103 Orchard Street (2014)
Emily Gordon
Luxury hotels and the old corset shops
still sit side by side. How are the corset shops
making money? Who’s visiting them?
An Orthodox wife has the gift: she can size
your cup size with her eyes. The man
puts dainties in a bag at the counter,
averting his eyes, but pleased by the sale.
Pleased by the sale! It hovers on bigotry.
But the residents of Orchard Street
would have been envious of this storefront,
not a back room in a lightless hovel,
making clothes whose collars cut you
from the sink scrubbing and the starch.
Almost everyone’s an immigrant. New Yorkers
who brag they were born here can be green
and sheltered as a shtetl farmer. More.
Is it wrong to want to lose your accent?
It depends which accent. You sound
a lot friendlier on the news these days
if you don’t seem, say, German.
Is it wrong to forget where you’re from?
My great-grandmother Ooma moved
uptown and looked back in the perfect
American way, sentimentally and for profit.
The standing up. The washing. The constant
baby filth and the filthy slops of water.
It’s so easy to sentimentalize. The simple life!
The family playing rummy by gaslight
at twenty-five cents a stint of warmth.
Poverty isn’t simple. Even rummy isn’t simple.
The father miserable. Keeping up their spirits.
The mother wondering if he would even stay.
How old is old enough to start working
in a factory? New Englanders had their kids
of two hired out to rich neighbors for chores.
Who gets to be mothered? 1770s Mary Cooper
never got to sit down. This Italian mom,
this German wife, surely didn’t either.
How was there even time for sex?
Maybe the price of more children
was worth it for the brief vacation.
In the gift shop we see Malcolm Gladwell,
millionaire immigrant from Ontario
where good college was practically free.
There are kitsch novelties. Jacob Riis.
It seems right, the history all mixed
and matched, all New York, all America,
the whole sloppy history of humans
who try to go somewhere, try to run
from pogroms or religion, families
or bad reputations, joblessness
or untillable land. There is a “to”
to America, but it’s a lonesome “to,”
a bursting “to,” a “to” that doesn’t
understand you, that’s ever-ready
to waste or replace or forget you
without warning. At Orchard Street
we tramp the lighted stairs,
so dark and slippery with foul water
in the mind’s eye, so easy to escape
when we are us, when I am here
without a “to,” without a “from,”
but all the choices, none of the steel wool.
Emily Gordon grew up in Wisconsin and California and is a longtime journalist and editor. Her poems have also appeared in The Baffler, The Women’s Review of Books, Painted Bride Quarterly, Indie Soleil, HIV Here and Now, Transition, and the Toronto Globe & Mail. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut, and is a sound improviser for the Dirty Little Secrets show in New York City.