I was thinking
of a son.
The womb is
not a clock
nor a bell
tolling,
but in the
eleventh month of its life
I feel the
November
of the body as
well as of the calendar.
In two days it
will be my birthday
and as always
the earth is done with its harvest.
This time I
hunt for death,
the night I
lean toward,
the night I
want.
Well
then"
speak of it!
I was in the
womb all along.
I was thinking
of a son . . .
You! The
never acquired,
the never
seeded or unfastened,
you of the
genitals I feared,
the stalk and
the puppy's breath.
Will I give
you my eyes or his?
Will you be
the David or the Susan?
(Those two
names I picked and listened for.)
Can you be the
man your fathers are"
the leg
muscles from Michaelangelo,
hands from
Yugoslavia,
somewhere the
peasant, Slavic and determined,
somewhere the
survivor, bulging with life"
and could it
still be possible,
all this with
Susan's eyes?
All this
without you"
two days gone
in blood.
I myself will
die without baptism,
a third
daughter they didn't bother.
My death will
come on my name day.
What's wrong
with the name day?
It's only an
angel of the sun.
Woman,
weaving a web
over your own,
a thin and
tangled poison.
Scorpio,
bad
spider"
die!
My death from
the wrists,
two name tags,
blood worn
like a corsage
to bloom
one on the
left and one on the right"
It's a warm
room,
the place of
blood.
Leave the door
open on its hinges!
Two days for
your death
and two days
until mine.
Love!
That red disease"
year after
year, David, you would make me wild!
David!
Susan! David! David!
full and
disheveled, hissing into the night
never growing
old,
waiting always
on the back porch . . .
year after
year,
my carrot, my
cabbage,
I would have
possessed you before all women,
calling your
name,
calling you
mine.
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