Everyone in me is a bird.
I am beating all my wings.
They wanted to cut you out
but they will not.
They said you were
immeasurably empty
but you are not.
They said you were sick unto
dying
but they were wrong.
You are singing like a school
girl.
You are not torn.
Sweet weight,
in celebration of the woman I
am
and of the soul of the woman I
am
and of the central creature
and its delight
I sing for you. I dare to
live.
Hello, spirit. Hello, cup.
Fasten, cover. Cover that does
contain.
Hello to the soil of the
fields.
Welcome, roots.
Each cell has a life.
There is enough here to please
a nation.
It is enough that the populace
own these goods.
Any person, any commonwealth
would say of it,
“It is good this year that we
may plant again
and think forward to a
harvest.
A blight had been forecast and
has been cast out.”
Many women are singing
together of this:
one is in a shoe factory
cursing the machine,
one is at the aquarium tending
a seal,
one is dull at the wheel of
her Ford,
one is at the toll gate
collecting,
one is tying the cord of a
calf in Arizona,
one is straddling a cello in
Russia,
one is shifting pots on the
stove in Egypt,
one is painting her bedroom
walls moon color,
one is dying but remembering a
breakfast,
one is stretching on her mat
in Thailand,
one is wiping the ass of her
child,
one is staring out the window
of a train
in the middle of Wyoming and
one is
anywhere and some are
everywhere and all
seem to be singing, although
some can not
sing a note.
Sweet weight,
in celebration of the woman I
am
let me carry a ten-foot scarf,
let me drum for the
nineteen-year-olds,
let me carry bowls for the
offering
(if that is my part).
Let me study the
cardiovascular tissue,
let me examine the angular
distance of meteors,
let me suck on the stems of
flowers
(if that is my part).
Let me make certain tribal
figures
(if that is my part).
For this thing the body needs
let me sing
for the supper,
for the kissing,
for the correct
yes.
Poulin, A., and Michael Waters. Contemporary American Poetry. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2006. Print.
Poulin, A., and Michael Waters. Contemporary American Poetry. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2006. Print.
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