Moving the HouseFour poems from Moving the House: "Remembering Breughel’s Massacre of the Innocents," "Feeling Dry," "Having Given Birth," "Dust." Remembering Breughel’s “Massacre of the Innocents” I should have known it hung there, in Vienna. But home was the place for warnings of strangeness, of not taking rides, or candy. With me now even wieners from butcher shop owners were safe. Together now we were climbing palatial marble steps, the guidebook having said nothing of archways twice as high as our house, completely studded with color, real gold-covered crossbeams, a ceiling of painted-on seasons of glory: each hair on each head (as my father would say) so precise you could see it, assuming you could get close as the artists had, hanging there day after day for months, their dangers of falling so far removed from our journey past sculptures on landings to canvas in far-off rooms. I would have stared upward longer but you were obsessed with the head of Medusa in What’s- his-name’s hand, my memory not so needed as saying it’s really all make-believe. No one could ever have snakes for hair, no one cut off her head although maybe he would have, had she been real. What’s true is I didn’t avoid when I could have that room with fifteen original Breughels, the first I had ever seen not in a book. “The Tower of Babel.” “Peasant Dance.” The other I couldn’t draws you away from, could only respond: those soldiers lived too far back to remember, they must have been following orders, their leaders must have been mean. More I could have said and still not enough. So much you already knew of betrayals and still you returned again and again from rooms of Rembrandt and Reubens, Cranach’s Adam and Eve and hundreds of Christs on the cross, you returned to take in details no one could forget: the mothers pleading, the children lying in blood, in snow, in a huge commotion of lances, hooves, dogs, the wails of the children, the mothers helpless with blood on their laps, on their hands, their eyes turned back from Heaven. Erin, no one forgives such things. Nor do I know why we stayed until closing, hurrying out with our postcards and parcels into the late May drizzle. Why I sat on a park bench while you tried finding pleasure in dancing like pigeons, hiding from me again and again behind the base of Maria Theresa’s statue, knowing I knew where you were, insisting I couldn’t find you, anywhere. Feeling Dry To want to write, but to lack words. More accurately, to lack some thing to feel. This unpainted desk, cars outside proving themselves on the hill, smoke from burning fields slipping unnoticed under the sun until someone drowns in his own breath. To listen for some wind. To feel responsible for listening and to be unmoved, an air sock limp as an unfilled dunce’s cap waiting some change in the weather, something full as the river you fished last weekend without luck and then swimming saw the whitefish grazing on stones the flickering trout steady as mobiles suspended on more levels than you thought water could contain. Having Given Birth for the first time my body comes back to itself Spine, half a wish bone doubles back victorious Stretch marks on my breasts fade pale as milk Around my head songs from my childhood quiver like moths, they ask to be taken back they ask forgiveness for having been gone so long Through my own lips my mother’s voice sings my daughter to sleep When she sleeps at my breast, I become the oldest person I have ever known I am younger than I can remember. Dust Old houses have the most It ticks out of the walls like seconds            * Arrogant tourists, attracting only their own kind Speaking loudly in corners under tables, beds Whichever way the wind happens to blow            * It’s not the rest of the world we track in It’s us When the heater is on When we rub moving from room to room this simple air up against this simple, worn-out, top layer of wall            * The one who cleans, knows:                                           it’s what you could order your life around:                      getting dressed to eat breakfast for strength to finish the cleaning in tome to shop for clothes to wear to work to earn money for food to eat for strength to wash the dishes to wash the clothes to wear to bed to get enough rest to get the cleaning done            * Ah, to clean and pretend it was nothing Ah, in their house to let them pretend it was nothing Ah, to pretend to each other you aren’t pretending t all            * Facing it: “What did you do today?”                                         Nothing “What can you show for it?”                                         Absence            * Days I was in school Mother cleaning everything we didn’t do Saturdays:                     shelves where clean dishes went, insides of windows I never saw anyone touch light bulbs on ceilings, tops of doorframes, windowframes, curtain rods backs of every last picture on the wall            * Dust wouldn’t be dust forever It mixes with something when no one not even TV is looking Indiscriminate as sin it clings greaselike to cracks between baseboard and floor, to bathroom walls, kitchen walls doors of cupboards, ceilings, cracks around door knobs, stove knobs, faucets, chrome the length of the sink, of the stove, of the edge of anger The sponge of our knowledge useless against it Mother, years it took me to guess you knew all this Your Saturday helper dusting her own room, living room, dining room, den All this she hadn’t expected to notice to care about Ever            * It ticks out of the walls like lives before us The walls won’t hold them any more. |
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