| Ruth Daigon USA
RUTHART@aol.com

Ruth Daigon
singer/editor/performance/poet's latest prize is the Greensboro
National Poetry Prize 2000, Kimera's chapbook prize to be anthologized
in hardcopy in February 2001. Her latest publications on the WEB is
ForPoetry, Conspire, Poetry Repair Shop, Ste. 101, Kota Press,
Writer's Quill.... and in (hard copy) Heaven Bone, Maelstrom, Southern
California anthology, A Room of One's Own... and a poetry
collection"The Moon Inside" (Gravity/Newton's Baby Press, 2000)
...plus a selection of her poems entitled "The Greatest Hits of Ruth
Daigon 1970-1990" is forthcoming from Pudding House as part of their
Chapbook Series and a chapbook "Payday at the Triangle" is on the
verge.
Jennifer Bosveld of Pudding magazine has published her
latest chapbook "Ruth Daigon's Latest Hits 1970 to 2000" as part of
her invitational list of outstanding American poets and she has a
wonderful lineup of poets....She will be producing this every year, we
think.
This chapbook is composed of twelve of the poems Ruth considers to her
best PLUS an extended biography PLUS the stories and and events that
gave birth to these poems.
ALSO "Payday At The Triangle" is on the verge of publication. It is a
chapbook describing the horrendous factory fire in New York City, 1911
where 147 young immigrant girls lost their lives.... and the book will
contain poetry in the voices of the young women.... the victims, the
firemen... the police.... the onlookers...plus clippings and photos
from the newspapers published during hat period of time. |
AFTER THE FAILED REVOLUTION, 1905
After the hunger march to the
tsar's palace
begging for bread,
after the slaughter,
father sleeps in dialectical
paradise and mother
packs the samovar, the china, the
ruby glass,
the children.
Her face carries its tribe
just below the skin and
somewhere they are spinning the
thread
measuring its length and breadth,
poised
with the terrible shears.
She restores the hair on her head,
gold teeth in broad smiles
and dreams of a land locked in
amber.
Desire curled in her fist,
she sails for America
silent with all the others.
No wheel of miracles
just the hand which is, the eye
which is
and the long nerve of history.
Breathless and sunblind, mother
tunnels through bitter earth
into salt of heaven.
She builds a fire to warm her
children
and the flame is bright,
the shadows dim.
Learning English from the book
of exiles, she mouths words,
tonguing, polishing
until they grow liquid. Then
she nibbles on chicken wings,
gnawing bones clean.
Her thoughts tug at their moorings:
the half-light of childhood,
daybreaks bursting like seeds,
a forest of old tongues telling
stories,
winds rattling obituaries,
and the past spreading its stain.
She whispers names out of time
until the new world arrives
fresh with heat and light.
Flesh tones of memory fade
as she stores the children
under her heart. Alone and growing
wiser, mother undresses the dark
and sleeps with moonlight
resting in her palms.
DOPPELGANGER
In the province no one visits,
she's still
waiting to be born. I can
almost feel her breath
brushing by me like a dark wish
hear the lullabies
burrowed deep in time when I lay
under stars small fires, waiting
under sun's spiral, waiting
under vacant wash of sky
beyond barriers of sight, waiting.
If I empty my head of names
If I empty my pocket of coins
If I empty my shoes
will I feel the imprint of a palm
or hear a voice that fuses silence?
In thought's last extravagance
we reach toward each other
intent and unaware, and I imagine
fears that shape her nights
until the world leaps back to
brightness.
Yet, she never quite appears
even in the downdrop of sleep
and the moment is never the moment
where grace begins.
2
In the dream, she's above me
leaning into the pond.
From the still, clear water
I stare up
mouthing her words.
As I drift on the current
and beyond, she follows
sinks a stone through me
then extends her hand.
We exchange places.
Water covers her eyes, her mouth.
I inhale her and I am cold.
Peering into the blue facade
I shield my eyes
One reflection kisses, the other
kills.
She sinks through amber depths
into green awareness and then
floats to the surface
singing of a more transparent time.
Night rises like dark wine.
Under the moon's bald eye
we drift together, the shadow
of one lying darkly on the other.
A HAIRLINE FRACTURE
Stunned by morning, she slips out
of bed.
Stands barefoot on the tile.
Looks into the mirror
suddenly aware of her skull, jaw
and pulse just below the surface.
She's a skeleton clothed in flesh
and thought
waiting for wonder
vivid with longing
under the breast of sky.
Last night, she watched sunset
until the lost colors of evening.
Then in the narrowing hours she
imagined
stars with fins, stars with feet,
the bone white eye of the moon
and in a trance of blue-veined
dreams,
she's lost with feather, wing,
shell,
reaching for light
in the black center of time
and the salt wash of the sea.
As the owl's wings shadow the
earth, she sits
hollow-boned with the midnight
people
away from the stone music of the
street
away from the emptied eyes of
ancestors
and the great noise of it all.
EVE'S LEGACY
She picks the perfect one,
almost out of reach, more
tempting than the rest. Wedging
her thumb into the soft stem end,
she
twists and cracks the fruit in
half,
it's white skin umber at the core.
Stripped of other appetites, she
smells,
nuzzles, tongues, sinks her teeth
into the flesh,
rotating as she bites until
reaching
the womb-shaped heart, convinced
that only
a solid piece of fruit understands
teeth
that go on biting and biting a
whole lifetime.
NEVERTHELESS
SHe is thankful for small miracles,
the sky flaunting its dazzle,
and days tall as promise.
She's lost track of the alphabet,
but someone will read aloud to her
or chant a litany of sounds,
bluer than air,
cleaner than numbers
A tongue she's never learned,
a voice she's never heard
but something she has known all our
lives.
The hours lie stored in linen,
and she's pearled
for one last migration. Along the
way,
people die for the smallest
reasons.
Nevertheless,
her world begins inside the green
century. She savors the earth
and
travels the furrowed planet.
Like nocturnal animals, she is
always vanishing, always there.
Shadows beckon ahead, she grows
large
and drinks the wind.
Nevertheless,
she waits for laughter,
a sky drunk with sunlight,
and after the sudden dark
when earth turns to air,
she greets the final stun of
silence.
APPRENTICESHIP
Enter with an armful of knuckles.
Locate the cupboard where
clean fingernails are stored
and listen for scent
locked in an orange,
yellow stillness of egg yolks,
soft churning of custard.
Count the hours spent here,
rolled and wrapped,
pounded paper-thin,
smeared between oiled layers
of indigestible dough,
skewered, stuffed, deep-fried,
poached, baked, broiled.
Since you're the guardian,
keep a slow fire lit
and a constant simmering.
This is no teacup world.
Wine goes to vinegar.
Corn confronts you like
a mouthful of rotting teeth.
Everything yields to its soft spot,
the zero border where minus begins.
THE CLEANSING
In Siberia, during the wedding, the bride
was required to wash the feet of
the groom and drink the water. Only
then was she considered worthy to be
taken as a wife.
She lifts his right foot
then his left
soaping between the toes
scooping dirt from under nails
doing what must be done
scrubbing in unleavened silence.
Pale glue of tears clinging to lashes
she licks her lips tasting the instant
when she was none other than herself
sitting in the kitchen
curtains drawn
floor swept
dipping into the curve and coil of wife
practicing
until she got it right.
The night before, she dreamt of spring
shoots
pushing purple tongues through earth's skin,
of babies swimming toward her
slippery as tadpoles
her unskilled hands can't capture.
And in the morning, she awakes
to pinpricks of sun, birds
blading against the horizon.
This is her wedding day
air thick with accordian notes
swirling skirts, embroidered shirts
the smell of lamb and kumiss.
He sits like a boulder in the sun.
His voice makes him taller.
When he bends a listening face toward her
she unknots a smile
takes one last look over her shoulder
at childhood so remote
it belongs to someone else.
Nothing's left
Not a ribbon
Not a thimble
And lifts the basin to her lips.
IN MY BODY OF SKIN
When I was a nightingale I sang
When I was a serpent I swallowed
my voice spume blown from a
wave
a sound too thin for earthworms
With memories older than Prometheus
I remember the time when time was
birthed
the sky appeared
sudden light wind and water
where blind valves closed
on a single grain of sand
In my body of skin of moss
of clover
I touch fingers with fingers
lips with lips
the exposed tip of the heart
Seed work sun work
earth work
If pansies are for thoughts
I pick them early in the morning
so they last
Lake-summer days I climb the hill
drink the sky and pose like
Millet's peasant
listening to an invisible lark
With a pocketful of seeds I sit
peeling an orange under a static
sun
attentive to the sound of pine
cones clicking open
The child sleeps in my shadow
and walks beside me
following from birth
moving as I move
We cling together like small
animals
The well is dry the cup
empty
and gravity's a long way down
© All Copyright, Ruth Daigon.
All Rights Reserved. Printed By Permission.
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