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Enough

Ellen Bass on

Published in Poem Of The Day

enough seen. enough had. enough
-Arthur Rimbaud
No. It will never be enough. Never
enough wind clamoring in the trees,
sun and shadow handling each leaf, never enough clang
of my neighbor hammering,
the iron nails, relenting wood, sound waves
lapping over rooves, never enough
bees purposeful at the throats
of lilies. How could we be replete
with the flesh of ripe tomatoes, the unique
scent of their crushed leaves. It would take many
births to be done with the thatness of that.

Oh blame life. That we just want more.
Summer rain. Mud. A cup of tea.
Our teeth, our eyes. A baby in a stroller.
Another spoonful of creme brulee, sweet burnt crust crackling.
And hot showers, oh lovely, lovely hot showers.

Today was a good day.
My mother-in-law sat on the porch, eating crackers and cheese
with a watered-down margarita
and though her nails are no longer stop-light red
and she can't remember who's alive and dead,
still, this was a day
with no weeping, no unstoppable weeping.

Last night, through the small window of my laptop,
I watched a dying man kill himself in Switzerland.
He wore a blue shirt and snow was falling
onto a small blue house, onto dark needles of pine and fir.
He didn't step outside to feel the snow on his face.
He sat at a table with his wife and drank poison.

Online I found a plastic bag complete with Velcro
and a hole for a tube to a propane tank. I wouldn't have to
move our Weber. I could just slide
down the stucco to the flagstones, where the healthy
weeds are sprouting through the cracks.
Maybe it wouldn't be half-bad
to go out looking at the yellowing leaves of the old camellia.
And from there I could see the chickens scratching-
if we still have chickens then. And yet...

this little hat of life, how will I bear
to take it off while I can still reach up? Snug woolen watch cap,
lacy bonnet, yellow cloche with the yellow veil
I wore the Easter I turned thirteen when my mother let me promenade
with Tommy Spagnola on the boardwalk in Atlantic City.

Oxygen, oxygen, the cry of the body-and you always want to give it
what it wants. But I must say no-
enough, enough
with more tenderness
than I have ever given to a lover, the gift
of the nipple hardening under my fingertip, more
tenderness than to my newborn,
when I held her still flecked
with my blood. I'll say the most gentle refusal
to this dear dumb animal and tighten
the clasp around my throat that once was kissed and kissed
until the blood couldn't rest in its channel, but rose
to the surface like a fish that couldn't wait to be caught.


About this poem
"Yeats wrote, 'We make out of the quarrels with others rhetoric, but of the quarrel with ourselves, poetry.' When my mother-in-law was declining into dementia, I found myself in difficult talks with my family about what I would want for myself. Eventually I realized the conversation I needed to have was internal."
-Ellen Bass

About Ellen Bass
Ellen Bass is the author of "Like a Beggar" (Copper Canyon Press, 2014). She teaches at Pacific University and lives in Santa Cruz, Calif.

***
The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.


(c) 2015 Ellen Bass. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate




 


 

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