FOUR WALLS EIGHT WINDOWS

NEW YORK

Copyright © 1990, 1991 by Andrea Dworkin.

A F o u r Wa l l s E ig h t W in d o w s F i r s t E d it io n .

First Printing August, 1991.

First paperback printing September, 1992.

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval

system, or transmit ed in any form, by any means, including

mechanical, electric, photocopying, recording or otherwise,

without the prior writ en permission of the publisher.

Excerpts from this novel have appeared in The Michigan Quarterly

Review, Vol. XXIX, No. 4, Fall 1990 and The American Voice,

No. 21, Winter 1990.

Mercy was first published

in Great Britain by Seeker & Warburg in 1990.

The author and publisher are grateful to the fol owing for

permission to quote from copyright material: Olwyn Hughes for

“Daddy, ” in Collected Poems by Sylvia Plath, published by Harper

& Row, Publishers, © 1965 1981; Pantheon for Anna Cancogni’s

translation of Sartre: A Life by Annie Cohen-Solal, © 1987

Random House, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Dworkin, Andrea.

Mercy: a novel / Andrea Dworkin.

p.

cm.

I. Title.

PS3554. W85M4 1991

813'. 54—dc20

91-18157

(Cloth) ISBN: 0-941423-69-7

CIP

(Paper) ISBN: 0-941423-88-3

Four Wal s Eight Windows

P. O. Box 548, Village Station

New York, N. Y 10014

Printed in the U. S. A.

F o r Judith Malina

For Michael M oorcock

In M em ory o f Ellen Frankfort

D addy, daddy, you bastard, I’ m through.

“ D ad d y, ” Sylvia Plath

For a small moment have I forsaken

thee; but with great mercies will I gather

thee.

In a little wrath I hid my face from

thee for a moment; but with everlasting

kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith

the Lord thy Redeemer.

Isaiah 54: 7-8

Contents

Not Andrea: Prologue

i

o n e In August 1956 (Age 9)

5

t w o In 1961 and 1962 (Age 14, 15, 16)

29

t h r e e In January 1965 (Age 18)

35

f o u r In February 1965 (Age 18)

56

f iv e In June 1966 (Age 19)

74

s ix In June 1967 (Age 20)

100

s e v e n In 1969, 1970, 1971 (Age 22, 23, 24, 25)

134

e i g h t In March 1973 (Age 26)

164

n in e In October 1973 (Age 27)

214

TEN April 30, 1974 (Age 27)

273

e le v e n April 30, 1974 (Age 27)

308

Not Andrea: Epilogue

334

Author’s N ote

343

Not Andrea: Prologue

N o w I’ve come into m y ow n as a wom an o f letters. I am a

committed feminist, o f course. I admit to a cool, elegant

intellect with a clear superiority over the ape-like men who

write. I don’t wear silk, o f course. I am icy and formal even

alone by myself, a discipline o f identity and identification. I do

not wear m yself out with mistaken resistance, denunciation,

foolhardy anguish. I feel, o f course. I feel the pain, the sorrow ,

the lack o f freedom. I feel with a certain hard elegance. I am

admired for it— the control, the reserve, the ability to make

the fine point, the subtle point. I avoid the obvious. I have a

certain intellectual elegance, a certain refinement o f the mind.

There is nothing w rong with civilized thought. It is necessary.

I believe in it and I do have the courage o f m y convictions. One

need not raise one’s voice. I am formal and careful, yes, but

with a real power in m y style i f I do say so myself. I am not, as

a writer or a human being, insipid or bland, and I have not sold

out, even though I have manners and limits, and I am not

poor, o f course, w h y should I be? I don’t have the stink on me

that some o f the others have, I am able to say it, I am not effete.

I am their sister and their friend. I do not disavow them. I am

committed. I write checks and sign petitions. I lend m y name.

I write books with a strong narrative line in clear, detailed,

descriptive prose, in the nineteenth-century tradition o f

storytelling, intellectually coherent, nearly realistic, not

sentimental but yes with sex and romance and wom en w ho do

something, achieve something, strong women. I am

committed, I do care, and I am the one to contend with, if the

truth be told, because m y mind is clear and cool and m y prose

is exceedingly skillful if sometimes a trifle too baroque. Every

style has its dangers. I am not reckless or accusatory. I consider

freedom. I look at it from many angles. I value it. I think about

it. I’ve found this absolutely stunning passage from Sartre that

I want to use and I copy it out slow ly to savor it, because it is

cogent and meaningful, with an intellectual richness, a moral

subtlety. Y ou don’t have to shout to tell the truth. Y ou can

think. Y ou have a responsibility to think. M y wild sisters revel

in being wretched and they do not think. Sartre is writing

about the French under the German Occupation, well, French

intellectuals really, and he says— “ We were never as free as

under the German Occupation. We had lost all our rights, and,

first o f all, the right to speak; we were insulted every day, and

had to keep silent.. . . and everywhere, on the walls, the

papers, the movie screen, we were made to confront the ugly

mug that our oppressor presented to us as our own: but this is

precisely why we were free. As the German poison seeped into

our minds, every just thought we had was a real conquest; as

an omnipotent police kept forcing silence upon us, every word

we uttered had the value o f a declaration o f rights; as we were

constantly watched, every gesture we made was a commitm ent. ” This is moral eloquence, in the mouth o f a man. This

applies to the situation o f women. This is a beautiful truth,

beautifully expressed. Every just thought is a real conquest,

for women under the rule o f men. They don’t know how hard

it is to be kind. Our oppressor puts his version o f us

everywhere, on walls, in the papers, on the movie screens.

Like a poison gas, it seeps in. Every word we utter is a

declaration o f our rights. Every gesture is a commitment. I

make gestures. I experience this subtle freedom, this freedom

based on nuance, a freedom grotesquely negated by a vulgar,

reckless shout, however sincere. He didn’t know that the Je w s

were being exterminated, perhaps, not then. O f course, yes,

he did know that they had been deported from France. Yes.

And when he published these words much later, in 1949, he

did know, but one must be true to one’s original insights,

one’s true experiences, the glimpses one has o f freedom. There

is a certain pride one takes in seeing something so fine, so

subtle, and saying it so well— and, o f course, one cannot

endlessly revise backwards. His point about freedom is

elegant. He too suffered during the war. It is not a cheap point.

And it is true that for us too every w ord is a declaration o f

rights, every gesture a commitment. This is beautifully put,

strongly put. As a wom an o f letters, I fight for m y kind, for

women, for freedom. The brazen scream distracts. The wild

harridans are not persuasive. I write out Sartre’s passage with

appreciation and excitement. The analogy to the condition o f

wom en is dramatic and at the same time nuanced. I w ill not

shout. This is not the ovens. We are not the Jew s, or, to be

precise, the Je w s in certain parts o f Europe at a certain time.

We are not being pushed into the ovens, dragged in, cajoled in,

seduced in, threatened in. It is not us in the ovens. Such

hyperbole helps no one. I like the w ay Sartre puts it, though

the irony seems unintended: “ We were never as free as under

the German O ccupation. ” Actually, I do know that his

meaning is straightforward and completely sincere— there is

no irony. This embarrasses me, perhaps because I am a captive

o f m y time. We are cursed with hindsight. We need irony

because we are in fact incapable o f simple sincerity. “ We were

never as free as under the German O ccupation. ” It gives the

right significance to the gesture, something Brecht never

managed incidentally. I like the sophistication, the unexpected

meaning. This is what a writer must do: use w ords in subtle,

unexpected w ays to create intellectual surprise, real delight. I

love the pedagogy o f the analogy. There is a mutability o f

meaning, an intellectual elasticity that avoids the rigidity o f

ideology and still instructs in the meaning o f freedom. It

warns us not to be simple-minded. We were never as free as

under the German Occupation. Glorious. Really superb.

Restrained. Elegant. True in the highest sense. De Beauvoir

was my feminist ideal. An era died with her, an era o f civilized

coupling. She was a civilized woman with a civilized militance

that recognized the rightful constraints o f loyalty and, o f

course, love. I am tired o f the bellicose fools.

O N E

In August 1956

(Age 9)

M y name is Andrea. It means manhood or courage. In Europe

only boys are named it but I live in America. Everyone says I

seem sad but I am not sad. I was born down the street from

Walt W hitman’s house, on M ickle Street, in Cam den, in 1946,

broken brick houses, cardboard porches, garbage spread over

cement like fertilizer on stone fields, dark, a dark so thick you

could run your fingers through it like icing and lick it o ff your

fingers. I w asn’t raped until I was almost ten which is pretty

good it seems when I ask around because many have been

touched but are afraid to say. I w asn’t really raped, I guess, just

touched a lot by a strange, dark-haired man w ho I thought was

a space alien because I couldn’t tell how many hands he had

and people from earth only have two, and I didn’t know the

w ord rape, which is ju st some awful word, so it didn’t hurt me

because nothing happened. Y o u get asked if anything happened and you say well yes he put his hand here and he rubbed

me and he put his arm around m y shoulder and he scared me

and he followed me and he whispered something to me and

then someone says but did anything happen. And you say,

well, yes, he sat down next to me, it was in this m ovie theater

and I didn’t mean to do anything w rong and there w asn’t

anyone else around and it was dark and he put his arm around

me and he started talking to me and saying weird things in a

weird voice and then he put his hand in m y legs and he started

rubbing and he kept saying ju st let m e.. . . and someone says

did anything happen and you say well yes he scared me and he

followed me and he put his hand or hands there and you don’t

know how many hands he had, not really, and you don’t want

to tell them you don’t know because then they will think you

are crazy or stupid but maybe there are creatures from Mars

and they have more than two hands but you know this is

stupid to say and so you don’t know how to say what

happened and if you don’t know how many hands he had you

don’t know anything and no one needs to believe you about

anything because you are stupid or crazy and so you don’t

know how to say what happened and you say he kept saying

just let me. . . . and I tried to get away and he followed me

and he. . . . followed me and he. . . . and then they say,

thank God nothing happened. So you try to make them

understand that yes something did happen honest you aren’t

lying and you say it again, strained, thicklipped from biting

your lips, your chest swollen from heartbreak, your eyes

swollen from tears all salt and bitter, holding your legs funny

but you don’t want them to see and you keep pretending to be

normal and you want to act adult and you can barely breathe

from crying and you say yes something did happen and you

try to say things right because adults are so strange and so

stupid and you don’t know the right words but you try so hard

and you say exactly how the man sat down and put his arm

around you and started talking to you and you told him to go

away but he kept holding you and kissing you and talking to

you in a funny whisper and he put his hands in your legs and he

kept rubbing you and he had a really deep voice and he

whispered in your ear in this funny, deep voice and he kept

saying just to let him. . . . but you couldn’t understand what

he said because maybe he was mumbling or maybe he couldn’t

talk English so you can’t tell them what he said and you say

maybe he was a foreigner because you don’t know what he

said and he talked funny and you tried to get away but he

followed you and then you ran and you didn’t scream or cry

until you found your m omma because he might hear you and

find you so you were quiet even though you were shaking and

you ran and then they say thank God nothing happened and

you don’t know w hy they think you are lying because you are

trying to tell them everything that happened ju st the right w ay

and i f you are a stubborn child, a strong-willed child, you say

the almost-ten-year-old version o f fuck you something happened all right the fuck put his hands in m y legs and rubbed me

all over; m y legs; my legs; me; m y; m y legs; m y; m y; m y legs;

and he rubbed me; his arm was around m y shoulder, rubbing,

and his mouth was on m y neck, rubbing, and his hand was

under m y shirt, rubbing, and his hand was in m y pants,

rubbing, and he kept saying ju st let me. . . . and it was a

creepy whisper in some funny language and he was saying

sounds I didn’t understand and then they say the child is

hysterical, something must have happened, the child is

hysterical; and they want to know i f anything came inside or

was outside and you don’t want to tell them that he took your

hand and put it somewhere wet on him in his lap in the dark

and your hand touched something all funny and your hand got

all cold and slim y and they say thank God nothing happened;

and they ask i f something went inside but when you ask inside

where they look aw ay and you are nearly ten but you are a

fully desperate human being because you want to know inside

where so you w ill know what happened because you don’t

know what he did or what it was or how many hands he had

but they don’t ask you that. And your mother says show me and

you don’t know if you should put your arm around her

shoulder, rubbing, or rub your head into her neck, and she says

show me and you try to whisper the w ay he whispered in a deep

voice but you are too far away from her for it to be like him and

you don’t know what he said so you are crying and a little sick

and you point to your legs and say here and she says show me

where he touched you and you say here and you point to your

legs and she says did he put anything in and you say his hands

and she says anything else did he put anything else in and you

don’t know how many hands he had or if he put them in or in

where and you are wearing bermuda shorts because it is hot,

hot summer, August, black ones, too grown up for a girl your

age she told you but you are always fighting to wear black

because you want to be grown up and you are always fighting

with her anyway and this time she let you because she didn’t

want to fight anymore, and she wants to know i f he touched

your knee and she points to your bare knee and you say yes and

she wants to know if he touched higher and you don’t know

how high because you were sitting down and you say my legs

and she asks you if he touched your bermuda shorts and you

say yes and she asks you if he took them o ff and you think she

is trying to trick you because you were at the movies and how

could someone take your bermuda shorts o ff at the movies and

she asks you if he touched under the bermuda shorts and she

wants to know what he touched you with and it was dark and

you couldn't see and you don’t know what he touched you

with or how many hands he had but she doesn’t ask you that

and afterwards sometimes you think he was from outer space

because people from earth have two hands and when you

make a drawing o f him with crayons or pastels you draw a

stick man with a big face and big hands, lots o f hands, and

sometimes you make another hand in the sky coming down

and you never tell that you are drawing him and you say that

he rubbed you with something inside your legs, no, not there,

higher up, and she cries, your beautiful mother cries, with her

long hair, with her black hair down to her shoulders, and her

cotton summer dress with flowers on it from when she was

young, she cries and she sits across from you and she holds

your hands in hers and you feel so sorry because you always do

something wrong and make her angry or sad and this was a

special day when she let you go to the movies by yourself for

the first time because you said you were mature enough and

she let you wear black and you made her cry so you say

momma I’m sorry momma nothing happened m om ma

nothing happened he didn’t hurt me momma I’m fine m omma

honest m omma nothing happened it didn’t m omma honest

nothing; and she says “ pregnant” something; and I am

punished, in m y room, put alone in m y room and not allowed

to come out and she doesn’t like me anymore, and I cry, I am

going to cry until I get old, I am crying for God to see, I am

afraid the man will come again because he came from nowhere

the first time and he disappeared into thin air and if he is from

outer space he can go anywhere or maybe he followed me like

they do on television and I couldn’t see him because he hid

behind trees and cars and God would know if he had followed

me and maybe God could stop him from finding m y room or

it could be like when someone is killed on television and you

think he is dead and then it gets all quiet and he isn’t dead and

he attacks again with a knife or a gun or he is real strong and it

is real quiet but suddenly he appears from nowhere so I cry but

I keep m y eye on the door so I will be alert in case he is just

pretending to be gone but really he sneaked inside the house

and he is ju st waiting or he could come in the w indow ; and

something hurts me like when you fall down and scrape your

knees and the skin is all scraped o ff and it is all bloody and has

cuts in it and dirt in it and your mother cleans it o ff and puts

iodine on it and says it w o n ’t hurt but it burns and she puts a

bandage on it; something hurts somewhere where he rubbed

but I don’t look because I’m afraid and I keep m y hands away

because I don’t want m y hands to touch me and I don’t want to

touch anywhere in m y legs because I’m afraid; and I couldn’t

say something was hurting because I didn’t know if something

was hurting or not or where it was because maybe I was

making it up because it hurt like a scraped knee but it hurt

somewhere that didn’t exist. I wanted God to see me crying so

He would know and it would count. I asked God if there were

men from outer space on earth because He knew if there was

life on other planets but He didn’t answer me; and I knew there

weren’t but I knew He could have made them if He wanted to

and I knew people only had two hands and I didn’t know how

many hands this man had and I couldn’t figure it out no matter

how much I tried because if he was rubbing in some places

how could he be rubbing in so many places and I couldn’t

count how many places and if he was from outer space he

could come into my room now through the air or anytime

from nowhere. I wanted God to tell me the truth because I was

afraid. I was trying to tell God I was hurt because I thought

God should know and let me stay in m y room and keep the

man away and I wanted to stay in my room a long time, until I

got old, and I wanted God to keep my mother away because

she didn’t like me anymore and I didn’t want to take o ff my

bermuda shorts or show her any more and I didn’t want her to

look at me anymore, and I thought God should know I needed

Him and where was He? I thought maybe the man wasn’t a

bad man because they said nothing happened after all and I

looked grown up so how could he know I was just a child and I

wasn’t sure if he thought I was a child or not because I did look

very grown up and act very grown up but I told him I was a

child and he should go away but I said it in a very grown-up

way. I cried because they said nothing happened and because I

didn’t know if the man knew I was a child and I cried because I

wanted God to know something had happened and I was a

child and I wanted God to say w hy it was less bad if I wasn’t a

child because I was still the same me if I was or if I wasn’t. And

for the first time I didn’t want to be grown up because all the

adults said it was less bad. I cried because I didn’t see how it

could be less bad; and if I grew up were men going to be

putting themselves on me in movies only it wouldn’t be bad

because I wouldn’t be a child anymore. I cried because God

was busy somewhere else and didn’t come and if I cried He

w ould know I was hurting so much somewhere that didn't

exist and He could find it because He lived somewhere that

didn’t exist and He would know what I meant even if I

couldn’t say it and I w ouldn’t have to point here and here and

here and so I kept crying in case He didn’t know yet that He

should be coming to me now even though people were sick

and hungry all over and He had to see them too. I used to talk

to God, especially when m y mother was sick and in the

hospital and m y daddy had to be w orking so hard all day and

all night and God would be pretty near me, in the same room,

near me, and I wanted to know things like w hy anyone had to

die or be poor or starve in China, and if China was real or ju st a

story adults made up, and w hy colored people were treated so

bad, and w hy so many Jew s were dead; and I can’t remember

what He said but I always thought someday I would

understand if I kept trying to pin Him down and maybe I

could convince Him not to have things be so bad; and I had

complicated discussions with Him about w hy He made things

the w ay He did, because I didn’t think He did it right, and I

wanted to be a scholar when I grew up and write things about

what God meant and intended and He would listen to m y

questions and arguments but the adults wouldn’t; and I heard

Him inside m y head, and it was like He was in the room, but it

was never scary and it always made me peaceful even though I

thought He hadn’t done things completely right and I would get

calmed down and quiet even when I had been begging Him to let

m y mother get better or at least not die. I talked to Him a lot

when m y mother was in the hospital for an operation that might

kill her and they told me she might die right then and I had a high

fever and appendicitis and a rash and the adults told me I had to

tell her over the phone that I was all right because she must not

w orry and die and I knew it was wrong to lie, especially because

she might die right then or that night or the next day,

and my last words to her would be lies, and I wanted to cry to

her, but the adults said I wasn’t allowed, and it didn’t matter if

God said it was wrong to lie if adults said you had to lie because

you had to do what adults said not what God said. Y ou had to

be careful not to tell anyone you talked with God because they

might think you were crazy and you had to make sure n ob od y.

heard you talking to Him and you had to remember not to tell

the doctor. They told you to believe in Him and you were

supposed to pray and they sent you to Hebrew School and you

had to go to the children’s services where girls weren’t allowed

to do anything anyway but He wasn’t supposed to talk to you.

He talked to Moses and Abraham but you were just Andrea

from Camden even though Abraham had just been a boy

herding sheep when he figured out there was one God. He had

been staring up in the sky trying to think about God and he

thought God was the moon but the moon disappeared when

night was over and then he thought God was the sun but the

sun disappeared when the day was over and then he figured

out God had to be there all the time so He couldn’t be the sun

or the moon or any king because they died or any idol because

you could break it and you weren’t so different from Abraham

before he grew up. Except that you didn’t understand how he

knew God couldn’t be air because air is everywhere all the time

and the teacher didn’t know but they never say they don’t

know, they just make you feel stupid for asking something.

Y ou were supposed to pray but you couldn’t lead the prayers

because you were a girl and you couldn’t read from the Torah

so a whole bunch o f boys who were a lot stupider than you got

to do all the important things and you weren’t supposed to

argue with God although the rabbis did it all the time but you

were a girl and you weren’t allowed to be a rabbi anyw ay and

all the rabbis who argued with Him were dead anyway and

none o f the rabbis you ever saw or heard who were alive ever

argued with God at all. Y ou thought they just didn’t care

enough but they kept telling you rules and what you had to do

and what you couldn’t do and how to grow up and what to

think but you knew that the dead rabbis couldn’t have been

like them and hadn’t just learned rules and so sometimes you

would write arguments in the margins o f books just like the

great rabbis because you wanted to make commentaries like

they did but you weren’t supposed to write in any holy book

even if it was for children so you would have to hide your

writings and you would have to try to argue with God out

loud in person but hiding it but mostly you would talk with

God when you were crying for your mother or had had a big

fight with her or if you were very scared. I had a big fight with

God when I learned in Hebrew School that women couldn’t

go into the Tem ple when they had their periods because I got

mine when I was nine, I was an adult when I went to the

movies alone in the Bible, and it had hurt so terrible, so bad,

and still did every month, and I couldn’t think when anyone

would need God more, and how could He keep me aw ay and

say aw ful things like that I was unclean when He gave you the

thing. We were studying Leviticus and I was in class and I was

angry with the teacher who sat slumped over the book and

told me what God had said which I could see for m yself N o

one else was upset but maybe they hadn’t gotten their periods

yet and the teacher never would and he could go into the

Tem ple all the time, the whole month, all slumped over and

stupid. When I had it out with God I tried to explain over and

over that I really was sincere and w hy would He want to keep

someone sincere like me out o f the Tem ple and there w asn’t

any good answer that I could figure out except that it w asn’t

sincerity God was looking for; He wanted people w ho didn’t

bleed so w hy had He made you bleed; and you thought that

having a baby would be even worse and hurt even more and

He said you were even more unclean and had to stay out even

longer but you could solve that by not having a baby. And if

you had a baby you would have nine months when you could

go into the Temple and make God happy but when it got real

bad and you needed Him you couldn’t go because once it got

really bad and blood came you were unclean. I thought

women should have their babies in the Temple where God

was because it might hurt less. The teacher said you had to

accept things you didn’t understand and God didn’t have to be

fair but if God wasn’t who would be and how would they

know how? The teacher said that when he went to dinner in

people’s houses he would take a book out o f the people’s

bookcases and blow dust o ff it to show the wife the books

weren’t clean and how lazy and dirty she was. He said the

books were always dusty because women were lazy and didn’t

take care o f their husbands’ books. I didn’t understand w hy it

wasn’t rude to blow dust o ff someone’s books and make them

feel bad and I couldn’t understand how she could stand it after

she had made him dinner and been real nice. But he just

laughed and said women were unclean and he had just proved

it. I asked him if his books were dusty and he said his wife

cleaned them and he blew on them. I didn’t go to God with the

problem o f the books and the dust but I didn’t think it was fair

either. I asked my mother and she said he was my teacher and I

should listen to him but I decided not to anymore. N o w I had

another problem on my mind. Why was what the man did less

bad if I wasn’t a child? If I was a grown-up and went to the

movies and wanted to see the movie, w hy would it be less bad

if the man stopped me and if he scared me and if I had to run

away and i f he hurt me and if he made me cry and i f I didn’t

want him sitting next to me and whispering or anything. I

wanted to know if God thought it was less bad; and I hated the

adults for saying it was less bad. I wanted to know where God

was when the man was there and w hy God didn’t make the

man go away. I wanted to know if God was there too. The

Hebrew School teachers said God knows everything and can

do anything and H e’s always there, everywhere. I believed He

could do anything and knew everything but I didn’t think He

was always there because too many bad things happened and if

He was there they couldn’t ju st happen; how could they? I f I

see someone do something bad I’m not supposed to ju st

watch. M om m a says call the police or an adult. H ow could He

be in the movies with me when the man came? He w ouldn’t

even come to m y room after because He knew all about it and

felt ashamed for making such a horrible man. I knew He could

do anything and made us all so w hy did He make that man?

Was God there like the teachers kept saying and the rabbis kept

saying and did He look or was He looking somewhere else

because He could have turned to look somewhere else because

it didn’t take so long and time for God must be different and it

must have been just a small minute for Him to turn away. O r if

He had to go to India or somewhere maybe He w asn’t there. I

sort o f thought He was there but I couldn’t believe that H e’d

ju st sit and watch because that w ouldn’t be right and God has

to do things that are right. M aybe He turned aw ay but maybe

He was there. M aybe He looked. I thought He was there, I

didn’t feel alone, but I couldn’t stand to think He had ju st

looked so I stopped thinking it but the only w ay I could stop

thinking it was to think that probably God didn’t exist anyw ay

and was only a superstition and there was no God the same

w ay there were no space creatures. I lectured m yself that I was

a child and I was going to grow up even though I didn’t want

to anym ore and someday I would understand w hy it was less

bad if I w asn’t a child unless the adults were just lying, because

adults lie a lot to children I had found out. M aybe they were

lying about God too and maybe there wasn’t one. I sort o f

thought God had been there though. The theater was em pty

but it didn’t feel em pty and there’s a special kind o f dark that

feels like G o d ’s in it, it’s got dots o f light in it all dancing and

sparkling or it’s almost thick so it’s just all surrounding you

like a nest or something, it’s something alive and you’re

something alive and it’s all around you, real friendly, real close

and kind as if it will take care o f you. I was so excited to be at

the movies by myself. I thought it was a very great day in my life

because usually I would be fighting with my mother and she

wouldn’t let me do anything I wanted to do. I had to play with

children and she didn’t like for them to be older than me but all

my real friends were older than me but I kept them secret. I

had to go shopping with her and try on clothes and go with her

to see the wom en’s things and the girls’ things and there were

millions o f them, and they were all the same, all matching sets

with the dressy ones all messed up with plastic flowers, all

fussy and stupid, and they were so boring, all skirts and

dresses and stupid things, little hats and little white gloves, and

I could only try on things that she liked and I wanted to read

anyway. I liked to walk around all over and go places I had

never seen before and I would always try to find a w ay to

wander around and not have to shop with her, except I loved

being near her but not shopping. N o w she was going on a big

trip to Lits, the biggest department store in Camden and

almost near Philadelphia, right near the bridge, and I loved to

be near the bridge, and I used to love to have lunch with m y

mother at the lunch counter in the giant store because that

wasn’t like being a child anymore and we would talk like

girlfriends, even holding hands. So this time I asked if I could

go to the movie across the street while she shopped and come

back to Lits all by m yself and meet her when the movie was

over and instead o f fighting with me to make me do what she

wanted she said yes and I couldn’t believe it because it made

me so happy because she didn’t fight with me and she had faith

in me and I knew I could do it and not get lost and handle the

money right and get back to the store on time and be in the

right place because I was mature. I had to act like a child but I

w asn’t one really. She wanted to have a child but I had been on

m y ow n a long time so I had to keep acting like a child but I

hated it. When she was sick I was on m y own and when I was

with relatives I was alone because they didn't know anything

and when she was in the hospital or home from the hospital I

did the ironing and I peeled the potatoes and once when she

couldn’t breathe and fell on the kitchen floor and it was late at

night and m y daddy was w orking I called the doctor and he

told me to get her whiskey right aw ay but I didn’t know what

whiskey was or how to find some so he told me to go to the

neighbors and I did and I got her whiskey and I ran like he told

me to in the dark at night and I took care o f her and made her

drink it even though she was on the floor dead and the doctor

said i f not for how calm I was she would have died but I w asn’t

calm and I wanted to cry but I didn’t. I thought she was dead

and I stopped breathing. I had already lived in lots o f different

houses and you can’t act like some normal child even though

everyone wants you to be just normal and they don’t want you

to feel bad but you have to be grown up and not give them

trouble and they never know what is in your heart or what you

really think about because their children are normal to them

and you aren’t their children and their children don’t know

about dying or being alone so you have to pretend. So I was

grow n up inside and acted grow n up all the time except when

m y mother was around because she wanted to have a child, a

real child, and got angry i f I didn’t act like a child because it

upset her to think I had got grow n up without her when she

w asn’t there because she wanted to be the mother o f a real

child. When I forgot to be a child or didn’t want to be I made

her very mad at me and very unhappy and she thought I was

trying to hurt her on purpose but I w asn’t because I loved ju st

being near her, sitting near to her when she drank her coffee,

and I was so proud once when I had helped m y daddy shovel

snow and she let me drink some coffee ju st like her. I loved her

hair. I loved when she talked to me about things, not telling

me what to do but just said things to me about things not

treating me like a baby. I loved when she let me go somewhere

with her and her girlfriends. I loved even when she was sick

but not real sick and was in bed for many days or sometimes

many weeks and I was allowed to go in and visit her a little and

sit on the bed and watch television with her and we would

watch “ The $64, 000 Question, ” and we were both crazy for

Charles Van Doren because he was so cute and so intellectual

and we rooted for him and bit our lips waiting for him to

answer and held hands and held our breath. Then I had to leave

her alone because I had tired her out but I felt wonderful for

hours after, so warm and happy, because m y mother loved

me. We held hands and we sat. But I couldn’t stand the stuff

she made me do. She made me sew and knit and do stupid

things. I was supposed to count the stitches and sit still and be

quiet and keep my legs closed when I sat down and wear white

gloves and a hat when I went out in a dress. She made me close

my legs all the time and I kept trying to get her to tell me w hy I

couldn’t sit how I wanted but she said girls must not ever sit so

sloppy and bad and she got mad because I said I liked to have

m y legs open when I sat down and I always did what I wanted

even if I got punished. She said I was a relentless child. But if I

had to think about closing my legs all the time I couldn’t just

sit and talk and I thought it was silly and stupid and I w asn’t

going to do it and she slapped me and told me how I was just

trying to hurt her. Sometimes she screamed and made me sit

with m y legs closed counting stitches knitting and I wanted

her to die. I wanted to go everywhere and I would lie and say I

was somewhere I was allowed to be and I would go

somewhere I had never been just to see it or just to be alone or

ju st to see what it was like or if anything would happen. Once I

got caught because two boys who were bigger and older

threw a Christmas tree at me and it hit the top o f m y head and

blood started running down all over me. I was walking on a

trashy dirt road but it had trees and bushes on it and even some

poison sumac on the trees which was bright red and I thought

it was beautiful and I used to pretend it was Nature and I was

walking in Nature but children w eren’t supposed to go there

alone because it was out o f the way. The tw o boys came

running out o f the bushes and trees and threw a whole

Christmas tree at m y head and m y head got cut open and

blood started running down and I got home walking with the

blood coming down and I got put in bed and the doctor came

and it w asn’t anything, only a little cut with a lot o f blood he

said. He said the head could bleed a lot without really being

hurt bad. But I had been some place I w asn’t supposed to go so

it was m y fault anyw ay even i f I had been hurt very bad. I was

supposed to learn that you weren’t supposed to go strange

places but instead I learned that m y head didn’t get smashed or

cracked open and I w asn’t going to die and I could do what I

wanted i f I w asn’t afraid o f dying; and I wasn’t. I had another

life all apart from what m y momma said and wanted and

thought and did and I did what I wanted and she couldn’t stop

me and I liked going places she wasn’t and I liked not having to

listen to her or stay with her or be like some prisoner where she

could see me and I liked doing what I wanted even if it was

nothing really. I hated her telling me everything not to do and

I stopped listening to her and no one knows all the things I did

or all the places I went. I liked it when she was away. I knew it

was bad o f me to like it because she was sick but I liked being

alone. I got sick o f being her child. I’d get angry with her and

yell at her for trying to make me do things. But I was always

nice to the other adults because you wanted them to like you

because then they left you alone more and sometimes they

would talk to you about things if you asked them lots o f

intelligent questions and made them talk to you. And you

have to be nice to adults to show you have manners and so they

w o n ’t watch you all the time and because you get punished i f

you aren’t nice to them because adults get to punish you if they

want and you can’t stop them. I knew I had to be nice to the

man in the movies because he was an adult and I had to talk to

adults in a certain w ay because I was a child and I got punished

if I didn’t but I also wanted to act like an adult so they would

leave me alone so I had to talk t o him like an adult and not cry

or be stupid or act silly or act like a baby or be rude or raise my

voice or run away or be scared like a baby. Y ou had to say

mister or sir and you had to be polite and if you wanted to be

grown up you had to talk quiet and be reasonable and say

quiet, intelligent things in a certain quiet, reasonable way.

Children cried. Y ou didn’t cry. Little babies screamed like

ninnies. Y ou didn’t scream. Adults didn’t scream when

someone talked to them quietly. The man talked very quiet.

The man was very polite. I was too grown up to scream and

cry and then I would have had to leave the movie if I made

noise because you weren’t even allowed to make any noise in a

movie. You weren’t allowed to whisper. I couldn’t understand how come the man kept talking once the movie started

because I knew you weren’t allowed to talk during it. M y

daddy hated for me to cry. He walked away in disgust. M y

momma yelled at me but my daddy went away. Adults said I

was a good child or I was very mature for my age or I had

poise. Sometimes they said I was a nice girl or a sweet child or

a smart, sweet child with such nice manners. It was a big act on

my part. I waited for them to go away so I could go

somewhere and do what I wanted but I wanted them to like

me. M y momma made me talk with respect to all adults no

matter what they did. Sometimes a teacher was so stupid but

m y momma said I had to talk with respect or be quiet and I

wasn’t allowed to contradict them or even argue with them at

all. One teacher in regular school made her pets stand behind

her when she was sitting at her desk in the front o f the room

and you had to brush o ff her collar, just stand there behind her

for fifteen minutes or a half hour or longer and keep brushing

her collar on her shoulders with your open hands, palms

down, stroking all the whole w ay from her neck to her arms.

She sat at her desk and we would be taking a test or writing

something or answering her questions and she would say

someone had to come up and stand behind her and she wore

one o f those fuzzy collars you put on top o f sweaters and

someone had to stand behind her chair facing the class and

with their hands keep brushing the fuzzy collar down,

smoothing it down, with one stroke from her neck to her

shoulder, the left hand had to stroke the left side o f her collar

and the right hand had to stroke the right side o f her collar, and

it had to be smooth and in rhythm and feel good to her or she

would get mean and say sarcastic things about you to the class.

Y ou just had to stand there and keep touching her and they’d

stare at you. Y ou were supposed to like it because she only

picked you if she liked you or if you were done your test early

or i f you were very good and everyone else stared at you and

you were the teacher’s pet. But m y arms got tired and I hated

standing there and I felt funny and I thought it was boring and

I didn’t see w hy I couldn’t do something else like read while I

was waiting for the test to be over and I tried to prolong it but I

couldn’t too much and I thought she was mean but the meaner

she was the more you wanted her to like you and be nice to you

because otherwise she would hurt you so much by saying

awful things about you to the class. And m y mother said she

was the teacher and an adult and I had to be respectful and do

what she said. I had to be nice to adults and do what they said

because they were adults and I wanted to grow up so I

w ouldn’t have to listen to them anymore and obey them but

the only w ay to get them to think you were grow n up was to

obey them because then they would say you were mature and

acting like an adult. Y ou had to brush the teacher’s collar and

no one ever had to say w hy to you even i f you kept asking and

they just told you to keep quiet and stop asking. She could

make you stand in the corner or sit alone or keep you after

school or give you a bad mark even if you knew everything. I

wanted to be an adult like my daddy. He was always very

polite and intelligent and he listened to people and treated

them fair and he didn’t yell and he explained things if you

asked why except sometimes when he got tired or fed up. But

he was nicer than anyone. He didn’t treat people bad, even

children. He always wanted to know what you were thinking.

He listened to what everybody said even if they were children

or even if they were stupid adults and he said you could always

listen even if you didn’t agree and even if someone was dumb

or rude or filled with prejudice or mean and then you could

disagree in the right way and not be low like them. He said you

should be polite to everyone no matter who they were or

where they came from or if they were colored or if they were

smart or stupid it didn’t make any difference. M y relatives and

teachers were pretty stupid a lot and they weren’t nice to

Negroes but I was supposed to be quiet even then because they

were adults. I was supposed to know they were wrong

without saying anything because that would be rude. I got

confused because he said you needed to be polite to Negroes

because white people weren’t and white people were wrong

and Jew s like us knew more about it than anyone and it was

meaner for us to do it than anyone but I also had to be polite to

the white people who did the bad things and used the bad

words and said the ugly things that were poisonous and made

the six million die. M y daddy said I had to be quiet because I

was a child. M y daddy said I had to be polite to my uncle who

called colored people niggers and he said I had to stay quiet and

when I was grown up I could say something. I watched my

daddy and he was quiet and polite and he would wait and listen

and then he would tell m y uncle he was wrong and Negroes

were just like us, especially like us, and they weren’t being

treated fair at all but I didn’t think it helped or was really good

enough because m y uncle never stopped it and I wanted to

explode all the time. M y daddy always said something but it

was ju st at the end because m y uncle would go aw ay and not

listen to him and no one listened to him, except me, I’m pretty

sure o f that. And once when m y mother was sick and going

into the hospital and I had to go stay in m y uncle’s house I cried

so hard because I was afraid she would die but also I knew he

would be calling colored people bad names and I would have

to be quiet and I had to live there and couldn’t go aw ay and m y

daddy told me specially as an order that I had to be quiet and

respectful even though m y uncle was doing something awful.

I didn’t understand w hy adults were allowed to do so many

things w rong and w hy children had to keep quiet all the time

during them. I stayed aw ay out o f the house as long as I could

every day, I hung out with teenagers or I’d just hang out alone,

and I prayed to God that m y uncle w ouldn’t talk but nothing

stopped him and I would try not to m ove and not to breathe so

I w ouldn’t run aw ay or call him bad names or scream because

it caused me such outrage in m y heart, I hated him so much for

being so stupid and so cruel. I sometimes had cuts on the inside

o f m y mouth because I would bite down to stop from talking

back and I would press m y fingernails into m y palms so bad

they would bleed and I had sores all over m y hands so I bit m y

nails to keep the sores from coming. Y ou had to do what

adults said no matter what even if you didn’t know them or

they were creeps or very bad people. The man was an adult.

He w asn’t so mean as m y uncle in how he talked, he talked

nicer and quieter. I was sitting there, acting grow n up,

wearing m y black bermuda shorts. Outside it was hot and

inside it was cold from air-conditioning. I liked the cold inside.

O ur house was hot and the city was hot but the movie was nice

and cold and the sweat dried on you and I liked how amazing it

felt. The man sat down next to me. There were a million empty

seats and the theater was like a huge, dark castle, but he

sat down right next to me, on m y left. The whole big theater

was empty. The usher was a teenager but I didn’t think he was

cute. He had a light blue uniform and a flashlight. He showed

me to my seat. He wanted it in the middle but I kept wanting

to go closer to the screen. I sat down in front where I’m not

allowed with my parents because they think it’s too close but I

like it because then the movie is big and it seems like the people

are giants and you forget everything looking at them. The

theater was so big and the ceiling was so high and you could

get lost in it except that the seats were all in rows. The theater

was dark but not completely dark. There was dim light but

not enough light really to see in or to read my book in. I had a

book stuffed in my pocket. I always carried a book. I liked to

read whenever I could. Y ou could read almost anywhere but

there wasn’t enough light even for me so I had to sit and wait

for the lights to go down all the w ay and the movie to start. I

crossed m y legs because I thought it was sophisticated. I

crossed them one way, then the other way. I opened the top

buttons on my blouse because I was alone now and I could do

what I wanted. The man sat down and the usher wasn’t there

because I tried to look but I didn’t want to insult the man by

acting like anything was wrong. I didn’t understand w hy he

had to sit there and I wished he wouldn’t but you had to be nice

to people who sat next to you in a bus or in a synagogue or

anywhere and I wanted to move but he hadn’t done anything

bad and I knew it would be an insult to him and I didn’t think I

was better than other people. He said some things to me and I

tried to look straight ahead and I tried to be polite and not talk

to him at the same time and I tried to ask him to leave me alone

but not to be rude because he was an adult and it wasn’t right to

be mean anyway. I didn’t understand what was w rong

because people sit next to people all the time but I thought he

could move over one seat and not be right next to me but I

didn’t know how to say he should m ove over w ith o u t. it

seeming like I was mean or thought he was dirty or poor or

something bad. He said things and I said yes or no or I don’t

know or I don’t think so and kept looking ahead to show I

w asn’t interested in talking and had other things on m y mind

and he told me I was pretty and grow n up and I said I was ju st a

child really and I had never been to the m ovies before m yself

and m y mother was waiting for me and I wanted to watch the

m ovie but when someone says yo u ’re pretty you have to say

thank you. Then the lights went o ff and it was really dark and

the room was dark and big, an enormous cave o f darkness, and

I felt buried alive in it as if it wasn’t good and then the light

started flickering across things from the screen and the man

put his arm around m y shoulder and I asked him not to touch

me but I was very polite because I thought he was just being a

friendly person because people only touched you if they were

your friends or your relatives and liked you and I wanted to

scream for the usher to come but I was afraid o f making noise

because it w asn’t right to make noise and I didn’t want to do

something w rong and insult the man and he did all those

things, many things but as i f it was one thing with no breaks or

stops in it because he ju st curled and curved and slid all over

with his arms everywhere and his mouth all over and his hands

everywhere and keeping me in the seat without stopping, and

he kept whispering and he hurt me and I didn’t know what to

do except that grow n-ups don’t cry or make noise and he

pushed his hands in me and I didn’t know what to do, except

he was hurting me, and he slumped more over me and in m y

chest and kept pressing me and then he slumped again and

shaked and stopped pressing so hard and I pulled m yself aw ay

from him grabbing on me and I ran and I ran all the w ay up the

aisle in the dark and I found the usher w ho was all the w ay in

the back and I said the man was bothering me but I was afraid

to say what he did and the usher didn’t say anything or do

anything so I asked if I could sit somewhere else please and

could he keep the man from bothering me please because I

knew you weren’t supposed to talk in the movies and the usher

could make you stop and he just stared at me and he took me

somewhere else with his flashlight and I sat there making my

shirt right and my pants right but I couldn’t make them right

and wiping my hand dry and I sat there looking all around in

the dark and there wasn’t enough light from the movie for me

to see where the man was and I couldn’t look at the movie

because I kept looking for the man but I was afraid that if he

saw me looking for him he would think I was wanting him to

come and I kept trying to see where he was in the dark and i f he

was going to try to talk to me more and the movie kept going

on but I was afraid to watch it because maybe the man would

come and I knew I couldn’t find my mother because it wasn’t

time to meet her yet and I had to stay in the movies or I didn’t

have anywhere to go and then the man came and I was going

to scream or hit him or shout but I was afraid to because I was

never allowed to hit adults, no such thing could ever happen,

and he looked at me and he stared and he walked by and down

the aisle and I was afraid he would come back and I got up and I

ran, I ran out, I ran into the street, into the cars, into the hot air,

into the light, it was like running into a wall o f heat and I

couldn’t breathe, and I ran to the department store and once

when I was a little child I had gotten lost in a department store

and I was lost from m y mother a long time and someone took

me to the manager because I was crying and lost and scared

and they announced over the loudspeaker for m y mother to

come find me and she came and this was the first time I was

ever so scared since then but I w ouldn’t cry or make noise

because I didn’t want the man to find me so I kept running and

saying I needed the manager and I needed m y mother and it

was an emergency but I kept as quiet as I could and I couldn’t

breathe so they called her on the loudspeaker and then when

she came I shook and cried and I tried to tell her and she said,

did anything happen, and I kept saying yes and I kept trying to

say each thing that happened and then we were on the bus and I

kept crying but I w asn’t supposed to talk because people could

hear and it was something bad, and then we got home and I

said how I didn’t want the man to sit next to me and I didn’t

know how to tell him to go away because he was an adult and I

didn’t mean to do something w rong but I didn’t know how to

tell the man not to rub because I didn’t even know what it was

or if it was a mistake because maybe he was making a mistake

because it was dark and maybe he thought I was someone else

that he knew or it was some other mistake and when I told him

he didn’t listen to me and he rubbed me and I didn’t want him

to, I wanted him to go away, and I tried to be polite and act like

an adult and not make noise in public and I didn’t cry like a

child and he had a dark jacket on and they asked me if it was

leather but I didn’t know what leather was and they asked me

what it felt like but I didn’t know how to say and he had on a

striped shirt and he had on dark pants and he had dark hair and

he didn’t sit straight even when he first sat down and he had

bad posture because he couldn’t sit straight and he smoked and

he asked me i f I wanted to smoke, and I did but I didn’t say that

to m y mother because I just looked ahead o f me and said no

even though I wanted to and so I was good and I didn’t have to

say I wanted to, and then he slumped all over me and held me

still with his arm around m y shoulder and his head pinned

under m y head so I couldn’t m ove aw ay and I couldn’t

describe him enough for them but I could still see him; and m y

mother cried; and now I can see him, almost, I can’t remember

yesterday as well, even now he’s right next to me, almost, on

me, almost, the pressure o f his body covering m y heart,

almost, I can touch him, nearly, I could search the earth for

him and find him, I think, or if he sat down next to me I w ould

die, except I can’t quite see his face, nearly but not enough, not

quite, and I can feel his fingers going in, almost, if I touch my

face his fingers are more real, and it hurts, the bruised, scraped

labial skin, the pushed, twisted skin; and my daddy came into

my room after I couldn’t cry anymore and said nothing

happened and not to cry anymore and we wouldn’t talk about

it anymore; and I waited to be pregnant and tried to think i f I

would die. I could have the baby standing up and I wouldn’t

make any noise. M y room is small but I can hide behind the

door.

T W O

In 1961 and 1962

(Age 14, 15, 16)

M y name is Andrea. It means manhood or courage. In Europe

only boys are named it. I live in the U . S . A. I was bom down

the street from Walt W hitman’s house, on M ickle Street in

Camden in 1946, after the war, after the bomb. I was the first

generation after the bomb. I’ve always known I would die.

Other generations didn’t think so. Everyone says I’m sad but

I’m not sad. It doesn’t make me sad. The houses were brick,

the brick was made o f blood and straw, there was dust and dirt

on the sidewalks, the sidewalks were gray, the cement was

cracked, it was dark, always dark, thick dark you could reach

out and touch and it came down all around you and you could

feel it weighing on you and bumping up against you and

ramming you from behind. Y o u m oved against the dark or

under it or it pushed you from behind. The dark was

everything. Y o u had to learn to read it with your fingers or

you would be lost; might die. The cement was next, a great

gray desert. Y ou were on it, stuck and abandoned, a great gray

plain going on forever. They made you fall on your knees on

the cement and stay there so the dark could come and get you.

The dark pushed you, the cement was the bed, you fell on

your knees, the dark took you, the cement cradled you, a

harsh, angry embrace tearing the skin o ff your knees and

hands. Some places there is a great, unbearable wind, and the

fragile human breaks in it, bends in it, falls. Here there was this

dark; like the great, unbearable wind but perfectly still, quiet,

thick; it pushed without moving. Them in the dark, the

cement was the bed, a cold slat o f death, a grave with no rest,

the best bed you could get, the best bed you would ever have,

you fell forward on your knees pushed by the dark from

behind and the dark banged into you or sometimes there were

boys in cars flying by in the dark and then coming around

from behind, later, the same ones; or sometimes different

ones. The dark was some army o f them, some mass, a creature

from the deep, the blob, a giant parasite, some spreading

monster, pods, wolfmen. They called you names and they

hissed, hot steam o ff their tongues. They followed you in

beat-up cars or they just stood around and they whistled and

made noises, and the dark pushed you down and banged into

you and you were on your hands and knees, the skin torn off,

not praying, waiting, wanting all right, wanting for the dark

to move o ff you, pick itself up and run. The dark was hissing

and hot and hard with a jagged bone, a cold, brutal bone, and

hips packed tight. The dark wasn’t just at night. The dark was

any time, any place; you open your eyes and the dark is there,

right up against you, pressing. You can’t see anything and you

don’t know any names, not who they are or the names for

what they do; the dark is all you know, familiar, old, from

long ago, is it Nino or Joe or Ken or Curt, curly hair or

straight, hard hips, tight, driven, familiar with strange words

whispered in your ear, like wind lashing it. Do they see you,

do they know your name? I’m Andrea you whisper in the dark

and the dark whispers back, okay babe; shut up babe; that’s

cool babe; that’s a pretty name babe; and pulls out all the w ay

and drives back in, harder, more. Nino is rough and bad, him

and his friend, and he says what’s w rong with making love

here, right now, on this lunch counter. We are in Lits. I’m

alone, a grown-up teenage girl; at the lunch counter, myself.

They come up to me. I don’t know the name o f the other one. I

have never heard anyone say “ making love” before. Nino

takes the salt shaker and the pepper shaker from the counter

and he rubs them against each other, slow , and he talks staring

at me so I can’t m ove m y head aw ay from his eyes and he says

w hat’s w rong with it, here, now , in the daytime, on this lunch

counter, you and me, now, and I don’t know w hat’s w rong

with it; is N ino one o f them, in the dark? Stuart is m y age from

school before he stopped coming and went bad and started

running with gangs and he warned me to stay aw ay from him

and Nino who is older and bad and where they go. N ino has a

knife. I write m y first poem for Nino; I want it to be N ino; I’d

touch him back. I ran away lots o f times. I was on the bus to

N ew Y o rk lots o f times. I necked with old men I found on the

bus lots o f times. I necked with Vincent and Charles different

times, adults, Vincent had gray hair and a thick foreign accent,

Italian, and Charles had a hard, bronze face and an accent you

could barely hear from someplace far, far away, and they liked

fifteen-year-old girls; and they whispered deep, horsey,

choked words and had wet mouths; and you crunched down

in the seats and they kissed you all over, then with their hands

they took your head and forced it into their laps. One became a

famous m ovie star and I went to watch him in cow boy films.

He was the baddie but he was real nice to me. I said I wanted to

be a writer, a real writer, a great writer like Rimbaud or

D ostoevsky. He didn’t laugh. He said we were both artists and

it was hard. He said, Andrea, that’s a pretty name. He said

follow your dream, never give up, it takes a long time, years

even, and we slouched down in the seats. I knew the highw ay

to N ew Y o rk and the streets when I got there. I knew the back

alleys in Philadelphia too but I didn’t like Philadelphia. It was

fake, pretend folksingers and pretend guitar players and

pretend drug dealers, all attitude, some pot, nothing hard,

pretend poets, a different attitude, no poems. Y o u couldn’t get

lost in the dark, it w asn’t dense enough, it w asn’t desolate

enough, it was safe really, a playpen, the fake girls went there

to not get hurt, to have regular boyfriends, to pretend they

were different or bad; but I was really lost so I had to be lost,

not pretend, in a dark as hard and unyielding as the cement

under it. In N ew Y ork I got o ff the bus dank from old Charles,

old Vincent, he walked away, wet, rumpled, not •looking

back, and I had some dollars in my hand, and I took the A train

to Greenwich Village, and I went to the Eighth Street

Bookstore, the center o f the universe, the place where real

poets went, the most incredible place on earth, they made

beauty from the dark, the gray, the cement, your head down

in someone’s lap, the torn skin on your bruised knees, your

bloody hands; it wasn’t the raspy, choked, rough whisper, it

was real beautiful words with the perfect shape and sound and

filled with pain and rage and pure, perfect; and I looked

everywhere, at every book, at every poem, at every play, and I

touched every book o f poems, I just touched them, just passed

my hand over them, and I bought any poems I had money for,

sometimes it was just a few pages stapled together with print

on it, and I kept them with me and I could barely breathe, and I

knew names no one else knew, Charles Olsen, Robert

Duncan, Gregory Corso, Anselm Hollo, Leroi Jones,

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Kenneth Patchen, Robert Creeley,

Kenneth Rexroth; and when Allen Ginsberg had new poems I

almost died, Allen Ginsberg who was the most perfect and the

bravest and the best and the words were perfect beauty and

perfect power and perfect pain and I carried them with me and

read them, stunned and truly trembling inside because they

went past all lies to something hidden inside; and I got back on

the bus and I got back to Camden and I had the poems and

someday it would be me. I wrote words out on paper and hid

them because my mother would say they were dirty words; all

the true words were dirty words. I wrote private, secret words

in funny-shaped lines. Y ou could take the dark— the thick,

mean, hard, sad dark— the gray cement, lonely as death, cold

as death, stone cold, the torn skin, you on your knees your

hands bleeding on the cold cement, and you could use words

to say I am— I am, I want, I know , I feel, I see. N in o ’s knife,

cold, on the edge o f m y skin down m y back, the cement

underneath: I want, I know, I feel; then he tears you apart from

behind, inside. Y ou could use words to say what it was and

how it felt, the dark banging into you, pressing up against you,

pinning you down, a suffocating mask over your face or a

granite mountain pressing you under it, you’re a fossil, delicate,

ancient, buried alive and perfectly preserved, some bones

between the mountain and the level ground, pressed flat on the

cement under the dark, the great, still, thick, heavy dark. Y ou

could sing pain soft or you could holler; you could use the

voices o f the dead i f you had to, the other skeletons pressed in

the cement. Y ou could write the words on the cement blind in

the dark, pushed on your knees, a finger dipped in blood; or

pushed flat, the dark on you, the cement under you, N in o ’s

knife touching the edge o f your skin. The poems said: Andrea,

me too, I’m on m y knees, afraid and alone, and I sing; I’m

pushed flat, rammed, torn up, and I sing; I weep, I rage, I sing; I

hurt, I’m sad, I sing; I want, I’m lost, I sing. Y ou learned the

names o f things, the true names, short, abrupt, unkind, and

you learned to sing them, your heart soared from them, the

song o f them, the great, simple music o f them. The dark

stayed dark and hard but now it had a sound in it, a bittersweet

lyric, music carried on the edge o f a broken line. Then m y

m omma found the words I wrote and called me awful names,

foul names, in a screaming voice, in filthy hate, she screamed I

was dirty, she screamed she wanted me o ff the face o f the

earth, she screamed she’d lock me up. I left on the bus to N ew

Y ork . N o one’s locking me up. When the men said the names

they whispered and touched you; and flat on the cement, still

there were no locks, no walls. When the men said the names

they were all tangled in you and their skin was melting into

you the w ay night covers everything, they curved and curled.

There was the edge o f N in o’s knife on your skin, down your

back, with him in you and the cement under you, your skin

scraped away, burned o ff almost, the sweat on you turning as

cold as the edge o f his knife; try to breathe. She screamed

foul hate and spit obscene words and tore up all your things, all

your poems you had bought and the words you had written;

and she said she’d lock you up; no one locks me up. Men

whispered the same names she said and touched you all over,

they were on you, they covered you, they hid you, they were

the weight o f midnight on you, a hundred years o f midnight,

they held you down and kept you still and it was the only

stillness you had and you could hear a heartbeat; men

whispered names and touched you all over. Men wanted you

all the time and never had enough o f you and the cement was a

great, gray plain stretching out forever and you could wander

on it forever, free, with signs that they had been there and

promises they would come back, abrasions, burns, thin,

exquisite cuts; not locked up. Under them, covered, buried,

pinned still— the dark ramming into you— you could hear a

heartbeat. And somewhere there were ones who could sing.

Whisper; touch everywhere; sing.

T H R E E

In January 1965

(Age 18)

M y name is Andrea. It means manhood or courage, from the

ancient Greek. I found this in Paul Tillich, although I like

Martin Buber better because I believe in pure love, I-Thou,

love without boundaries or categories or conditions or

making someone less than you are; not treating people like

they are foreign or lower or things, I-It. Prejudice is I-It and

hate is I-It and treating people like dirt is I-It. In Europe only

boys are named Andrea, Andre, Andreus, but m y mother

didn’t know that and so I got named Andrea because she

thought it was pretty. Philosophy comes from Europe but

poetry comes from America too. I was born down the street

from Walt Whitman’s house, on M ickle Street in Cam den,

N ew Jersey, in 1946, after the bomb. I’m not sad but I wish

everyone didn’t have to die. Everyone will burn in a split

second, even less, they w o n ’t even know it but I bet it will hurt

forever; and then there will be nothing, forever. I can’t stand it

because it could be any second at all, just even this second now

or the next one, but I try not to think about it. I fought it for

a while, when I had hope and when I loved everyone, I-Thou,

not I-It, and I suffered to think they would die. When I was

fourteen I refused to face the wall during a bomb drill. T hey

would ring a bell and we all had to file out o f class, in a line, and

stand four or five deep against a wall in the hall and you had to

put your hands behind your head and your elbows over your

ears and it hurt to keep your arms like that until they decided

the bomb wasn’t coming this time. I thought it was stupid so I

wouldn’t do it. I said I wanted to see it coming if it was going

to kill me. I really did want to see it. O f course no one would

see it coming, it was too fast, but I wanted to see something, I

wanted to know something, I wanted to know that this was it

and I was dying. It would just be a tiny flash o f a second, so

small you couldn’t even imagine it, but I wanted it whatever it

was like. I wanted my whole life to go through m y brain or to

feel m yself dying or whatever it was. I didn’t want to be facing

a wall pretending tomorrow was coming. I said it outraged

m y human dignity to have my elbows over m y ears and be

facing a wall and just waiting like an asshole when I was going

to die; but they didn’t think fourteen-year-olds had any

human dignity and you weren’t allowed to say asshole even

the minute before the bomb came. They punished me or

disciplined me or whatever it is they think they’re doing when

they threaten you all the time. The bomb was coming but I

had to stay after school. I was supposed to be frightened o f

staying after school instead o f the bomb or more than the

bomb. Adults are so awful. Their faces get all pulled and tight

and mean and they want to hit you but the law says they can’t

so they make you miserable for as long as they can and they

call your parents to say you are bad and they try to get your

parents to hit you because it’s legal and to punish you some

more. You ask them why you have to cover your ears with

your elbows and they tell you it is so your ear drums w on ’t get

hurt from the noise. They consult each other in whispers and

this is the answer they come up with. I said I thought m y ear

drums would probably burn with the rest o f me so I got

punished more. I kept waiting to see them wink or smile or

laugh or something even just among themselves even though

it w ouldn’t be nice to show they knew it was crap but they

acted serious like they meant it. They kept telling you that you

were supposed to respect them but you would have had to take

stupid pills. I kept thinking about what it meant that this was

m y life and I was going to die and I thought I could say asshole

i f I wanted and face whatever w ay I wanted and I didn’t

understand w hy I couldn’t take a walk in the fucking spring air

if I wanted but I knew i f I tried they would hurt me by making

me into a juvenile delinquent which was a trick they had if you

did things they didn’t like. I kept reading Buber and tried to

say I-Thou but they were I-It material no matter how hard I

tried. I thought maybe he had never encountered anything like

them where he lived. I kept writing papers for English on

Buber’s philosophy so I could keep in touch with I-Thou even

though I was surrounded by I-It. I tried to reason it out but I

couldn’t. I mean, they were going to die too and all they could

think o f was keeping you in line and stopping you from

whispering and making you stare at a wall. I kept thinking

they were ghosts already, just dead already. Sometimes I

thought that was the answer— adults were dead people in

bodies giving stupid orders. They thought I was fresh but it

was nothing like what I felt inside. Outside I was calm. Inside I

kept screaming in m y brain: are you alive, are you zombies,

the bomb is coming, assholes. Why do we have to stand in

line? W hy aren’t we allowed to talk? Can I kiss Paul S. now?

Before I die; fast; one time? In your last fucking minute on

earth can’t you do one fucking human thing like do something

or say something or believe something or show something or

cry or laugh or teach us how to fight the Goddamn Russians or

anything, anything, and not just make us stand here and be

quiet like assholes? I wanted to scream and in m y brain I

screamed, it was a real voice screaming like something so loud

it could make your head explode but I was too smart to scream

in real life so I asked quietly and intelligently w hy we couldn’t

talk and they said we might miss important instructions. I

mean: important instructions; do you grasp it? I didn’t scream

because I knew there might be a tom orrow but one day there

wouldn’t and I would be as big an asshole as the teachers not to

have screamed, a shithead hypocrite because I didn’t believe

tom orrow was coming, one day it wouldn’t come, but I

would die pretending like them, acting nice, not screaming. I

wanted to scream at them and make them tell me the truth—

would there be a tomorrow or not? When I was a child they

made us hide under our desks, crawl under them on our knees

and keep our heads down and cover our ears with our elbows

and keep our hands clasped behind our heads. I use to pray to

God not to have it hurt when the bomb came. They said it was

practice for when the Russians bombed us so we would live

after it and I was as scared as anyone else and I did what they

said, although I wondered why the Russians hated us so much

and I was thinking there must be a Russian child like me,

scared to die. You can’t help being scared when you are so

little and all the adults say the same thing. Y ou have to believe

them. You had to stay there for a long time and be quiet and

your shoulders would hurt because you had to stay under your

desk which was tiny even compared to how little you were

and you didn’t know what the bomb was yet so you thought

they were telling the truth and the Russians wanted to hurt

you but if you stayed absolutely still and quiet on your knees

and covered your ears underneath your desk the Russians

couldn’t. I wondered if your skin just burned o ff but you

stayed on your knees, dead. Everyone had nightmares but the

adults didn’t care because it kept you obedient and that was

what they wanted; they liked keeping you scared and making

you hide all the time from the bomb under your desk. Adults

told terrible lies, not regular lies; ridiculous, stupid lies that

made you have to hate them. They would say anything to

make you do what they wanted and they would make you

afraid o f anything. N o one ever told so many lies before,

probably. When the Bay o f Pigs came, all the girls at school

talked together in the halls and in the lunchrooms and said the

same thing: we didn’t want to die virgins. N o one said anyone

else was lying because we thought we were all probably going

to die that day and there w asn’t any point in saying someone

wasn’t a virgin and you couldn’t know , really, because boys

talked dirty, and no one said they w eren’t because then you

would be low-life, a dirty girl, and no one would talk to you

again and you would have to die alone and if the bomb didn’t

come you might as well be dead. Girls were on the verge o f

saying it but no one dared. O f course now the adults were

saying everything was fine and no bomb was com ing and

there was no danger; we didn’t have to stand in the halls, not

that day, the one day it was clear atomic death was right there,

in N ew Jersey. But we knew and everyone thought the same

thing and said the same thing and it was the only thought we

had to say how sad we were to die and everyone giggled and

was almost afraid to say it but everyone had been thinking the

same thing all night and wanted to say it in the morning before

we died. It was like a record we were making for ourselves, a

history o f us, how we had lived and been cheated because we

had to die virgins. We said to each other that it’s not fair we

have to die now, today; we didn’t get to do anything. We said

it to each other and everyone knew it was true and then when

we lived and the bomb didn’t come we never said anything

about it again but everyone hurried. We hurried like no one

had ever hurried in the history o f the world. O ur mothers

lived in dream time; no bomb; old age; do it the first time after

marriage, one man or yo u ’ll be cheap; time for them droned

on. B ay o f Pigs meant no more time. They don’t care about

w hy girls do things but we know things and we do things;

w e’re not just animals who don’t mind dying. The houses

where I lived were brick; the streets were cement, gray; and I

used to think about the three pigs and the bad w o lf blow ing

down their houses but not the brick one, how the brick one

was strong and didn’t fall down; and I would try to think i f the

brick ones would fall down when the bomb came. They

looked like blood already; blood-stained walls; blood against

the gray cement; and they were already broken; the bricks

were torn and crumbling as if they were soft clay and the

cement was broken and cracked; and I would watch the houses

and think maybe it was like with the three pigs and the big bad

w o lf couldn’t blow them down, the big bad bomb. I thought

maybe we had a chance but if we lived in some other kind o f

house we wouldn’t have a chance. I tried to think o f the bomb

hitting and the brick turned into blood and dust, red dust

covering the cement, wet with real blood, but the cement

would be dust too, gray dust, red dust on gray dust, just dust

and sky, everything gone, the ground just level everywhere

there was. I could see it in my mind, with me sitting in the

dust, playing with it, but I wouldn’t be there, it would be red

dust on gray dust and nothing else and I wouldn’t even be a

speck. I thought it would be beautiful, real pure, not ugly and

poor like it was now, but so sad, a million years o f nothing,

and tidal waves o f wind would come and kill the quiet o f the

dust, kill it. I went away to N ew Y ork C ity for freedom and it

meant I went away from the red dust, a picture bigger than the

edges o f m y mind, it was a red landscape o f nothing that was in

me and that I put on everything I saw like it was burned on my

eyes, and I always saw Camden that way; in m y inner-mind it

was the landscape o f where I lived. It didn’t matter that I went

to Point Zero. It would just be faster and I hadn’t been hiding

there under the desk afraid. I hate being afraid. I hadn’t grown

up there waiting for it to happen and making pictures o f it in

m y mind seeing the terrible dust, the awful nothing, and I

hadn’t died there during the Bay o f Pigs. The red dust was

Camden. Y ou can’t forgive them when you’re a child and they

make you afraid. So you go away from where you were afraid.

Some stay; some go; it’s a big difference, leaving the

humiliations o f childhood, the morbid fear. We didn’t have

much to say to each other, the ones that left and the ones that

stayed. Children get shamed by fear but you can’t tell the

adults that; they don’t care. They make children into dead

things like they are. If there’s something left alive in you, you

run. Y ou run from the poor little child on her knees; fear

burned the skin o ff all right; she’s still on her knees, dead and

raw and tender. N ew Y o rk ’s nothing, a piece o f cake; you

never get afraid like that again; not ever. I live where I can find

a bed. Men roll on top, fuck, roll off, shoot up, sleep, roll on

top again. In between you sleep. It’s how it is and it’s fine. I

never did feel more at home. It’s as i f I was always there. It’s

familiar. The streets are the same gray, home. Fucking is

nothing really. Hiding from the law and dumb adults is

ordinary life; yo u ’re always hiding from them anyw ay unless

yo u ’re one o f their robots. I hate authority and it’s no jo k e and

it’s no game; I want them dead all right, all the order givers.

N ew Y o r k ’s home because there’s other people the same; we

know each other as much as you have to, not much. The only

other w ay is the slow time o f mothers; facing a wall, staring at

a blank wall, for life, one man, forever, marriage, the living

dead. I don’t want to be like them. I never will be. I’m not

afraid o f dying and I’m not standing quiet at some wall; the

bomb comes at me, I’m going to hurl m yself into it; flashfly

into its fucking face. I’m fine on the streets. I’m not afraid; o f

fucking or anyone; and there’s nothing I’m afraid of. I have

ideals about peace and freedom and it doesn’t matter what the

adults think, because they lie and they’re stupid. I’m sincere

and smarter than them. I believe in universal love. I want to

love everybody even if I don’t know them and not to have

small minds like the adults. I don’t mind if people are strangers

or how they look and no matter how raw som ebody is they’re

human; it’s the plastic ones that aren’t human. I don’t need a

lot, a place to sleep, some money, almost none, cigarettes.

Everyone in this place knows something, jazz or poems or

anarchism or dope or books I never heard o f before, and they

don’t like the bomb. T h ey’ve lived and they don’t hide from

knowing things and sex is the main w ay you live— adults say it

isn’t but they never told the truth yet. N ew Y o rk ’s the whole

world, it’s like living inside a heartbeat, you know, like a

puppy you can put your head up against the ticking when

you’re lonely and when you want to move the beat’s behind

you. I don’t need things. I’m not an American consumer. I’m

on the peace side and I have ideals about freedom and I don’t

want anyone telling me what to do, I’ve had enough o f it, I’m

against war, I go to demonstrations, I’m a pacifist, I have been

since I can remember. I read books and I go to places in N ew

Y ork, churches and bare rooms even, and I hear people read

poems and in m y mind I am with Sartre or Camus or Rimbaud

and I want to show love to everyone and not be confined and

sex is honest, it’s not a lie, and I like to feel things, strong

things. In N ew Y ork there’s people like me everywhere,

hiding where regular people don’t look, in every shadow

there’s the secret people. There are pockets o f dark in the dark

and the people like me are in them, poor, with nothing, not

afraid, I’m never afraid. It’s as if every crack in the sidewalk is

an open door to somewhere; you can go between the cracks to

the hidden world but regular people never even see the cracks.

People the same as you go through the cracks because they’re

not afraid and you meet them there, in the magic places, real

old from other generations even, hidden, some great underground city, dirty, hard, dark, free. There’s always sex and dope and you can get pretty hungry but you can get things if

you have to; there’s always someone. I never doubted it was

home from the start; where I was meant to come. I’m known

and invisible at the same time; fitting in but always going m y

own way, a shy girl alone in a dark corner o f the dark, the

dark’s familiar to me and so are the men in it, no rules can ever

stop night from putting its arms around a lonely girl. I like

doing what I want no matter what it is and I like drifting and I

run i f I have to; someone’s always there, kind or otherwise,

you decide quick. I love the dark, it’s got no rough edges for

me. I hear every sound without trying. I feel as if I was born

knowing every signal. I’m an animal on instinct lucky to be in

the right jungle, a magic animal charged with everything

intense and sacred, and I hate cages. I’m the night, the same.

Y ou have to hurt it to hurt me. I am one half o f everything

lawless the night brings, every lawless embrace. I can smell

where to turn in the dark, it’s not something you can know in

your head. It’s a whisper so quiet not even the dead could hear

it. It’s touching fire so fast you don’t burn your hand but the

fire’s real. I don’t know much, not what things are called or

how to do them right or how people act all the regular times.

Everything is ju st what it is to me with nothing to measure it

against and no w ay to check and I don’t have any tom orrow

and I don’t have a yesterday that I can remember because the

days and nights just go on and on and never stop and never

slow down and never turn regular; nothing makes time

normal. I have nineteen cents, I buy a big purple thing, it’s

with the vegetables, a sign says eggplant, it’s the cheapest

thing there is, I never saw one before, I try to cook it in m y one

pan in a little water, I eat it, you bet I do, it’s an awful thing, I

see w hy momma always used vegetables in cans but they cost

more. I buy rice in big unmarked bags, I think it’s good for

you because Asian people eat it and they have lived for

centuries no matter how poor they are and they have an old

civilization so it must be good but then someone says it has

starch and starch is bad so I stop buying it because the man’s very

disapproving as if I should know better because it makes you fat

he says. I just boil what there is. I buy whatever costs what I have

in m y pocket. I don’t know what people are talking about

sometimes but I stay quiet because I don’t want to appear so

ignorant to them, for instance, there are funny words that I

can’t even try to say because I think they will laugh at me but I

heard them once like zucchini, and if someone makes something and hands it to me I eat it. Sometimes someone asks me if

I like this or that but I don’t know what they mean and I stare

blankly but I smile and I don’t know what they think but I try

to be polite. I worked at the Student Peace Union and the War

Resisters League to stop the bomb and I was a receptionist at a

place that taught reading and I was a waitress at a coffee shop

that poured coffee-to-go and I typed and carried packages and

I went with men and they had smoke or food or music or a

place to sleep. I didn’t get much money and I didn’t keep any

jobs because mostly I lived in pretty bad places or on the streets

or in different places night to night and I guess the regular

people didn’t like it or wanted to stay away but I didn’t care or

think about it and I never thought about being regular or

looking regular or acting regular; I did what I wanted from

what there was and I liked working for peace and the rest was

for cigarettes. I slept in living rooms, on cots, on floors, on

soiled mattresses, in beds with other people I didn’t know who

fucked while I slept, in Brooklyn, in Spanish Harlem, near

Tompkins Square Park, in abandoned buildings, in parks, in

hallways, curled up in corners. Y ou can build your own walls.

Even the peace people had apartments and pretty things and

warm food, it seemed regular and abundant but I don’t know,

I never asked them for anything but sometimes someone took

me home and I could see. I didn’t know where it came from; it

was just like some play with scenery. They had plants or

pretty rugs or wool things or pots; posters; furniture; heat;

food; things around. I tried to live in a collective on Avenue B

and I was supposed to have a bed and we were going to cook

and all but that was where the junkies kept rolling on top o f me

because the collective would never tell anyone they couldn’t

sleep there and I never was there early enough so there wasn’t

someone asleep where I thought was mine. I never did really

sleep very well, it’s sort o f a lie to say I could sleep with junkies

rolling over on top o f me, a little bravado on m y part, except I

fell o ff to sleep, or some state o f less awake, and then it’d

happen. Y ou are always awake a little. I lived in a living room

o f a woman for peace who lived with her brother. He slept in

the living room, she slept in the bedroom, but she put me in

the living room with him. He breathed heavy and stayed up

watching me and I had to move out because she said he

couldn’t sleep. I stayed anywhere I could for as long as I could

but it w asn’t too long usually. I slept on benches and in

doorways. D oorw ays can be like palaces in the cold, in the

dark, when it’s wet; doorways are strong; you feel sheltered,

like in the arms o f God, unless the wind changes and comes

right at you and drives through you; then you wake up already

shivering, sleep pulling you down because you want to believe

you are only dreaming the wind is driving through you, but

you started to shake unconscious and the cold permeates your

body before you can bring your mind to facing it. Y ou can’t

find any place in N ew Y ork that doesn’t have me in it. I’m

stuck in the dark, m y remembrance, a shadow, a shade, an

old, dark scar that keeps tearing, dark edges ripping, dark

blood spilling out, there’s a piece left o f me, faded, pasted onto

every night, the girl who wanted peace. Later I found out it

was Needle Park or Bed-Stuy or there were whores there or it

was some kind o f sociological phenomenon and someone had

made a documentary showing the real shit, some intrepid

filmmaker, some hero. It never happened. N o one ever

showed the real shit because it isn’t photogenic, it doesn’t

stand still, people just live it, they don’t know it or conceptualize it or pose for it or pretend it and you don’t get to do it over i f you make a mistake. Y ou just get nailed. Fucked or hit

or hurt or ripped o ff or poisoned with bad shit or yo u ’re just

dead; there’s no art to it. There’s more o f me stuck in that old

night than anywhere. Y o u don’t just remember it; it remem­

bers you; Andrea, it says, I know you. Y ou do enough in it and

it takes you with it and I’m there in it, every night on every

street. When the dark comes, I come, every night, on every

street, until N ew Y ork is gone; I’m alive there in the dark

rubbing up against anything flesh-and-blood, not a poor,

homeless girl but a brazen girl-for-peace, hungry, tired,

waiting for you, to rub up against you, take what you have,

get what you got; peace, freedom, love, a fuck, a shy smile,

some quarters or dimes or dollars. The dark’s got a little anger

in it m oving right up against you. You can feel it pushing right

up against you now and then, a burning flash across your

thing; that’s me, I’m there, Andrea, a charred hallucination,

you know the w ay the dark melts in front o f you, I’m the

charred thing in the melting dark, the dark fire, dark ash

burned black; and you walk on, agitated, to find a living one,

not a shade stuck in midnight but some poor, trembling, real

girl, hungry enough even to smile at you. That’s m y home

you’re misbehaving in with your mischievous little indulgences, your secret little purchases o f girls and acts, because I was on every street, in every alley, fucked there, slept there,

got drugs there, found a bed for my weary head; oh, it got

weary; curled up under something, a little awake. C an’t be.

N o one can live that way. C an’t be. Isn’t true. C an’t be. Was.

Was. I wasn’t raped really until I was eighteen, pretty old.

Well, I wasn’t really raped. Rape is just some awful word. It’s a

w ay to say it was real bad; worse than anything. I was a pacifist

and I didn’t believe in hurting anyone and I wouldn’t hurt

anyone. I had been eighteen for a couple o f months; o f legal

age. It was winter. Cold. Y ou don’t forget winter. I was

w orking for peace groups and for nonviolence. It wouldn’t be

fair to call it rape; to him; it wouldn’t be fair to him. I wasn’t a

virgin or anything; he forced me but it was m y own fault. I

was working at the Student Peace Union then and at the War

Resisters League. I typed and I answered phones and I tried to

be in the meetings but they didn’t really ever let me talk and I

helped to organize demonstrations by calling people on the

phones and I helped to write leaflets. They didn’t really believe

in rape, I think. I couldn’t ask anyone or tell anyone because

they would just say how I was bourgeois, which was this

word they used all the time. Women were it more than

anybody. They were hip or cool or hipsters or bohemians or

all those words you could see in newspapers on the Low er East

Side but anytime a woman said something she was bourgeois.

I knew what it meant but I didn’t know how to say it w asn’t

right. They believed in nonviolence and so did I, one hundred

percent. I w ouldn’t hurt anybody even if he did rape me but he

probably didn’t. Men were supposed to go crazy and kill

someone if he was a rapist but they wouldn’t hurt him for raping

me because they didn’t believe in hurting anyone and because I

was bourgeois and anything that brought me down lower to the

people was okay and if it hurt me I deserved it because if you

were bourgeois female you were spoiled and had everything and

needed to be fucked more or to begin with. At the Student Peace

Union there were boys m y age but they were treated like grown

men by everyone around there and they bossed me around and

didn’t listen to anything I said except to make fun o f it and no one

treated me as if I knew anything, which maybe I didn’t, but the

boys were pretty ignorant pieces o f shit, I can tell you that. I was

confused by it but I kept working for peace. These boys all called

momma at home; I heard them. I didn’t. There were adults,

some really old, at the War Resisters League but to me they

weren’t anything like the adults from school. They were heroes

to me. They had gone to jail for things they believed in. They

weren’t afraid and they didn’t follow laws and they didn’t act

dead and they had sex and they didn’t lie about it and they didn’t

act like there was all the time in the world because they knew

there wasn’t. They stood up to the government. They weren’t

afraid. One had been a freedom rider in the South and he got

beaten up so many times he was like a punched-out prizefighter.

He could barely talk he had been beaten up so much. I didn’t try

to talk to him or around him because I held him in awe. I thought

I would be awfully proud if I was him but he wasn’t proud at all,

just quiet and shy. Sometimes I wondered if he could remember

anything; but maybe he knew everything and was just humble

and brave. I have chosen to think so. He did things like I did,

typed and put out mailings and put postage on envelopes and ran

errands and got coffee; he didn’t order anyone around. They

were all brave and smart. One wrote poems and lots o f them

wrote articles and edited newsletters and magazines. One wrote

a book I had read in high school, not in class o f course, about

freedom and utopia, but when I asked him to read a poem I

wrote— I asked a secretary who knew him to ask him because I

was too shy— he wouldn’t and the secretary said he hated

women. He had a wife and there was a birthday party for him

one day and his wife brought a birthday cake and he wouldn’t

speak to her. Everyone said he had boys. His wife was

embarrassed and just kept talking, just on and on, and everyone

was embarrassed but no one made him talk to her or thank her

and I stayed on the outside o f the circle that was around him to

think if it was possible that he hated women, even his wife, and

w hy he would be mean to her as if she didn’t exist. Y o u ’d thank

anyone for a birthday cake. From his book I thought he was

wise. I thought he loved everyone. And if he hated women and

everyone knew it how come they were so nice to him because

hate wasn’t nonviolence. When he died a few years later I felt

relieved. I wondered if his wife was sad or if she felt relieved. I

suppose she was sad but why? I thought he was this one hateful

man but the others were the great I-Thous, the real I-Thous;

fighting militarism; wanting peace; writing; I wanted to be the

same. The I-Its were the regular people on the streets dressed in

suits all the same like robots busy going to business and women

with lacquered hair in outfits. But when the boys who wanted to

be conscientious objectors came in for help there were always

a lot o f jokes about rape. I didn’t see how you could make

jokes about rape i f you were against violence; maybe rape

barely existed at all but it was pretty awful. The pacifists and

w ar resisters would counsel the conscientious objectors about

what to say to the draft boards. Vietnam was pulling all these

boys to be killers. The draft board always asked what the c. o. ’s

would do i f their mother was raped or their girlfriend or their

sister and it was a big joke. The pacifists and the c. o . ’s would

say things like they would let her have a good time. I don’t

remember all the things they said but they would laugh and

jo k e about it; it always made me sort o f sick but if I tried to say

something they w ouldn’t listen and I didn’t know what to say

anyway. Eventually the pacifists would tell the c. o. ’s the right

w ay to answer the question. It was a lofty answer about never

using violence under any circumstance however tragic or

painful but it was a lie because none o f them ever thought it

was anything to have their girlfriend raped or their mother.

They always thought it was funny and they always laughed; so

it wasn’t violence because they never laughed at violence. So

I’m not sure i f rape even really existed because these pacifists

really cared about violence and they never would turn their

backs on violence. They cared about social justice. They cared

about peace. They cared about racism. They cared about

poverty. They cared about everything bad that happened to

people. It was confusing that they didn’t care about rape, or

thought it was a joke, but then I wasn’t so sure what rape was

exactly. I knew it was horrible. I always had a picture in my

mind o f a woman with her clothes torn, near dead, on the floor,

unable to move because she was beaten up so bad and hurt so

much, especially between her legs. I always thought the Nazis

had done it. The draft board always asked about the Nazis:

would you have fought against the Nazis, suppose the Nazis

tried to rape your sister. They would rehearse how to answer the

draft board and then, when it came to the rape part, they always

laughed and madejokes. I would be typing because I never got

to talk or they would act irritated if I did or they would just

keep talking to each other anyway over me and I felt upset and

I would interrupt and say, well, I mean, rape is. . . . but I

could never finish the sentence, and if I’d managed to get their

attention, sometimes by nearly crying, they’d all just stare and

I’d go blank. It was a terrifying thing and you would be so

hurt; how could they laugh? And you wouldn’t want a Nazi to

come anywhere near you, it would just be foul. The Nazis, I

would say, trying to find a way to say— bad, very bad. Rape is

very bad, I wanted to say, but I could only say Nazis are very

bad. What’s bad about fucking my sister, someone would say;

always; every time. Then they’d all laugh. So I wasn’t even

sure if there was rape. So I don’t think I could have been raped

even though I think I was raped but I know I wasn’t because it

barely existed or it didn’t exist at all and if it did it was only

with Nazis; it had to be as bad as Nazis. I didn’t want the man

to be fucking me but, I mean, that doesn’t really matter; it’s

just that I really tried to stop him, I really tried not to have him

near me, I really didn’t want him to and he really hurt me so

much so I thought maybe it was rape because he hurt me so

bad and I didn’t want to so much but I guess it wasn’t or it

doesn’t matter. I had this boyfriend named Arthur, a sweet

man. He was older; he had dignity. He wasn’t soft, he knew

the streets; but he didn’t need to show anything or prove

anything. He just lived as far as I could see. He was a waiter in a

bar deep in the Lower East Side, so deep down under a dark

sky, wretched to get there but okay inside. I was sleeping on a

floor near there, in the collective. Someone told me you could

get real cheap chicken at the bar. I would go there every night

for m y one meal, fried chicken in a basket with hot thick

french fried potatoes and ketchup for ninety-nine cents and it

was real good, real chicken, not rat meat, cooked good. He

brought me a beer but I had to tell him to take it back because J

didn’t have the money for it but he was buying it for me. Then

I went with him one night. The bar was filled and noisy and

had sawdust on the floors and barrels o f peanuts so you could

eat them without money and there were low life and artists

there. He smiled and seemed happy and also had a sadness, in

his eyes, on the edges o f his mouth. He lived in a small

apartment with two other men, one a painter, Eldridge, the

other I never met. It was tiny, up five flights on Avenue D,

with a couple o f rooms I never saw. Y ou walked in through a

tiny kitchen, all cracked wood with holes in the floor, an

ancient stove and an old refrigerator that looked like a bank

vault, round and heavy and metal, with almost no room

inside. His bed was a single bed in a kind o f living room but

not quite. There were paintings by the artist in the room. The

artist was sinewy and had a limp and was bitter, not sad, with a

mean edge to anything he said. He had to leave the room so we

could be alone. I could hear him there, listening. I stayed the

night there and I remember how it was to watch the light come

up and have someone running his finger under m y chin and

touching m y hands with his lips. I was afraid to go back to the

bar after that because I didn’t know if he’d want me to but it

was the only place I knew to get a meal for small change.

Every time he was glad to see me and he would ask me what I

wanted and he would bring me dinner and some beer and

another one later and he even gave me a dark beer to try

because I didn’t know about it and I liked it; and I would stay;

and I would go with him. I didn’t talk much because you don’t

talk to men even if they seem nice; you can never know if they

will mind or not but usually they will mind. But he asked me

things. He told me some things, hard things, about his life,

and time in jail, and troubles; and he asked me some things,

easy things, about what I did that day, or what I thought, or i f I

liked something, or how I felt, or if something felt good, or i f I

was happy, or i f l liked him. He was my lover I guess, not

really my boyfriend, because I never knew i f l should go to the

bar or not but I would and then w e’d make love and when we

made love he was a sweet man with kisses and soft talk into

sunrise and he’d hold me after and he’d touch me. Sometimes

he took me to visit people, his friends, and I was too shy to say

anything but I thought it might mean he liked me or trusted

me or had some pride in me or felt right about me and they

asked me things too and tried to talk with me. Eldridge would

come into the bar and get drinks and say something but always

something cutting or mean so I didn’t-know what to say or do

because I didn’t know i f l was supposed to be his friend or not;

only that Arthur said he loved him. I would ask him about his

paintings but he would look away. I went to the bar for a long

time, maybe three months, and I went with Arthur to where

he slept in the bed in the living room; and w e’d kiss, face to

face, and the light would come up. I learned to love dawn and

the long, slow coming o f the light. One night I went to the bar

and Arthur wasn’t nice anymore. He brought dinner to me

and he brought beer but he wouldn’t look at me or talk to me

and his face was different, with deep anger or pain or I didn’t

know what because I don’t know how to know what people

feel or think. A lot o f time went by and then I thought I should

go away and not come back but he sat down, it was a Saturday

night, early in the night because he usually worked Saturdays

until four a. m. but now it was only ten at night and it was

busy, very busy, so it wasn’t easy for him to sit down; and he

said his sister, an older sister, Caroline, was in the hospital,

and she had brought him up, and she had cancer, and she had

had cancer for a long time but now it seemed she was dying,

now, tonight, and he was hurting so bad, he was in bad grief,

sad and angry and fucked up, and he had to go to the hospital

right now and it was far away up town and it would take most

o f the night and probably she would die tonight; and would I

go to his place, he would take me there to make sure I got there

safe, and would I wait for him there— he knew I might not

want to and it was a lot to ask, but would I? And I said I was

sorry about his sister and I would go there and I would wait for

him. He took me there and he kissed me and he showed me

with courtesy to the little bed where we slept that was all made

up like a sofa in what was sort o f a living room, with the

paintings all around, and he showed me where some books

were, and he thanked me, and I said I would wait, and I was so

sorry. I waited many hours. Sometimes I walked around.

Sometimes I sat. There wasn’t enough light to read really. I

looked at the paintings. Then Eldridge came in and he touched

me on m y face and I pulled aw ay and said no and said I was

waiting for Arthur and his sister was dying o f cancer and he

was at the hospital and she was dying now, dying now, and he

said yes but I’m his friend what’s w rong with me I’m as good

as he is I’m as good; and he limped but he was tall and strong

and angry and he forced me down on the bed and he hit me flat

out with his fist in m y face and I fought him and he raped me

and pushed me and he hit me and he was in me, sitting on top

o f me, upright, m y skirt was up over m y face and he was

punching me; and after I was bleeding on m y lips and down

m y legs and I couldn’t m ove and I could hear Arthur coming

and Eldridge said, I’m his best friend and I’ll tell him you

wanted it, and he said, I’m his best friend and yo u ’ll kill him if

you tell him, and he said, he’ll kill you if you tell him because

he can’t stand any more. I straightened up the bed fast because

I could have been sleeping on it so it didn’t have to be perfect

and I straightened up m y clothes and I tried to get the blood o ff

m y face by rubbing it on m y sleeve and I sat on the edge o f the

bed with m y hands folded, waiting, and the lights were out,

and I didn’t know if Arthur would see anything on m y face,

pain or bruises or cuts, and I didn’t know what Arthur would

believe; and he said his sister had died; and he sat down next to

me and he cried; and I held him; and he asked me if everything

was all right; and I said yes; and he asked me if anything was

wrong and I said no; and he asked me if Eldridge had bothered

me and I said no; and he wanted to make love so we made love

in the dark and the pain o f him in me was like some hot,

pointed branding iron in me, an agony o f pain on pain, and I

asked God to stop the pain, I had forgotten God but I

remembered Him now and I supplicated Him with Arthur in

me asking Him to stop the pain; and the light started coming

up, so slow, and it fell, so slow, on Arthur’s grief-stricken,

tear-stained black face, a face o f aging grace and relentless

dignity, a handsome face with remorse and sorrow in it for

what he had seen and known and done, the remorse and

sorrow that is part o f any decent life, more sorrow, more

trouble than white men had, trouble because o f color and then

the burden o f regular human pain— an older sister, Caroline,

dies; and I turned my face away because I was afraid he would

see bruises or cuts where I was hit or I was afraid he could see I

was raped and I didn’t know how to explain because I had

already lied so it couldn’t be true now later and tears were

coming down my face and he touched the tears and he asked if

I was crying because I loved him and was sad for his sister and I

said yes. He slept then and I went away. I didn’t come back.

There’s this girl I loved but she disappeared a long time ago.

When we were children we played in the rubble in the street, in

the broken cement, on broken glass and with sticks and bricks

and garbage, city garbage, we made up mysteries for ourselves and enacted stories, we made great adventures in

condemned houses, deserted garages, empty, scary warehouses, we broke into cars and churches, we trembled and

held hands, w e’d wrestle and w e’d fight, we were tender and

we were fierce; and then in alleys we would kiss each other a

hundred million times. Arthur was m y lover in m y heart, a

city lover, near to her. It made me lonely, what wasn’t rape; I

disappeared from him and grief washed over me pulling me

near to her. She’d died when someone did something, no one

would say what; but she was wild and strong, a man did

something and she took pills, a beautiful girl all the adults said;

it makes you lonely, what isn’t rape. He slept, and I left; lonely

twice; for both. Y ou can love som ebody once and som ebody,

a little, once. Then it ends and yo u ’re a sad, lonely girl, though

you don’t think about it much. After, the light would come,

slow; he’d be kissing m y hands.

F O U R

In February 1965

(Age 18)

I live in a funny kind o f silence, I have all my life, a kind o f

invisible bubble. On the streets I am quiet and there is quiet all

around and no one gets through, nothing, except for the wind

sometimes bellowing in my head an awful noise o f cold

weeping. I don’t look quiet but I am quiet. People don’t see

much so they don’t see how still I am. I see the people talking,

all the people o f every kind, throwing words at everything,

throwing words at each other, throwing words at time, sitting

over coffee throwing words, peaceful or shouting, smiling or

in pain, throwing words at anything they see, anything that

walks up to them or anything that gets in their w ay or trying

to be friendly throwing words at someone who doesn’t know

them. I don’t have words to throw back. When I feel

something no right words come or no one would know what

they mean. It would be like throwing a ball that could never be

caught. They act like words are cheap and easy as if they can

just be replaced after they are used up and as if they make

things all right. if I am caught in a situation so I have to, I say

something, I say I am shy and I smile, but it’s not true, I am not

shy, I ju st don’t have these great numbers o f dozens o f words,

it’s so blank inside, so empty, no words, no sound at all, a

terrible nothing. I don’t know things. I don’t know where the

people come from when the light starts coming through the

sky. I don’t know where the cars come from, always starting

about an hour after the first trash can is pushed over by boys

running or cats looking for food. T here’s no one to ask if. I

knew how but I can’t think how. The people come out first; in

drips; then great cascades o f them. I don’t know how they got

there, inside, and how they get to stay there. I don’t know

where the cars come from or where the people get all their

coats or where the bus drivers come from in the em pty buses

that cruise the streets before the people come out. I f it’s raining

suddenly people have different clothes to stay dry in but I

don’t know where they got them or where you could go to get

them or how you would get the m oney or how they knew it

was going to rain if you couldn’t see it in the sky or smell it in

the air. I don’t know how anything w orks or how everyone

knows the things they know or w hy they all agree, for

instance, on when to all come out o f the buildings at once in a

swarm , or how they all know what to say and when. They act

like it’s clear and simple and they’re sure. I don’t have words

except for m y name, Andrea, which is the only w ord I have all

the time, which m y mom ma gave me, which I remember even

if I can’t remember anything else because sometimes I forget

everything that happened until now. Andrea is the name I had

since being a child. In school we had to write our names on our

papers so maybe I remember it from that, doing it over and

over day in, day out. And also m y mother whispered it to me

in m y ear when she was loving me when I was little. I

remember it because it was so beautiful when she said it. I

don’t exactly remember it in m y mind, more in m y heart. It

means manhood or courage and it is from Europe and she said

she was damned for naming me it because you become what

you are named for and I w asn’t the right kind o f girl at all but I

think I could never be named anything else because the sounds

o f the w ord are exactly like me in m y heart, a music in a sense

with m y m other’s voice singing it right to m y heart, it’s her

voice that breaks the silence inside me with a sound, a w ord;

m y name. It doesn’t matter w ho says it or in what w ay, I am

comforted, as if it is the whisper o f my mother when I was a

baby and safe up against her in her arms. I was only safe then in

all my life, for a while but everything ends soon. I was born

into her arms with her loving me in Camden, down the street

from where Walt Whitman lived. I liked having him there

because it meant that once it was somewhere; it meant you

could be great; it meant Camden was something; it meant

there was something past the rubble, this great gray man who

wasn’t afraid o f America and so I wasn’t afraid to go anywhere

and I could love anyone, like he said. Camden was broken

streets, broken cement, crushed gray dust, jagged, broken

cement. The houses were broken bricks, red bricks, red,

blood red, I love brick row houses, I love blood red, wine red,

crumbled into sawdust; w e’re dust too, blood red dust. It was

a cement place with broken streets and broken bricks and I

loved the cement and I loved the broken streets and I loved the

broken bricks and I never felt afraid, just alone, not sad, not

afraid. I had to go away from home early to seek freedom

which is a good thing because you don’t want to be a child for

too long. You get strong if you go away from where you are a

child; home; people say it’s home; you get strong but you

don’t have a lot o f words because people use words to talk

about things and if you don’t have things there’s few words

you need. It’s funny how silence goes with having nothing and

how you have nothing to say if you don’t have things and

words don’t mean much anyway because you can’t really use

them for anything if you have nothing. If you go away from

home you live without things. Things never mattered to me

and I never wanted them but sometimes I wanted words. I

read a lot to find words that were the right ones and I loved the

words I read but they weren’t exactly the ones. They were like

them but not them. I just moved along the streets and I took

what was coming and often I didn’t know what to call it. We

were going to die soon, that was for sure, with the bomb

coming, and there weren’t words for that either, even though

people threw words at it. Y ou could say you didn’t want to die

and you didn’t want them to wipe out the earth but w ho could

you say. it to so it would matter? I didn’t like people throwing

words at it when words couldn’t touch it, when you couldn’t

even wrap your mind around it at all. When I thought about

being safe I could hear the word Andrea coming from m y

m other’s lips when I was a baby, her mouth on me because she

loved me and I was in her arms but it ended soon. I played in

the bricks and on the cement; in rubble; in garbage; in alleys;

and I went from Camden to N ew Y o rk and the quiet was all

around me even more as if I was sinking under it sometimes;

and I thought, if your momma isn’t here to say your name

there is nothing to listen to. I f you try to say some words it is

likely people don’t understand them anyway. I don’t think

people in houses understand anything about the w ord cold. I

don’t think they understand the word wet. I don’t think you

could explain cold to them but if you did other words would

push it out o f their minds in a minute. T hat’s what they use

words for, to bury things. People learn long w ords to show

o ff but if you can’t say what cold is so people understand what

use is more syllables? I could never explain anything and I was

em pty inside where the words go but it was an emptiness that

caused vertigo, I fought against it and tried to keep standing

upright. I never knew what to call most things but things I

knew, cold or wet, didn’t mean much. Y o u could say you

were cold and people nodded or smiled. Cold. I tremble with

fear when I hear it. They know what it means on the surface

and how to use it in a sentence but they don’t know what it is,

don’t care, couldn’t remember if you told them. T h e y ’d forget

it in a minute. Cold. O r rape. Y ou could never find out what it

was from one o f them or say it to mean anything or to be

anything. Y o u could never say it so it was true. Y o u could

never say it to someone so they would help you or make

anything better or even help you a little or try to help you. Y ou

could never say it, not so it was anything. People laughed or

said something dirty. Or if you said someone did it you were

just a liar straight out; or it was you, dirty animal, who pulled

them on you to hurt you. Or if you said you were it, raped,

were it, which you never could say, but if you said it, then they

put shame on you and never looked at you again. I think so.

And it was just an awful word anyway, some awful word. I

didn’t know what it meant either or what it was, not really,

not like cold; but it was worse than cold, I knew that. It was

being trapped in night, frozen stuck in it, not the nights people

who live in houses sleep through but the nights people who

live on the streets stay awake through, those nights, the long

nights with every second ticking like a time bomb and your

heart hears it. It was night, the long night, and despair and

being abandoned by all humankind, alone on an empty planet,

colder than cold, alive and frozen in despair, alone on earth

with no one, no words and no one and nothing; cold to frozen

but cursed by being alive and nowhere near dead; stuck frozen

in nowhere; no one with no words; alone in the vagabond’s

night, not the burgher’s; in night, trapped alive in it, in

despair, abandoned, colder than cold, frozen alive, right there,

freeze flash, forever and never let loose; the sun had died so the

night and the cold would never end. God w on ’t let you loose

from it though. Y ou don’t get to die. Instead you have to stay

alive and raped but it doesn’t exist even though God made it to

begin with or it couldn’t happen and He saw it too but He is

gone now that it’s over and you’re left there no matter where

you go or how much time passes even if you get old or how

much you forget even if you burn holes in your brain. Y ou

stay smashed right there like a fly splattered over a screen,

swatted; but it doesn’t exist so you can’t think about it because

it isn’t there and didn’t happen and couldn’t happen and is only

an awful word and isn’t even a word that anyone can say and it

isn’t ever true; so you are splattered up against a night that will

go on forever except nothing happened, it will go on forever

and it isn’t anything in any w ay at all. It don’t matter anyw ay

and I can’t remember things anyw ay, all sorts o f things get

lost, I can’t remember most o f what happened to me from day

to day and I don’t know names for it anyw ay to say or who to

say it to and I live in a silence I carry that’s bigger than m y

shadow or any dark falling over me, it’s a heavy thing on m y

back and over m y head and it pours out over me down to the

ground. Words aren’t so easy anymore or they never were and

it was a lie that they seemed so. Some time ago they seemed

easier and there were more o f them. I’m Andrea but no one

says m y name so that I can hear it anymore. I go to jail against

the Vietnam War; it’s night there too, the long night, the sun is

dead, the time bomb is ticking, your heart hears it; the

vagabond’s night, not the burgher’s. I’m arrested in February.

It is cold. There is a driving wind. It slices you in pieces. It goes

right through you and comes out the other side. It freezes your

bones and your skin is a paper-thin ice, translucent. I am

against the War. I am against war. I find it easier to do things

than to say things. I am losing the w ords I had about peace.

The peace boys have all the words. The peace boys take all the

words and use them; they say them. I can’t think o f ones for

myself. T hey don’t mean what they say; words are trash to

them; it’s hollow, what they say; but the words belong to

them. In January I sat in court and saw Ja y sent aw ay for five

years to a federal prison. He w ouldn’t go to Vietnam. I sat

there and I watched and there was nothing to say. The peace

boys talked words but the words were trash. When the time

came Jay stood there, a hulking six-foot black man and I know

he wanted to cry, and the Feds took him out and he was gone

for five years. The peace boys were white. He was afraid and

the peace boys were exuberant. He didn’t have words; he

could barely say anything when the ju dge gave him his few

seconds to speak after being sentenced or before, I don’t

know, it was all predecided anyway; I think the judge said five

years then invited Ja y to speak and I swear he almost fell down

from the shock and the reality o f it and he mumbled a couple o f

words but there wasn’t anything to say and federal marshals

took him o ff and his mother and sisters were there and they

had tears, not words, and the peace boys had no tears, only

words about the struggle o f the black man against the racist

war in Vietnam, I couldn’t stop crying through the thing

which is w hy I’m not sure just when the judge said five years

and just when Ja y seemed like he was going to double over and

ju st when he was told he could say something and he tried but

couldn’t really. I’ve been organizing with the peace boys since

the beginning o f January, working to organize a demonstration at the United States Mission to the United Nations. We are going to sit in and protest Adlai Stevenson fronting for the

War. The peace boys wanted Ja y to give a speech that they

helped write and it covered all the bases, imperialism, racism,

stinking U . S. government, but it was too awful and too

tragic, and the peace boys went out disappointed that the

speech hadn’t been declaimed but regarding the trial as a

triumph; one more black man in jail for peace. I thought they

should honor him for being brave but I didn’t think they

should be jum ping for jo y ; it was too sad. They weren’t sad.

You just push people around when you organize, get them to

do what’s best for you; and if it hits you what it’s costing them

you will probably die on the spot from it. We have meetings to

work out every detail o f the demonstration. It is a w ay o f

thinking, precise, demanding, you work out every possible

scenario, anticipate every possible problem, you have the

right people at the right place at the right time, you have

everything happen that you want to have happen and nothing

that you don’t; and if something bad happens, you use it. I try

to say things but they just talk over it. if I try to say words to

them about what we are doing they don’t hear the words. I

think I am saying words but I must be mute, m y mouth makes

shapes but it must be that nothing comes out. So I stop saying

things. I listen and put stamps on envelopes. I listen and run off

addresses for envelopes on the mimeograph machine. I listen

and make phone calls to people to get them to come to the

demonstrations. I have long lists and I make the calls for hours

at a time but if I talk too long or say too much someone makes

a sarcastic remark or if I talk too much about the War as if I am

talking about politics someone tells me I am not w orking hard

enough. I listen and type letters. The peace boys scribble out

letters and I type them. I listen and learn how to make the

plans, how to organize; I take it in in a serious w ay, for later

perhaps; I like strategy. I learn how to get people to come and

exactly what to do when and what is important and how to

take care o f people and keep them safe— or expose them to

danger i f that is our plan, which they never know . I learn how

to make plans for every contingency— i f the police do this or

that, i f people going by get violent, i f the folks demonstrating

get hurt, i f the demonstrators decide to get arrested, what to

do when the police arrest you, the laws the police have to

follow , how to make your body go limp in resisting arrest,

how to get lawyers to be ready, how to get the press there,

how to rouse people and how to quiet them down. I listen so

that I learn how to think a certain w ay and answer certain hard

questions, very specific questions, about what w ill happen in

scenario after scenario; but I am not allowed to say anything

about what to do or how to do it or ask questions or the w ords

I do say ju st disappear in the air or in m y throat. The old men

really are the ones. T hey say how to do it. T hey do all the

thinking. T hey make all the plans. They think everything

through. I listen to them and I remember everything. I am

learning how to listen too, concentrate, think it hard as if

writing it down in your mind. It is not easy to listen. The peace

boys talk and never listen. The old men do it all for them, then

they swagger and take all the credit while the old men are

happy to fade to the background so the movement looks virile

and young. The peace boys talk, smoke, rant, make their

jokes, strum guitars, run their silky white hands through their

stringy long hair. They spread their legs when they talk, they

spread out, their legs open up and they spread them wide and

their sentences spread all over and their words come and come

and their gestures get bigger and they got half erect cocks all

the time when they talk, the denim o f their dirty jeans is pulled

tight across their cocks because o f how they spread their legs

and they always finger themselves just lightly when they talk

so they are always excited by what they have to say. Somehow

they are always half reclining, on chairs, on desks, on tables,

against walls or stacks o f boxes, legs spread out so they can

talk, touching themselves with the tips o f their fingers or the

palms o f their spread hands, giggling, smoking, they think

they are Che. I live in half a dozen different places: in the

collective on Avenue B on the floor, I don’t fight for the bed

anymore; in a living room in Brooklyn with a brother and a

sister, the brother sleeps in the same room and stares and

breathes heavy and I barely dare to breathe, they are pacifists

and leave the door to their ground floor apartment open all the

time out o f love for their fellow man but a mongrel bulldog-

terrier will kill anyone who comes through, this is the

Brooklyn o f elevated subways where you walk down dark,

steep flights o f stairs to streets o f knives and broken bottles, an

open door is a merciless act o f love; in an apartment in Spanish

Harlem, big, old, a beautiful labyrinth, with three men but I

only sleep with two, one’s a sailor and he likes anal intercourse

and when he isn’t there I get the single bed in his room to myself,

some nights I am in one bed half the night, then in the other bed;

some nights between places I stay with different men I don’t

know, or sometimes a woman, not a peace woman but

someone from the streets who has a hole in the wall to-

disappear into, someone hard and tough and she seen it all and

she’s got a mattress covered with old garbage, paper garbage,

nothing filthy, and old newspapers, and I lay under her, a

pretty girl up against her dry skin and bones that feel like

they’re broke, her callouses, her scars, bad teeth but her eyes

are brilliant, savage and brilliant, and her sex is ferocious and

rough, a little mean, I find such a woman, older than me and

I’m the ingenue and I’m the tough girl with the future; some

nights between places I stay in a hallway in a building with an

open door; some nights between places I am up all night in

bars with nowhere to sleep and no one I am ready to go with,

something warns me o ff or I just don’t want to, and at two or

four when the bars close I find a doorw ay and wait or walk and

wait, it’s cold, a lethal cold, so usually I walk, a slow,

purposeful walk with m y shoulders hunched over so no one

will see I’m young and have nowhere to go. T he jail was dirty,

dark, foul. I wasn’t allowed to make the plans or write the

leaflets or draft the letters or decide anything but they let me

picket because they needed numbers and it was just being a

foot soldier and they let me sit in because it was bodies and

they let me get arrested because it was numbers for the press;

but once we were arrested the wom en disappeared inside the

prison, we were swallowed up in it, it w asn’t as if anyone was

missing to them. T hey were all over the men, to get them out,

to keep track o f them, to make sure they were okay, the heroes

o f the revolution incarnate had to be taken care of. The real

men were going to real jail in a real historical struggle; it was

real revolution. The nothing ones walked o ff a cliff and melted

into thin air. I didn’t mind being used but I didn’t expect to

disappear into a darkness resembling hell by any measure; left

there to rot by m y brothers; the heroes o f the revolution. T hey

got the men out; they left us in. Rape, they said. We had to get

them out as a priority; rape, they said. In jail men get raped,

they said N o jokes, no laughs, no Nazis; rape; we can’t have

the heroes o f the revolution raped. And them that’s raped ain’t

heroes o f the revolution; but there were no words for that. The

women had honor. We stood up to the police. We didn’t post

bail. We went on a hunger strike. We didn’t cooperate on any

level, at any time. The pacifists just cut us loose so we could go

under, no air from the surface, no lawyers, no word, no

solace, no counsel, no help; but we didn’t give in. We didn’t

shake and we didn’t scream and we didn’t try to die, banging

our heads against concrete walls until they were smashed. We

were locked in a special hell for girls; girls you could do

anything to; girls who were exiled into a night so long and

lonely it might last forever, a hell they made for those who

don’t exist. “ Ladies, ” they kept calling us; “ ladies. ” “ Ladies, ”

do this; “ ladies, ” do that; “ ladies, ” come here; “ ladies, ” go

there. We had been in the cold all day. We picketed from real

early, maybe eight in the morning, all through the afternoon,

and it was almost five in the evening before Adlai Stevenson

came. About three or four we blocked the doors by sitting

down so then we couldn’t even keep warm by walking

around. We sat there waiting for the police to arrest us but they

wouldn’t; they knew the cold was bad. Finally they said they’d

arrest us i f we blocked a side door, the one final door that

provided access to the building. Then we saw Adlai Stevenson

go in and we got mad because he didn’t give a fuck about us

and then we blocked the final door and then the police arrested

us; some people went limp and their bodies were dragged over

cement to the police vans and some people got up and walked

and you could hear the bones o f the people who were dragged

cracking on the cement and you wondered if their bones had

split down the middle. Then we went to the precinct and the

police made out reports. Then the men were taken to the city

jail for men, the Tom bs, a place o f brutality, pestilence, and

rape they said; rape; and we went to the w om en’s jail; no one

said rape. It was w ay late after midnight when we got there.

We got out o f the van in a closed courtyard and it was cold and

dark and we walked through a door into hell, some nightmare

some monster dreamed up. Hell was a building with a door

and you walked through the door. But the men got out the

next day on their own recognizance because the pacifists

hurried to get them lawyers and hearings, spent the whole day

w orking on it, a Friday, dawn to dusk, and the wom en didn’t

get out because the pacifists didn’t have time; they had to get

the heroes o f the revolution out before someone started

sticking things up them. They just left us. Then it was a

weekend and a national holiday and the jail w asn’t doing any

nasty business like letting people who don’t exist and don’t

matter loose; we were nothing to them and they left us to rot

or be hurt, because it was a torture place and they knew it but

they didn’t tell us; and they left us; the wom en who didn’t exist

got to stay solidly in hell; and no one said rape; in jail they kept

sticking things up us all the time but no one said rape, there is

no such w ord with any meaning that I have ever heard applied

when someone spreads a girl’s legs and sticks something in

anywhere up her; no one minds including pacifists. One

woman had been a call girl, though we didn’t know it then,

and she was dressed real fine so the women in the jail spit on

her. One woman was a student and some inmates held her

down and some climbed on top o f her and some put their

hands up her and later the newspapers said it was rape because

lesbians did it so it was rape if lesbians piled on top o f you and

lesbians was the bad word, not rape, it was bad because

lesbians did it, like Nazis, and it wasn’t anything like I knew,

being around girls and how we were. Later the newspapers

said this w om en’s jail was known as a hellhole torture place

and there’s a long history o f wom en beat up and burned and

assaulted for decades but the pacifists let us stay there; didn’t

bother them. There was a woman killed there by torture.

There were women hurt each and every day and the newspapers couldn’t think o f enough bad names to say how evil the

place was and how full o f cruelty and it was known; but the

pacifists let us stay there; didn’t bother them; because if you

get tortured they don’t hear the screams any more than if you

talk in a meeting; you could be pulled into pieces in front o f

them and they’d go on as if you wasn’t there; and you weren’t

there, not for them, truly you were nothing so they weren’t

w orrying about you when you were well-hidden somewhere

designed to hide you; and they weren’t all overwrought just

because someone might stick something up you or bring you

pain; and if you got a hole to stick it up then there’s no problem

for them if someone’s sticking something up it, or how many

times, or if it’s very bad. I don’t know what to call what they

did to me but I never said it was rape, I never did, and no one

did; ever. T w o doctors, these men, gave me an internal

examination as they called it which I had never heard o f before

or seen and they used a steel speculum which I had never seen

before and I didn’t know what it was or why they were putting

it up me and they tore me apart inside so I couldn’t stop

bleeding; but it wasn’t rape because it wasn’t a penis and it was

doctors and there is no rape and they weren’t Nazis, or lesbians

even, and maybe it was a lie because it’s always a lie or if it did

happen was I a virgin because if I wasn’t a virgin it didn’t

matter what they did to me because if something’s been stuck

up you once it makes you dirty and it doesn’t matter if you tear

someone apart inside. I didn’t think it was rape, I never did, I

didn’t know what they did or w hy they did it except I knew

how much it hurt and how afraid I was when I didn’t stop

bleeding and I wouldn’t have ever said rape, not ever; and I

didn’t, not ever. The peace boys told me I was bourgeois; like I

was too spoiled to take it. The pacifists thought if it was bad

for the prison in the newspapers it was good. But even after

the pacifists didn’t say, see, these girls hate the War. Even

these silly girls hate the War. Even the girl w h o ’s stupid

enough to type our letters and bring us coffee hates the War.

Even these dumb girls who walked through a door into hell

hate the War. Even these silly cunts we left in a torture pit

know ing full well they’d be hurt but so what hate the War.

They are too stupid to hate us but they hate the War. So stop

the War because these dregs, these nothings, these no ones,

these pieces we sent in to be felt up and torn up and have things

stuck in them hate the War. The peace boys laughed at me

when they found out I was hurt. It was funny, how some

bourgeois cunt couldn’t take it. They laughed and they spread

their legs and they fingered themselves. I w asn’t the one who

told them. I never told them. I couldn’t speak anym ore at all; I

was dumb or mute or however you say it, I didn’t have words

and I w ouldn’t say anything for any reason to anyone because I

was too hurt and too alone. I got out o f jail after four days and I

walked on the streets for some days and I said nothing to no

one until this nonviolence woman found me and made me say

what happened. She was a tough cookie in her ow n w ay which

was only half a pose. She cornered me and she w ouldn’t let me

go until I said what happened. Some words came out and then

all the ones I had but I didn’t know how to say things, like

speculum which I had never seen, so I tried to say what

happened thing by thing, describing because I didn’t know

what to call things, sometimes even with m y hands showing

her what I meant, and when it was over she seemed to

understand. The call girl got a jail sentence because the ju dge

said she had a history o f prostitution. The pacifists didn’t say

how she was noble to stand up against the War; or how she

was reformed or any other bullshit; they just all shivered and

shook when they found out she had been a call girl; and they

ju st let her go, quiet, back into hell; thirty days in hell for

trying to stop a nasty war; and the pacifists didn’t want to

claim her after that; and they didn’t help her after that; and they

didn’t want her in demonstrations after that. They let me drift,

a mute, in the streets, just a bourgeois piece o f shit who

couldn’t take it; except for the peace woman. She seemed to

understand everything and she seemed to believe me even

though I had never heard o f any such thing happening before

and it didn’t seem possible to me that it had happened at all.

She said it was very terrible to have such a thing happen. I had

to try to say each thing or show it with m y hands because I

couldn’t sum up anything or say anything in general or refer to

any common knowledge and I didn’t know what things were

or if they were important and I didn’t know if it was all right

that they did it to me or not because they did it to everyone

there, who were mostly whores except for one woman who

murdered her husband, and they were police and doctors and

so I thought maybe they were allowed to even though I

couldn’t stop bleeding but I was afraid to tell anyone, even

myself, and to m yself I kept saying I had m y period, even after

fifteen days. She called a newspaper reporter who said so

what? The newspaper reporter said it happens all the time

there that women are hurt just so bad or worse and remember

the woman who was tortured to death and so what was so

special about this? But the woman said the reporter was wrong

and it mattered so at first I started to suffocate because the

reporter said it didn’t matter but then I could breathe again

because the woman said it mattered and it couldn’t be erased

and you couldn’t say it was nothing. So I went from this

woman after this because I couldn’t just stay there with her and

she assumed everyone had some place to go because that’s

how life is it seems in the main and I went to the peace office

and instead o f typing letters for the peace boys I wrote to

newspapers saying I had been hurt and it was bad and not all

right and because I didn’t know sophisticated words I used the

words I knew and they were very shocked to death; and the

peace boys were in the office and I refused to type a letter for

one o f them because I was doing this and he read m y letter out

loud to everyone in the room over m y shoulder and they all

laughed at me, and I had spelled America with a “ k ” because I

knew I was in K afka’s world, not Jefferson ’s, and I knew

Am erika was the real country I lived in, and they laughed that I

couldn’t spell it right. The peace wom an fed me sometimes

and let me sleep there sometimes and she talked to me so I

learned some words I could use with her but I didn’t tell her

most things because I didn’t know how and she had an

apartment and w asn’t conversant with how things were for

me and I didn’t want to say but also I couldn’t and also there

was no reason to try, because it is as it is. I’m me, not her in her

apartment. Y ou always have your regular life. She’d say she

could see I was tired and did I want to sleep and I’d say no and

she’d insist and I never understood how she could tell but I was

so tired. I had a room I always stayed in. It was small but it was

warm and there were blankets and there was a door that closed

and she’d be there and she didn’t let anyone come in after me.

M aybe she would have let me stay there more if I had known

how to say some true things about day to day but I didn’t ask

anything from anyone and I never would because I couldn’t

even be sure they would understand, even her. And what I

told her when she made me talk to her was how once you went

to jail they started sticking things up you. T hey kept putting

their fingers and big parts o f their whole hand up you, up your

vagina and up your rectum; they searched you inside and

stayed inside you and kept touching you inside and they

searched inside your mouth with their fingers and inside your

ears and nose and they made you squat in front o f the guards to

see i f anything fell out o f you and stand under a cold shower

and make different poses and stances to see if anything fell out

o f you and then they had someone w ho they said was a nurse

put her hands up you again and search your vagina again and

search your rectum again and I asked her w hy do you do this,

why, you don’t have to do this, and she said she was looking

for heroin, and then the next day they took me to the doctors

and there were two o f them and one kept pressing me all over

down on my stomach and under where m y stomach is and all

down near between my legs and he kept hurting me and

asking me if I hurt and I said yes and every time I said yes he did

it harder and I thought he was trying to find out if I was sick

because he was a doctor and I was in so much pain I must be

very sick like having an appendicitis all over down there but

then I stopped saying anything because I saw he liked pressing

harder and making it hurt more and so I didn’t answer him but

I had some tears in m y eyes because he kept pressing anyway

but I wouldn’t let him see them as best as it was possible to turn

m y head from where he could see and they made jokes, the

doctors, about having sex and having girls and then the big

one who had been watching and laughing took the speculum

which I didn’t know what it was because I had never seen one

or had anyone do these awful things to me and it was a big,

cold, metal thing and he put it in me and he kept twisting it and

turning it and he kept tearing me to pieces which is literal

because I was ripped up inside and the inside o f me was bruised

like fists had beaten me all over but from within me or

someone had taken my uterus and turned it inside out and hit it

and cut it and then I was taken back to m y cell and I got on m y

knees and I tried to cry and I tried to pray and I couldn’t cry and

I couldn’t pray. I was in G od ’s world, His world that He made

H im self on purpose, on my knees, blood coming down m y

legs; and I hated Him; and there were no tears in me to come as

if I was one o f G o d ’s children all filled with sorrow and

mourning in a world with His mercy. M y father came to get

me weeks later when the bleeding wouldn’t stop. I had called

and begged and he came at night though I had shamed them

and he wouldn’t look at me or speak to me. I was afraid to tell

the woman about the blood. At first when she made me talk I

said I had m y period but when the bleeding didn’t stop I didn’t

tell her because a peace boy said I had a disease from sex and I

was bleeding because o f that and he didn’t want me around

because I was dirty and sick and I thought she’d throw me

aw ay too so I said I had called m y parents. I f you tell people in

apartments that you called your parents they think you are fine

then. M y mother said I should be locked up like an animal for

being a disgrace because o f jail and she would lock me up like

the animal I was. I ran aw ay for good from all this place—

home, Amerika, I can’t think o f no good name for it. I went far

away to where they don’t talk English and I never had to talk

or listen or understand. N o one talked so I had to answer. N o

one knew m y name. It was a cocoon surrounded by

cacophony. I liked not knowing anything. I was quiet outside,

never trying. There was no talking anyw ay that could say I

was raped more now and was broke for good. If it ain’t broke

don’t fix it and if it is broke just leave it alone and someday it’ll

die. Here, Andreus is a m an’s name. Andrea doesn’t exist at

all, m y m om m a’s name, not at all, not one bit. It is monstrous

to betray your child, bitch.

F IV E

In June 1966

(Age 19)

M y name is Andrea but here in nightclubs they say ma chere.

M y dear but more romantic. Sometimes they say it in a sullen

way, sometimes they are dismissive, sometimes it has a rough

edge or a cool indifference to it, a sexual callousness; sometimes they say it like they are talking to a pet dog, except that the Greeks don’t keep pets. Here on Crete they shoot cats.

They hate them. The men take rifIes and shoot them o ff the

roofs and in the alleys. The cats are skeletal, starving; the

Cretans act as if the cats are cruel predators and slimy crawling

things at the same time. N o one would dare befriend one here.

E very time I see a cat skulking across a roof, its bony, meager

body twisted for camouflage, I think I am seeing the Jew s in

the ghettos o f Eastern Europe sliding out o f hiding to find

food. M y chere. Doesn’t it mean expensive? I don’t know

French except for the few words I have had to pick up in the

bars. The high-class Greek men speak French, the peasants

only Greek, and it is very low -brow to speak English, vulgar.

N o one asks m y name or remembers it if I say it. In Europe

only boys are named it. It means manhood or courage. If they

hear m y name they laugh; you’re not a boy, they say. I don’t

need a name, it’s a burden o f memory, a useless burden for a

woman. It doesn’t seem to mean anything to anyone. There is

an Andreus here, a hero who was the captain o f a ship that was

part o f the resistance when the Nazis occupied the island. He

brought in guns and food and supplies and got people o ff the

island who needed to escape and brought people to Crete who

needed to hide. He killed Nazis when he could; he killed some,

for certain. N o occupier has ever conquered the mountains

here, rock made out o f African desert and dust. Andreus is old

and cunning and rich. He owns olive fields and is the official

consul for the country o f N orw ay; I don’t know what that

means but he has stationery and a seal and an office. He owns

land. He is dirty and sweaty and fat. He drinks and says dirty

things to women but one overlooks them. He says dirty

words in English and makes up dirty limericks in broken

English. He likes me because I am in love; he admires love. I

am in love in a language I don’t know. He likes this love

because it is a rare kind to see. It has the fascination o f fire; you

can’t stop looking. We’re so much joined in the flesh that

strangers feel the pain if we stop touching. Andreus is a failed

old sensualist now but he is excited by passion, the life-and-

death kind, the passion you have to have to wage a guerrilla

war from the sea on an island occupied by Nazis; being near

us, you feel the sea. I’m the sea for him now and he’s waiting to

see if his friend will drown. M venerates him for his role in the

resistance. Andreus is maybe sixty, an old sixty, gritty, oiled,

lined. M is thirty, old to me, an older man if I force m yself to

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