Good morning, Everyone,
Happy Post-Labor Day!
I wish I could mandate that you must be vaccinated and masked to read this column, but since I can’t I can only hope that those of you who can will be if you plan to venture outside once again –and especially, inside.
In times like these, one of the best, most soul-healing things we can do is read poetry.
Our poet today is one I have wanted to introduce for some time. Here she is:
Mihaela Moscaliuc
This lovely poet learned English in school in Romania, from a teacher who lent them books in English such as “Catch-22,” “Lord of the Flies” and “The Catcher in the Rye.”
Amazingly, he also had his students listen to records with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Bruce Springsteen and Leonard Cohen – just like so many American teenagers.
Mihaela came to the U.S. when she was twenty-four to pursue graduate studies and since then has published a number of successful poetry collections. Among them are Cemetery Ink (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2015) and Father Dirt (Alice James Books, 2010). She was the translator of Liliana Ursu’s Clay and Star (Etruscan Press, 2014) and Carmelia Leonte’s The Hiss of the Viper (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2014) and is the editor of Insane Devotion: On the Writings of Gerald Stern (Trinity University Press, 2016). With her husband, the well-known poet Michael Waters, she co-edited Border Lines: Poems of Migration (Knopf, 2020). Currently, she is the translation editor for Plume and associate professor of English at Monmouth University in New Jersey.
It’s my pleasure this morning to introduce her with the following three poems:
“Kitchen talk,” “Erotic,” and “Elegy for my mother’s employer.
–Irene Willis
Poetry Editor
Kitchen talk
“That’s something” my mom exclaims “you, me, bica,
her mother too,” as her index touches the blemish
that’s claimed for generations the same precise spot
Don’t! I threaten under my breath, don’t even look,
especially when someone’s around.
Hands in suds, I turn to make sure
My husband’s out of sight.
How is he supposed to brush his lips
along the flute of my spine
once he catches my mom’s appraising eyes
or the drift of such genealogical account.
Jesus, what’s with you Romanians, he once lost it
when, only days after being repulsed
by couples straddling each other’s backs
on an overcrowded Black Sea beach,
we almost soared off a cliff
as my cousin leaned from the passenger seat
toward her lover’s neck to nick one out.
Mom can’t understand what the big deal is.
“America’s neck-deep in dreadful habits.”
Like? I dare her. “Like paying others
to care for intimate business.
Seventy dollars so you can call it ‘back facial,’
as if you can’t tell your face from your ass.
Or the parents you unload into ‘homes’
then take on extra jobs to cover the indecent costs.
24/7 among strangers you wouldn’t have chosen
to share even a park bench with.”
My love steps in and hugs me from behind,
showered and balmy as wild chamomile.
For once I’m grateful he doesn’t know my language.
What’s with this heated conversation?
“No big deal,” Mom serves in English
“We battle about national tradition. She won.”
Erotic
pandemic 2020
Asked what he found erotic, he said eyes,
not eyes per se, but how they instigate,
ignite the body from within, that two second
ocular tryst that no tangible can match
when the strange eyes that enter yours,
equally strange, bring you home.
I felt envious. I’d never dared other eyes
and when lanced with a suggestive glance,
made sure to avert mine —
until now, when the daily stroll
parallel to the beach is measured
not in miles, but eyes.
Behind each mask, breath reveals
its nature, and it stinks.
The iris is the sole internal organ
visible from the outside,
my father professed to justify
his Canon’s small invasions
on the streets of Manhattan,
the troubles he got himself into.
I walk the day to harvest
what I see —blots of color,
fear, hello, no, father’s camera
on continuous click click click,
stealing what the subjects
don’t know they can give.
Elegy for my mother’s employer
Exit 172, Garden State Parkway, New Jersey
Why not, she’d snap as she ordered the tiles scrubbed raw
five empty bottles of cleaner lined for inspection
sixty-five pansies planted then replanted closer to the brick border
silver bowls emptied then reloaded with orchid-shaped
no not the lotus-shaped candles.
Why not swill fine cellar wine directly from the bottle
why not waltz while mother cooks onions in the rain
so they won’t pollute the inside with their crass smell
why not waltz naked, extoll your small frame
and freckled breasts, why not kick across the floor
each cocktail dress in search of the one
that will outshine the daughter.
Why not, she repeats, like a mantra, why wouldn’t I?
Six months of this shit’s enough, I tell my mother.
I’d heard how Romanians treat their own,
harping on how much worse their lives
would be back home, but now the rage
is personal. Pack up, we’ll come get you.
Mother assures me she’s fine. The woman means
no harm. She’s just having a hell of a time
dying in this marmoreal house
in a language that trips the tongue,
so far from the steamy furrows of native ground.