V
This apartment full of books could crack open
to the thick jaws, the bulging eyes
of monsters, easily: Once open the books, you have to face
the underside of everything youve loved
the rack and pincers held in readiness, the gag
even the best voices have had to mumble through,
the silence burying unwanted children
women, deviants, witnessesin desert sand.
Kenneth tells me hes been arranging his books
so he can look at Blake and Kafka while he types;
yes; and we still have to reckon with Swift
loathing the womans flesh while praising her mind,
Goethes dread of the Mothers, Claudel vilifying Gide,
and the ghoststheir hands clasped for centuries
of artists dying in childbirth, wise-women charred at the stake,
centuries of books unwritten piled behind these shelves;
and we still have to stare into the absence
of men who would not, women who could not, speak
to our lifethis still unexcavated hole
called civilization, this act of translation, this half-world.
Twenty-One Love Poems V
written byAdrienne Rich
© Adrienne Rich