Authors: Erica Jong
of another.
I dream of you
as the condemned witch
dreams of her end
at the stake,
when, lashed to the burning pole,
she will offer up her flesh
to become smoke,
her hair to become ash,
her soul to be carried away
on the wings of the air,
marrying, marrying, marrying
the final fire.
In my cauldron
under the full moon
thinking of poppets:
who shall I choose
to join
my life with?
The man of muslin
with the peppermint
heart, bleeding
through his pocket
underneath
the felt-tipped pens?
The man of plastic
listening to jazz
in his blue room?
The sexual robot
with his swiveling
indefatigable cock?
The yearning poet
who would rather yearn
than anything?
The businessman
who thinks poetry
has a bottom line?
The absent daddy
who will only come home
when the flesh
is falling off his bones?
I would
make a poppet, Muse,
but I do not know
how to mark it.
Which astrological sign,
which profession,
which color of hair,
which size and shape of cock?
Witch-woman that I am,
I am baffled
by choices.
Therefore I turn it over
to you,
and your lunar wisdom,
while I wait
in my cauldron
bubbling
under a pregnant
moon.
I sit at my desk alone
as I did on many Sunday
afternoons when you came
back to me,
your arms aching for me,
though they smelled
of other women
and your sweet head bowed
for me to rub
and your heart bursting
with things to tell me,
and your hair
and your eyes
wild.
We would embrace
on the carpet
and leave
the imprint of our bodies
on the floor.
My back is still sore
where you pressed me
into the rug,
a sweet soreness I would never
lose.
I think of you always
on Sunday afternoons,
and I try to conjure you
with these words—
as if you might
come back to me
at twilight—
but you are never coming back—
never.
The truth is
you no longer exist.
Oh you walk the world
sturdily enough:
one foot in front
of the other.
But the lover you were,
the tender shoot
springing within me,
trusting me with your dreams,
has hardened
into fear and cynicism.
Betrayal does that—
betrays the betrayer.
I want to hate you
and I cannot.
But I cannot
love you either.
It is our old love
I love,
as one loves
certain images
from childhood—
shards
shining in
the street
in the shit.
Shards of light
in the darkness.
All the endings in my life
rise up against me
like that sea of troubles
Shakespeare mixed
with metaphors;
like Vikings in their boats
singing Wagner,
like witches
burning at
the stake—
I submit
to my fate.
I know beginnings,
their sweetnesses,
and endings,
their bitternesses—
but I do not know
continuance—
I do not know
the sweet demi-boredom
of life as it lingers,
of man and wife
regarding each other
across a table of shared witnesses,
of the hand-in-hand dreams
of those who have slept
a half-century together
in a bed so used and familiar
it is rutted
with love.
I would know that
before this life closes,
a soulmate to share my roses—
I would make a spell
with long grey beard hairs
and powdered rosemary and rue,
with the jacket of a tux
for a tall man
with broad shoulders,
who loves to dance;
with one blue contact lens
for his bluest eyes;
with honey in a jar
for his love of me;
with salt in a dish
for his love of sex and skin;
with crushed rose petals
for our bed;
with tubes of cerulean blue
and vermilion and rose madder
for his artist’s-eye;
with a dented Land-Rover fender
for his love of travel;
with a poem by Blake
for his love of innocence
revealed by experience;
with soft rain
and a bare head;
with hand-in-hand dreams on Mondays
and the land of fuck
on Sundays;
with mangoes, papayas
and limes,
and a house towering
above the sea.
Muse, I surrender
to thee.
Thy will be done,
not mine.
If this love spell
pleases you,
send me this lover,
this husband,
this dancing partner
for my empty bed
and let him fill me
from now
until I die.
I offer my bones,
my poems,
my luck with roses,
and the secret garden
I have found
walled in my center,
and the sunflower
who raises her head
despite her heavy seeds.
I am ready now, Muse,
to serve you faithfully
even with
a graceful dancing partner—
for I have learned
to stand alone.
Give me your blessing.
Let the next
epithalamion I write
be my own.
And let it last
more than the years
of my life—
and without the least
strain—
two lovers bareheaded
in a summer rain.
I was sick of being a woman,
sick of the pain,
the irrelevant detail of sex,
my own concavity
uselessly hungering
and emptier whenever it was filled,
and filled finally
by its own emptiness,
seeking the garden of solitude
instead of men.
The white bed
in the green garden—
I looked forward
to sleeping alone
the way some long
for a lover.
Even when you arrived,
I tried to beat you
away with my sadness,
my cynical seductions,
and my trick of
turning a slave
into a master.
And all because
you made
my fingertips ache
and my eyes cross
in passion
that did not know its own name.
Bear, beast, lover
of the book of my body,
you turned my pages
and discovered
what was there
to be written
on the other side.
And now
I am blank
for you,
a
tabula rasa
ready to be printed
with letters
in an undiscovered language
by the great press
of our love.
—Vermont, August 5, 1989
Erica to Ken
The red and black biplane
swoops down
on the green hills
of Vermont.
A little airstrip
between two mountain ranges,
and people coming
with balloons and streamers,
kites, gliders
and winged wishes.
The bride climbs out
trailing wildflowers,
parachutes, kisses,
and the groom, big beast
with soft eyes that gleam
like butter,
grins, a horny boyscout,
and scoops her
in his arms.
Fearful, I have walked this world
not daring to hope
for the cut half
severed from me
in my last life
.
Defiant, I have flown
above my fears, flaunted them
like you, scattering jokes
to drown the sound
of my heart cracking
like winter ice,
and to still
the heckling
of the gallery.
And now you come
to tell me
you know the child
behind the wanton smile
and that you love her
as I know the boy
inside the rough beast
and I can lead him
home.
They marry in a field
of wildflowers
near a pond
whose least ripple
betrays the spirit within.
Intermediate
between earth and sky,
this palimpsest
for the mind of God
has caught the clouds
within its brimming bowl.
Butterflies and hummingbirds
hover nearby.
Deer tiptoe unafraid
on delicate hooves,
and crickets and bullfrogs
chorus.
The red and black biplane
takes off,
banks, turns and flies through
a green notch
in the mountains.
It soars into the blue,
seeming to disappear
into a cloud.
In a little while
it will come back to earth.
Perhaps that is the whole point.
For David Karetsky (April 14, 1940–March 12, 1991), killed in an avalanche
Putting the skis down
in the white snow,
the wind singing,
the blizzard of time
going past your eyes,
it is a little
like being snowed in
in the Connecticut house
on a day when the world
goes away
and only the white dog
follows you out
to make fresh tracks
in the long blue shadow
of the mountain.
We are all halfway there,
preferring not
to think about it.
You went down the mountain
first,
in a blaze of light,
reminding us
to seize our lives,
to live with the wind
whistling in our ears,
and the light bedazzling
the tips of our skis
and the people we love
waiting in the lodge below
scribbling lines
on paper the color
of snow,
knowing there is no
holding on
but only the wind singing
and these lines of light
shining
in the fresh snow.
The great bed of the world
arching over graves
over Babi Yar
with its multitudes of bones,
with battalions of screams
frozen in a concrete glacier,
with pillows of earth
and comforters of green grass
covering all that dead flesh.
Dead flesh shall live again—
a dream in god’s endless night—
rise green out of the earth
as grass, as trees, as tomato stalks
bearing a bright red fruit
and the feuds of man- and womankind
shall be fed again from the same seeds:
the tomato, the mythic pomegranate, the
biblical apple
all rising from the grass that springs
out of the screams of stopped mouths.
Sometimes I dream
that my bed is built over a ravine,
the ravine of Babi Yar, any ravine
where thousands died
and I moan in pleasure to propitiate the earth,
to make fruit ripen
and trees wave green leaves like banners
all because love can touch me still.
It is never enough to create.
The beast must feed its meat teeth too.
Out of the screaming mouth of earth
we feed the grass that covers
all our beds.
I wish I did not know all that I know.
Galaxies spin, grass grows, and people kill.
We are the only race to murder for our dreams—
and not for hunger,
hungering for dreams.
With his head full of Shakespearean
tempests
and old notions of poetic justice,
he was ready with his elegies
the day the ocean sailed into the square.
“The sea,” he wrote, “is a forgiving element,
and history only the old odor of blood.
She will come to rest on the soft floor
of the world, barnacled like a great pirate
ship,
and blind fish—mouthing like girls before a
glass—
will bump, perhaps, San Marco’s brittle
bones.”
Pleased with these images, he paused
and conjured visions of a wet apocalypse:
the blown church bobbing like a monstrous
water toy,
Doge Dandolo’s bronze horses from
Byzantium
pawing me black waves, incredulous
pigeons
hovering like gulls over the drowning
square,
mosaic saints floating gently to pieces.
Then he waited as the wind rose, as
gondoliers
were rocking in the long furrows of their
boats
and small waves licked the marble lions’
eyes.
But still this most improbable of cities
hung on, lewdly enjoying her own smell.
Learning later how Florence, with her brown