Authors: Erica Jong
Tags: #Fiction, #Fairy Tales; Folk Tales; Legends & Mythology, #Historical
amen.
Both here on earth
& in the skies
every day is
Aphrodite's day.
VII. Conjuring Her
Mandarin oranges,
love apples,
honey in a jar,
last year's rose petals,
dried gardenia whose pungency
lingers in the airâ¦
& a shred of brown paper
burned at the edges
with his secret name upon it
in heavy grease pencil,
my name, too.
Love has ignited
the edges of my life
& the honey
saturates his name
at the bottom
of the round, clear jarâ
a little womb of wishes.
I have kissed the lid,
lit incense sacred
to you, my lady,
& now I wait
for him to fill
my honey jar,
if it pleases you.
It pleased you to see
Arion rescued by his lyre,
clinging to it in the stormy sea
as if it were a dolphin's back.
It pleased you that Sappho's
fragmentary verses
went to make sarcophagi
for the sacred alligators of Egyptâ
thus were saved,
âa papier-mâché patchwork
quilt of poetry
spared by time.
Lady of papyri & sarcophagi,
lady of lovers' jumps,
lady of spells Scincense,
of goats & heifers
bleating to the sacrifice,
of maidens & madonnas
silently doing the same,
I bow my head
to your unending miraclesâ
I surrender to your power.
Some say love is a disease,
a fire in the blood that burns
every human city down.
I'll take my chances.
Before I curl
like incense to the sky,
before I study how to die,
drizzle the honey
of my wishes
on my waiting tongueâ¦
teach me how to fly.
VIII. Sappho: a footnote
A nightingale sang
at her birth,
the same nightingale
who sang
in Keats' garden.
She tried to hold
the sky in her two arms
& failedâ
as poets always failâ
& yet the effort
of their reach
is all.
She understood
that her life
was the river
that opened into the sea
of her dying.
She understood
this river flowed
in words.
Her harp
buoyed her like Arion's
as she drifted toward
the all-forgiving sea.
Most of her words
vanished. Millennia
flew by.
The goddess she worshiped,
born of the sea's pale foam,
grew younger
& more beautiful
as the words of the poet
dissolved.
All this was foretold.
Sappho burned
& Christians burned
her words.
In the Egyptian desert,
bits of papyri
held notations
of her flaming heart.
Aphrodite smiles,
remembering Sappho's words:
“If death were good,
even the gods would die.”
You who put your trust
in words when flesh decays,
know that even words
are swept awayâ
& what remains?
Aphrodite's smileâ
the foam at her rosy feet
where the dying dolphins play.
IX. Her Power
All around the crumbling
limestone shores
of the Mediterranean
there are traces
of her powerâ
the queen of Cythera,
foam-footed Aphrodite,
she who makes the muses
dance together,
plaiting poppies
in her golden hairâ¦.
Temples to her capriciousness
stand everywhere
facing the sea
which is full of nereids,
dolphins, blue & gold tiles
of sunlight, Sheaves where
the moon hides between pregnancies.
I have always been drawn
to these shores
as if I knew
the goddess I worshiped
would be found
looping the ancient isles
made of limestone,
most soluble of rocks.
She took the moon on her tongue,
the silver wafer
giving a lemony light.
She watched the waves erase
her filigreed footsteps.
She is everywhere & nowhereâ
provoking love in the least
recess of longing.
She is the goddess for whom
the earth continues to spinâ
in her turning
all endings end
& all beginnings
begin.
E
RICA
J
ONG
is an award-winning poet, novelist, and memoirist, and one of the nation's most distinctive voices on women and sexuality. She has won many literary awards: the Bess Hokin Prize from
Poetry
magazine (also awarded to Sylvia Plath and W. S. Merwin); a National Endowment for the Arts award; the first Fernanda Pivano Award in Italy (named for the critic who introduced Ernest Hemingway, Allen Ginsberg, and Erica Jong herself to the Italian public); the Sigmund Freud Award for Literature, also it Italy; the United Nations Award for Excellence in Literature; and the Deauville Award for Literary Excellence in France.
Raised by artists in the intellectual melting pot of New York's Upper West Side, Jong graduated from the High School of Music & Art and Barnard College, where she majored in writing and Italian literature. She then completed a Master's degree in eighteenth-century English literature at Columbia (1965) and began PhD studies. She first attracted serious attention as a poet, publishing her debut volume,
Fruits & Vegetables
, in 1971 and her second,
Half-Lives
, in 1973.
Also in 1973, she published the book for which she is best known. Partially drawing on Jong's early life, as well as her wild imagination,
Fear of Flying
, hailed by John Updike as the female answer to
Portnoy's Complaint
and
The Catcher in the Rye
, is about a woman trying to find herself and learn how to fly free of her repressions. Isadora Wing seeks to discover her soul and her sexuality, and in the process, she delves into erotic fantasy and experimentation, shocking many criticsâbut delighting readers.
While the book's explicitness inevitably drew controversy, the novel has endured because of its psychological depth and wild humor. Its heroine, Isadora Wing, whose quest for liberation and happiness struck a chord with many readers, galvanized them to change their lives. The novel gathered momentum, eventually landing on top of the
New York Times
bestseller list. It has since sold over twenty-six million copies in forty languages. It has been as beloved in Asia, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and South America as in North America, and has been written about, studied, and taught in universities.
Erica Jong followed Isadora Wing through three additional novels,
How to Save Your Own Life, Parachutes & Kisses
, and
Any Woman's Blues
. She has also published eight award-winning volumes of poetry and written brilliant historical fiction, like
Fanny
:
Being the True History of the Adventures of Fanny Hackabout-Jones
, a fantasy about what would have happened if Fielding's Tom Jones had been a woman. She has written a glittering novel about sixteenth-century Venice (where she has spent many summers),
Shylock's Daughter
or
Serenissima,
and an amazing recreation of ancient Greece, entitled
Sappho's Leap
. Her moving memoir,
Fear of Fifty,
and her writer's meditation on the craft,
Seducing the Demon
, have also been bestsellers in the United States and abroad. Her most recent publication is an anthology of women writing about the best sex they've ever had,
Sugar in my Bowl
.
Dividing her time between New York City and Weston, Connecticut, Jong lives with her husband, famed divorce attorney Ken Burrows, and a standard poodle named Belinda Barkowitz. Jong's daughter, Molly Jong-Fast, is also a writer, and the mother of Jong's three grandchildren, an eight-year-old and four-year-old twins.
Jong posing in her grandfather's portrait studio at a young age. Jong grew up in Manhattan's Upper West Side and enjoyed a childhood of music lessons, skating lessons, summer camps, and art school.
Jong at age eleven or twelve, meditating on her future as a writerâand perhaps which nail polish to try next.
Jong in her early teens at her parents' twenty-fifth anniversary party. Looking back at the photograph, Jong surmises that her mellow expression means she was likely drunk for the first time.
Jong, age sixteen, in her high school graduation picture. She attended New York's prestigious High School of Music & Art. A progressive school, it was full of passionate, talented kids and known for being racially integrated in a time when many schools were not.