Authors: Robin Morgan
the scar tissue open, leaking what we yet could
say, do, hear, think of, understand, dream
from the containment, leaking a different
radiance over bared heads.
What might I do then to get beyond
dying so many lives of affirming Denial?
Who is this figure I swivel behind like a shadow?
Who are the woman and man I'm being drawn back toâ
again, the flaw here, the fall now, the original
schism, the atom entire?
Policies lapse. Nothing is sure
any longer. That fact alone is
a renegade benefit, something like grace,
green, mimetic, audaciousâdaring to bleed,
sing, embrace simply each other, to find
in those arms a planet entire, swivelling up
at us its azure, full face,
blinking new eyes, yawning into a loud
rain of relief to be home. Almost as if,
this late, unveiled and forgiven, even
Denial might weep again. And if not here,
where, you ask; if not now, when? Oh my dear,
who am I to deny?
BATTERY
The fist meets the face as the stone meets water.
I want to understand the stone's parabola
and where the ripples disappear,
to make the connections, to trace
the withholding of love as the ultimate violence.
Battery
: a word with seven letters, seven definitions:
1) Any unit, apparatus, or grouping
in which a series or set of parts or components
is assembled to serve a common end.
2)
Electrical
. One or more primary or secondary cells
operating together as a single source of direct current.
3)
Military
. A tactical artillary unit.
4)
A game position
. In baseball, the pitcher
and catcher together.
5)
Law
. The illegal beating or touching of another person.
6)
Music
. The percussion instruments of an orchestra.
7)
Optics
. The group of prisms in a spectroscope.
I want to understand the connections
âbetween the tower where Bertha Mason Rochester
is displayed to Jane Eyre as a warning
âwith this place, this city my doorstep
where I've learned to interfere between
the prostitute's scream and the pimp's knife
is to invite their unified disgust.
I want to understand the components:
âthe stone's parabola, the percussion instruments,
the growth of battered children into battered wives
who beat their children,
âthe beating of the fallow deer in Central Park Zoo
by unknown teenage assailants,
âthe beating of these words against the poem:
to hit, slap, strike, punch, slash, stamp,
pound, maul, pummel, hammer, bludgeon, batterâ
to hurt, to wound,
to flex the fist and clench the jaw and withhold love.
I want to discover the source of direct current,
to comprehend the way the primary or secondary cells
operate together as that source:
âthe suburban community's defense of the fugitive Nazi
discovered to be a neighbor,
âthe effect of her father's way with women
on the foreign policy of Elizabeth Tudor,
âthe volunteers for a Utah firing squad,
the manner in which kwashiorkorâRed Johnny,
the Ghanaians call this slow death by starvationâ
turns the hair of children a coppery color
with the texture of frayed wire.
I want to follow the refractions of the prism:
âthe water's surface shuddering in anticipation
of the arching pebble,
âthe oilslick mask imposed on the Pacific,
âthe women of the Irish peace movement accused
of being traitors to tactical artillery units on both sides,
and replying, “We must accept that
in the next few months we will become their targets.”
âThe battering of dolphins against tuna nets,
âthe way seloscia, a flower commonly known
as coxcomb, is bulbous, unpetaled, and a dark velvet redâ
and always reminds me of a hemorrhaging brain.
The danger in making the connections
is to lose the focus,
and this is not a poem about official torture
in Iran or Chile or China, or a poem about
a bald eagle flailing its wings as it dies,
shot down over Long Island.
This is a poem called “Battery” about a specific woman
who is twelve-going-on-seventy-three and who
exists in any unit, grouping, class, to serve a common end.
A woman who is black and white and bruised all over
the world, and has no other place to go
âwhile the Rolling Stones demand shelter
âand some cops say it's her own fault for living with him
âand some feminists say it's her own fault for living with him,
and she hides her dark red velvet wounds
from pride, the pride of the victim,
the pride of the victim at not
being the perpetrator,
the pride of the victim at not knowing how
to withhold love.
The danger of fixing on the focus
is to lose the connections, and this is a poem
about the pitcher and the catcher
together
:
âthe battery of Alice Toklas, conversing cookbooks
with the other wives while Gertrude Stein shared her cigars
and her ideas with the men,
âthe sullen efficiency of Grace Poole,
âthe percussion of my palm striking my husband's face
in fury when he won't learn how to fight back, how to outgrow
having been a battered child, his mother's battered wince
rippling from his eyes, his father's laborer's fingers
flexing my fist, the pitcher and the catcher together
teaching me how to withhold love;
the contempt of the perpetrator for the pride of the victim.
The collaboration, the responsibility, the intimate
violence, the fantasy, the psychic battery, the lies,
the beating of the heart.
To fear, to dread, to cower, cringe, flinch,
shudder, to skulk, to shuffle.
Wing-beat, heart-beat,
the fist meets the face as the stone displaces water,
as the elbow is dislocated from the socket
and the connections shatter from the focus;
âthe knifeblade glimmers in the streetlight;
âit could be a drifting eagle feather
or cigar smoke rising
graceful as a doe who leaps in pain,
rising livid as a welt, livid as a consciousness
of my own hand falling to dispense
the bar of soap, the executioner's axe, the tuna nets,
the rifles, and at last the flint
for Bertha Mason Rochester to strike,
to spark the single source of direct current,
to orchestrate the common end emprismed
in the violent ripples of withheld love.
Batter my heart, seven-petaled word, for you
as yet but flower inside my brain;
that I may understand the stone's parabola,
make the connections, remember the focus,
comprehend the definitions,
and withhold nothing.
BIRTHRIGHT
Bringing what could not be borne to birthâ
her heart's decision, reached above your head
indifferent to your wish, but tangled as a myth
wound round your throat insistent with her bloodâ
surely the hardest of all her simple choices
was this mere waiting until it was too late.
Remember her dreams baring their teeth? her voices
counseling death? You've shared them since, a birthright.
Yet whatever hatred husbanded her will,
that will is yours. Whatever love accedes
accedia, however at home your hell
or lost your bearings, let your death recede
in fear of such raw labor, laugh, and learn
how to let what never can be borne be born.
PEONY
What appears to be
this frozen explosion of petals
abristle with extremist beauty
like an entire bouquet on a single stem
or a full chorus creamy-robed rippling
to its feet for the
sanctus
â
is after all a flower,
perishable, with a peculiar
history. Each peony
blossoms only after
the waxy casing thick around
its tight green bud is eaten literally
away by certain small herbivorous ants
who swarm round the stubborn rind
and nibble gently for weeks to release
the implosion called a flower. If
the tiny coral-colored ants have been
destroyed, the bloom cannot unfist itself
no matter how carefully forced to umbrage
by the finest hothouse gardeners.
Unrecognized, how recognizable:
Each of us nibbling discreetly
to release the flower,
usually not even knowing
the purposeâonly the hunger;
each mostly unaware of any others,
sometimes surprised by a neighbor,
sometimes (so rarely) astonished
by a glimpse into one corner
at how many of us there are;
enough to cling at least, swarm back,
remain, whenever we're shaken
off or drenched away
by the well-meaning gardener, ignorant
as we are of our mission, of our being
equal in and to the task.
Unequal to the task: a word
like “revolution,” to describe
what our drudge-cheerful midwifery
will bring to bearâwith us not here
to see it, satiated, long since
rinsed away, the job complete.
Why then do I feel this tremble,
more like a contraction's aftermath
release, relax, relief
than like an earthquake; more
like a rustling in the belly,
or the resonance a song might make
en route from brain to larynxâ
as if now, here, unleaving itself of all
old and unnecessary outer layers
butterfly from chrysalis
snake from cast skin
crustacean from shell
baby from placenta
something alive before
only in Anywoman's dreamings
begins to stretch, arch, unfold
each vein on each transparency opening proud,
unique, unduplicate,
each petal stiff with tenderness,
each gauzy wing a different shading flecked
ivory silver tangerine moon cinnamon amber flame
hosannas of lucidity and love in a wild riot,
a confusion of boisterous order
all fragrance, laughter, tousled celebrationâ
only a fading streak like blood
at the center, to remind us we were there once
but are still here, who dare,
tenacious, to nibble toward such blossoming
of this green stubborn bud
some call a world.
About the Author
Award-winning poet, novelist, journalist, and feminist leader Robin Morgan has published more than twenty books, including the now-classic anthologies
Sisterhood Is Powerful
and
Sisterhood Is Global
and the bestselling
The Demon Lover: The Roots of Terrorism
.
Her work has been translated into thirteen languages, among them Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Persian. A recipient of honors including a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship, and former editor in chief of
Ms.
, Morgan founded the Sisterhood Is Global Institute, and with Jane Fonda and Gloria Steinem, cofounded the Women's Media Center. She writes and hosts
Women's Media Center Live with Robin Morgan
, a weekly program with a global audience on iTunes and
WMCLive.com
âher commentaries legendary, her guests ranging from grassroots activists to Christiane Amanpour, Anita Hill, and President Jimmy Carter.
All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion there of in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or here in after invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.
Copyright © 1979, 1980, 1981 by Robin Morgan
Cover design by Mauricio Diaz
ISBN: 978-1-5040-0688-0
This edition published in 2015 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
345 Hudson Street
New York, NY 10014