Sunday, June 24, 2012

Quote: Adrienne Cecile Rich

When Adrienne Rich died at the end of March this year, I delved into my college diaries to find out what I'd said about reading The Fact of a Doorframe in Intro to Literature, and what I'd said the first time I saw her read. What I found was a poem called "Bears," which I hadn't remembered copying in ... in fact, I hadn't remembered it at all until I reread it, and the words washed over me once more with power and longing and the memory of unknown losses.

At the store last week, I took The Fact of a Doorframe off the shelf to write this post, and I couldn't find the poem. I searched the pages, the table of contents, the index ... and finally I looked at the front cover and realised that this was not "Poems Selected and New, 1950-1984" but instead "Poems, 1950-2001". Reissued and revised to include the whole of her career to that point, and clearly not just expanded, but shuffled -- some poems in, some poems out.

So here is one of the poems now lost from the collection. Who keeps it now?

Bears

Wonderful bears that walked my room all night,
Where are you gone, your sleek and fairy fur,
Your eyes' veiled imperious light?

Brown bears as rich as mocha or as musk,
White opalescent bears whose fur stood out
Electric in the deepening dusk,

And great black bears who seemed more blue than black,
More violet than blue against the dark--
Where are you now? upon what track

Mutter your muffled paws, that used to tread
So softly, surely, up the creakless stair
While I lay listening in bed?

When did I lose you? whose have you become?
Why do I wait and wait and never hear
Your thick nocturnal pacing in my room?
My bears, who keeps you now, in pride and fear?

-- Adrienne Rich, The Fact of a Doorframe: New and Selected Poems, 1950-1984, originally from The Diamond Cutters, 1955

2 comments:

  1. The Lesbian Bears
    Martha Courtot (circa 1975)

    here they have not heard of lesbian bears
    if they knew they would be afraid
    they would form a vigilante party
    to hunt wild perverse bear in the mountains


    at night while they slept in the open
    they would dream of unnatural acts
    in brown fur
    a female bear would come
    wrapping her lustful arms around the bodies
    of all the women
    then they too would be lost
    is this where lesbians come from?


    I have seen lesbian plums which cling to each other
    in the tightest of monogamous love
    and I have watched lesbian pumpkins
    declare the whole patch their playground
    profligate and dusky
    their voices arouse something in us
    which is laughing


    ah, everything is lesbian which loves itself
    I am lesbian when I really look in the mirror
    the world is lesbian in the morning and the evening
    only in mid-afternoon does it try to pretend otherwise


    and when the lesbian wind flutters the leaves
    of the bright lesbian trees
    sending golden shudders of delight
    through the changing lesbian light
    the sound which is returned to you
    is only an echo of your own lesbian nature


    admit it you too would like to love yourself
    and each other
    now, while the vigilantes
    wander the mountains
    now is the perfect time


    embrace the one nearest to you woman or child
    apricot, salmon, artichoke, cow


    embrace yourself

    ReplyDelete
  2. Elliott, that's wild! Thanks.

    ReplyDelete