Thursday, October 31, 2024

THIS FUMBLING

 


Nonetheless, morning comes,
as it always does.
I wake before dawn,
feed the cat, pour my coffee
into a Ball jar, unaware
that you have left this world
sometime in the night.
The radiator makes a creaking
sound; the phone is silent.
This fumbling, this calm unknowing
is in itself a small corner
of paradise I will recognize
only long after the fact,
when its comfort has moved
elsewhere, and I cannot
hope to enter again.

Sunday, October 20, 2024

PARIS, 1911

 

We never made it to Paris, though the framed Steiglitz print of a rain-swept boulevard in that city -- everything gone gray, everything blowing to one side -- which hung for so long in our old apartment, is here with me now. The same thin tree, half-bare and bent beneath the weight of the sky, still reaches upward in defiance; the same street sweeper, shrouded from shoulders to ankles, stoops as though retrieving something dropped to the reflecting water below. The same shadowy figures and buggies in the distance continue to move slowly past. I can almost smell the rain through this curtain of years, can almost hear the whoosh and drumming of it, as if it were approaching us here today. For the moment, this scene rests in the narrow hallway which leads to the bedroom, awaiting the right wall, the right light. You, of course, are not here to ask; and on any wall, in any room, it seems only to get further and further away.

Monday, October 14, 2024

THE LAST K-MART

 


The last K-Mart department store in the country
is closing today, and I am reminded suddenly
of those long-ago Saturday afternoons, following
my brother along the forbidden shortcut
through the tall grass and weeds which ran
alongside the junkyard, fresh quarters in hand
for finishing our weekend chores, to be quickly spent
on some small novelty, or if we had pooled
our money, a new hamster to replace the one we
had just buried, our first undeniable shock
at the fleetingness of this world and all it holds.
I am reminded, too, of my brother's name
for the store: Came-Apart, which never failed
to make us laugh, remember back-to-school shopping
with our tired mother, the generic Trax sneakers
and stiff, creased denim of Husky jeans, which
became the tell-tale wardrobe of welfare kids and
project brats -- which is to say, many of us.
I remember blue light specials in the cafeteria,
and our family TV and sofa on layaway.
I wonder what will become of the gumball stands,
the rusted merry-go-round and plastic pony
outside the entrance that you could sit atop for a nickel,
dreaming of faraway prairies and open sky.
No doubt they will be hauled away for the indignity
of the landfill, or to some industrial warehouse,
while my brother sleeps the same silent sleep
that he has mastered for more than twenty years,
not far from here, not far from anywhere.
When last I checked, that shortcut was still there.


Sunday, October 6, 2024

CHARLOTTE

 

Charlotte was well into her ninth decade,
with no plans for retirement, making,
slicing, and packing sandwiches
on the assembly line with the rest of us
poor souls -- perpetually bored teenagers,
dropouts, and functioning addicts trying to survive.
Her face was a wonder of lines intersecting
with lines, of worry and laughter,
one long and detailed story leading
imperceptibly into another; her skin, thin
as parchment, polished and shining
beneath the gray industrial light,
especially when she turned to smile.
Her beloved husband Frank had long since left
this life, while their children, and their children, had
grown and moved away, one to the east
and one far out west, remembering, most years,
to call at Christmas and her birthday.
"What would I do sitting at home alone?,"
she would ask to no one in particular,
answering herself with an exaggerated shrug.
Decades earlier, she had worked
at the ammunition plant not far from here,
alongside my aunt Anna Mae, counting
and packing machine gun shells for the war
six days a week, her hands perpetually
smelling of metal and oil for years.
This work was easier, much easier by far.
"Here I can eat what I make," she once quipped,
"and no one gets hurt, or killed -- just fed."

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