Read If There is Something to Desire Online
Authors: Vera Pavlova
Any housecoat would do,
but the seamstress cuts
the wedding gown
out of sea foam.
Come, undo my braid.
No sister’s foot can fit
Cinderella’s sandals
of cinders made.
I have brushed my teeth.
This day and I are even.
… if necessary, the books shall be divided as follows:
you get the odd, I get the even pages;
“the books” are understood to mean the ones we used to read aloud
together, when we would interrupt our reading for a kiss,
and would get back to the book after half an hour …
A weight on my back,
a light in my womb.
Stay longer in me,
take root.
When you are on top of me,
I feel triumphant and proud,
as if I were carrying you
out of a city under siege.
Armpits smell of linden blossom,
lilacs give a whiff of ink.
If we could only wage lovemaking
all day long without end,
love so detailed and elastic
that when nightfall came,
we would exchange each other
like prisoners of war, five times, no less!
Man to woman is homeland.
Woman to man is a way.
How much way have you covered!
Dear, get some rest:
here is a chest, lean your head;
here is a heart, camp out;
and we shall evenly share
the dry residue of griefs.
Memory keeps nothing unnecessary
or superfluous.
How much of your past
am I still to go through?
Taking dreams for memories,
I stroke the sleeper’s head.
A secret poll. The future
comes in last.
Envy not singers and mimes,
do not ravish the ailing words.
The adjective
beloved
embraces all other adjectives,
verbs, nouns,
pronouns …
Poor Logos, naked and starved,
pining in admiration!
Inseparable: the parrot and its mirror,
Narcissus and his stream.
Here, I have made duplicate keys
to Eden, had the white dress altered.
Inseparable: Robinson Crusoe and Friday,
the dots in the umlaut,
me and you, my Sunday.
The serenade of a car siren
under a window gone dark.
Anything but betrayal!
Let us stop ears with wax,
tie the daredevil to the woman
as to a mast … The sleep,
restless and moist.
The arm goes numb.
Writing down verses, I got
a paper cut on my palm.
The cut extended my life line
by nearly one-fourth.
Teeth dull, veins collapsed,
heels worn down.
We are young as long as
our parents are young.
Dry is the riverbed where milk and honey,
white and amber, had run.
In the hospital, comb your mother’s hair,
clip the yellow nails.
Bathe me, birth me from foam,
cover me, swathe me in hugs.
Paradise is where
nothing can ever change.
You’re crying? —No, a speck in the eye.
You’re crying? —No, too much reading.
Hell is where there is no way
you can ever change.
You are, my dear,
a wall of stone:
to sing or howl
behind,
to bash my head on.
A tentative bio:
caught fireflies,
read till dawn,
fell in love with weirdos,
cried buckets of tears
for reasons unknown,
birthed two daughters
by seven men.
I walk the tightrope.
A kid on each arm
for balance.
Old age will come, will arrange books
in alphabetical order, will sort out photos and negatives.
With a head shake: “How meager the heritage of the most gifted.”
With a shrug: “Still, they must have done their best.”
Wrapping a shawl tighter: “Incredible: any man that comes along
can deserve the title ‘darling’!”
With a toothless grin: “How lovely they look now,
the rejected photos never put into albums!”
Not sheep coming down the hills,
not cracks on the ceiling—
count the ones you loved,
the former tenants of dreams
who would keep you awake,
once meant the world to you,
rocked you in their arms,
those who loved you …
You will fall asleep, by dawn, in tears.
Eyes of mine,
why so sad?
Am I not cheerful?
Words of mine,
why so rough?
Am I not gentle?
Deeds of mine,
why so silly?
Am I not wise?
Friends of mine,
why so dead?
Am I not strong?
A cake of soap, a length of rope,
a chair to hang socks on.
Death from depression seems
a bit ridiculous.
Starless is the abyss,
dark the water’s depth.
Too late for me
to have died young.
The sleeping are no mates for the crying,
the crying cannot judge those asleep.
How quickly you succumb to slumbers,
how blissfully, as I lie crying
next to you, hiding in the pillow
and saving for a rainy day
the lullaby to mourn the one
who had fallen asleep before I did.
“If you want, we can part with a smile,
or you can cry a little, if you want.”
The sole profession in the world
for men only: the executioner.
Has all been properly done:
the verdict duly announced,
the scaffold set nice and comfy?
Is the ax razor sharp?
I
am
the one
who wakes up
on your
left.
At last you and I are one,
together until the end.
Penelope’s cloth came in handy
for the wedding gown,
napkins, bedsheets, hankies,
with enough left for Odysseus
to make a sail.
A torture: writing a rough draft
of what came as a fair copy.
The milky wholeness is gone.
The waxy ripeness is here.
I take the accursed apple,
the one that deprives us of peace,
nibble on it, do not swallow,
keep the bite behind my cheek.
We lay down, and the pain let up.
We embraced, and the pain let go:
no more scalding regrets,
no scorching remorse
that oppressed the soul,
that weighed like a stone on the heart.
You, on top of me, heavy, immense,
and I, feeling so light.
A caress over the threshold
of sleep. Asleep? Half asleep?
We are ignorant of vice:
blind, entwined, content,
our bodies cling tight
to each other
without our knowledge,
ignorant of the evil.
Am I lovely? Of course!
Breathlessly I taste
the subtle compliment
of a handmade caress.
Chop me into tiny bits,
caress and tame my soul,
that godly swallow
you love to no end.
Where are we? On the sky’s
seventh floor. Above seven clouds
you are sewing the soul to the flesh
with strong manly stitches
that can neither be cut nor torn.
Inseparable, as you and I:
the light vibrant flesh,
the vibrant light soul.
Basked in the sun,
listened to birds,
licked off raindrops,
and only in flight
the leaf saw the tree
and grasped
what it had been.
The matted lashes sprinkled
with pollen from Eden’s tree.
Your face: the sun.
Mine: a sunflower.
The golden lies of May:
that nature favors me,
the sun is for me alone,
like a reading light on the plane.
Whenever I wish, I press
a button, and browse at will
through some worthless magazine
on a flight to you. And soon will land.
Pellets of sunburned skin,
a love bite from a gnat
next to my nipple. Eve’s dress
must have been sewn for me.
An ant clambers up my arm,
a dragonfly lands on my back …
Stocking up summer for winter,
I know: the supply will not last.
A lonesome crow
croaks in the dusk.
The wind and nettles play cards;
the deck is marked.
A drinking binge next door.
An old man in the drizzling rain
carries a coat to the dump:
a woman’s coat, warm, heavy cloth, hardly worn.
A box for useless scrap.
A compost dump.
A puddle covered with grates
filched from the graveyard.
A bunch of frisky guys
on the way to a dance.
A scarecrow crucified
for crows to laugh at.
Torment: the homeland.
Happiness: a foreign land.
Patriotism: a congenital trauma.
The tears of a drunken gent
calling out to a prostitute:
“Hey, mama!”
Her grimace.
Nostalgia: craving pain.
… went to the movies with classmates,
came home, found his mother
hanging in the hallway.
Picking a sleepy kid
off the potty at night:
the kid’s limbs
a foal’s,
a Christ’s,
long and scrawny
in the dim light.
A
Pietà.
Another poet came into being
when I saw the life of life,
the death of death:
the child I had birthed.
That was my beginning:
blood burning the groin,
the soul soaring, the baby wailing
in the arms of a nurse.
I think it will be winter when he comes.
From the unbearable whiteness of the road
a dot will emerge, so black that eyes will blur,
and it will be approaching for a long, long time,
making his absence commensurate with his coming,
and for a long, long time it will remain a dot.
A speck of dust? A burning in the eye? And snow,
there will be nothing else but snow,
and for a long, long while there will be nothing,
and he will pull away the snowy curtain,
he will acquire size and three dimensions,
he will keep coming closer, closer …
This is the limit, he cannot get closer. But he keeps approaching,
now too vast to measure …
He pissed on a firefly,
but the critter took wing
and alighted on my pants,
making me jump and scream,
afraid of catching fire.
No, no harm was done.
At the piano: my back to the world.
At the piano: behind a high wall.
At the piano: like going down into a mine,
or on a drinking binge, taking along no one.
Thought’s surface: word.
Word’s surface: gesture.
Gesture’s surface: skin.
Skin’s surface: shiver.
Against the current of blood
passion struggles to spawn;
against the current of speech
the word breaks the oar;
against the current of thought
the sails of dreams glide;
dog-paddling like a child, I swim
against the current of tears.
My craft is not stringing lyres
with sunbeams, nor weaving wreaths.
Patient cutting of facets
on tears unshed, that is my craft.
Not for the sake of a gleam in the eye,
but to leave a trace behind …
and truly royal will be the reward:
a chance to cry the heart out.
Cannot look at you when you eat.
Cannot look at you when you pray,
when you extricate your leg from your pants,
when you kiss and take me.
Cannot look at you when you sleep.
Cannot look at you when you are not here.
Cannot wait until you come home again
and after a prayer sit down to eat.
Wrinkles around the mouth
put it in parentheses.
Wrinkles in the corners of the eyes
put them in quotation marks.
Wrinkles across the forehead
crossed out the writing on it.
Wrinkles across the neck …
and the bridal veil of gray hair.
Who will winter my immortality
with me? Who will thaw with me?
Come what may, I shall never trade
the earthly love for the subterranean.
I still have time to turn
into flowers, clay, white-eyed memory …
But while we are mortal, my love, to you
nothing will be denied.