The Writing Life : Poem as Preface
- Share via
I can live alone and I love to work.
--Mary Cassatt
Alli esta el detalle.
(Roughly: “There’s the rub.”)
--Cantinflas
Gentlemen, ladies. If you please--
these
are my wicked poems from when.
The girl grief decade. My wicked nun
years, so to speak. I sinned.
Not in the white woman way.
Not as Simone voyeuring the pretty
slum city on a golden arm. And no,
not wicked like the captain of the bad
boy blood, that Hollywood hood-
lum who boozed and floozed it up,
hell bent on self-destruction. Not me.
Well. Not much. Tell me,
how does a woman who.
A woman like me. Daughter of
a daddy with a hammer and
blistered feet
he’d dip into a washtub while he
ate his dinner.
A woman with no birthright
in the matter.
What does a woman inherit
that tell her how
to go?
My first felony--I took up
with poetry.
For this penalty, the rice burned.
Mother warned I’d never wife.
Wife? A woman like me
whose choice was rolling pin
or factory.
An absurd vice, this wicked wanton
writer’s life.
I chucked the life
my father’d plucked for me.
Leapt into the salamander fire.
A girl who’d never roamed
beyond her father’s rooster eye.
Winched the door with poetry
and fled.
For good. And grieved I’d gone
when I was so alone.
In my kitchen, in the thin hour,
a calendar Cassatt chanted:
Repeat after me--
I can live alone and I love to . . .
What a crock. Each week,
the ritual grief.
That decade of the knuckled
knocks.
I took the crooked route and liked
my badness.
Played at mistress.
Tattooed an ass.
Lapped up my happiness from
a glass.
It was something, at least.
I hadn’t a clue.
What does a woman
willing to invent herself
at twenty-two or twenty-nine
do? A woman with no who
nor how.
And how was I to know what was
unwise.
I wanted to be writer. I wanted
to be happy.
What’s that? At twenty.
Or twenty-nine.
Love. Baby. Husband.
The works. The big palookas of life.
Wanting and not wanting.
Take your hands off me.
I left my father’s house
before the brothers,
vagabonded the globe
like a rich white girl.
Got a flat.
I paid for it. I kept it clean.
Sometimes the silence frightened
me.
Sometimes the silence blessed me.
It would come get me.
Late at night.
Open like a window,
hungry for my life.
I wrote when I was sad.
The flat cold.
When there was no love--
new, old--
to distract me.
No six brothers
with their Fellini racket.
No mother, father,
with their wise I told you.
I tell you,
these are the pearls
from that ten-year itch,
my jewels, my colicky kids
who fussed and kept
me up the wicked nights
when all I wanted was . . .
With nothing in the texts
to tell me.
The who-I-was who would become
the who-I-am.
These poems are from
that hobbled when.
1992 by Sandra Cisneros. Reprinted by permission of Susan Bergholz Literary Services, N.Y.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.