.”
Did I mention I am also
turning gray?
It is because I
adore
this woman
who thinks of love
in this way.
Staying overnight in a friend’s house
I miss my own bed
in San Francisco
and the man in my bed
but mostly just
my bed
It’s a mattress on the floor
but so what?
This bed I’m in is lumpy
It lists to one side
It has thin covers
and is short
All night I toss and turn
dreaming of my bed
in San Francisco
with me in it
and the man too sometimes
in it
but together
Sometimes we are eating pastrami
which he likes
Sometimes we are eating
Other things
My daughter is coming!
I have bought her a bed
and a chair
a mirror, a lamp
and a desk.
Her room is all ready
except that the curtains
are torn.
Do I have time to buy shoji panels
for the window?
I do not.
First I must write a speech
see the doctor about my tonsils
which are dying ahead of schedule
see the barber and do a wash
cross the country
cross Brooklyn and Manhattan
MAKE A SPEECH
READ A POEM
liberate my daughter
from her father and Washington, D.C.
recross the country
and present her to her room.
My daughter is coming!
Will she like her bed,
her chair, her mirror
desk and lamp
Or will she see only
the torn curtains?
When Golda Meir
was in Africa
she shook out her hair
and combed it
everywhere she went.
According to her autobiography
Africans loved this.
In Russia, Minneapolis, London, Washington, D.C.
Germany, Palestine, Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem
she never combed at all.
There was no point. In those
places people said, “She looks like
any other aging grandmother. She looks
like a troll. Let’s sell her cookery
and guns.”
“
Kreplach
your cookery,” said Golda.
Only in Africa could she finally