Authors: Lorine Niedecker
European Travel
(Nazi New Order)
From Croatia my home to Moelling no pay
for our work, lay down at night without hay,
three days toward Berlin, one bread for six,
saw many die of cold and the whips.
At Bergen built roads tied to a pot,
crossed to Sweden tho one in our party was shot.
Depression years
My daughters left home
I was job-certified
to rake leaves
in New Madrid.
Now they tell me my girls
should support me again
and they're not out of debt
from the last time they did.
So you're married, young man,
to a woman's rich fads—
woman and those “buy! buy!”
technicolor ads.
She needs washers and dryers
she needs bodice uplift
she needs deep-well cookers
she needs power shift.
A man works in two shops—
home at last from this grave
he finds his wife out
with another slave.
She'll sue for divorce
he'll blow his brains,
the old work-horse
free at last of his reins.
She grew where every spring
water overflows the land,
married mild Henry
and then her life was sand.
Tall, thin, took cold on her nerves,
chopped wood, kept the fire,
burned the house, helped build it again,
advance, attack, retire.
Gave birth, frail warrior—gave boat
for it was mid-spring—
to Henry's daughter who stayed
on the stream listening
to Daisy: “Hatch, patch and scratch,
that's all a woman's for
but I didn't sink, I sewed and saved
and now I'm on second floor.”
I sit in my own house
secure,
follow winter break-up
thru window glass.
Ice cakes
glide downstream
the wild swans
of our day.
On hearing
the wood pewee
This is my mew
as our days last—
be alone
Throw it over—
all fashions
feud
Go home where the green bird is—
the trees where you pass
to grass
Along the river
wild sunflowers
over my head
the dead
who gave me life
give me this
our relative the air
floods
our rich friend
silt
He moved in light
to establish
the lovely
possibility
we knew
and let it pass
Keen and lovely man moved as in a dance
to be considerate in lighted, glass-walled
almost outdoor office. Business
wasn't all he knew. He knew music, art.
Had a heart. “With eyes like yours I should think
the dictaphone” or did he say the flute?
His sensitivity—it stopped you.
And the neighbors said “She's taking lessons
on the dictaphone” as tho it were a saxophone.
He gave the job to somebody else.
He lived—childhood summers
thru bare feet
then years of money's lack
and heat
beside the river—out of flood
came his wood, dog,
woman, lost her, daughter—
prologue
to planting trees. He buried carp
beneath the rose
where grass-still
the marsh rail goes.
To bankers on high land
he opened his wine tank.
He wished his only daughter
to work in the bank
but he'd given her a source
to sustain her—
a weedy speech,
marshy retainer.
I rose from marsh mud,
algae, equisetum, willows,
sweet green, noisy
birds and frogs