Carver
Page 3
   he forgets again at first, and blows at the light.
   Then he lies back dreaming as the bulb cools.
   Carver’s glasses and case
   Poultry Husbandry
   Tuskegee, 1902
   Raising chickens is a
   dawn-to-dawn,
   no-Sabbath proposition.
   Carver is a botanist.
   Yet, bowing before Mr. Washington’s mandate,
   Carver is named Superintendent of Poultry Operations,
   in addition to teaching seven classes,
   testing seed, examining soils, running
   the Agricultural Experiment Station,
   preparing bulletins,
   overseeing the dairy’s one hundred four cows,
   and maintaining a laboratory,
   with the assistance of the two or three
   work-study students the budget allows.
   Washington requires daily
   Poultry Yard Reports,
   writes from Ithaca
   that it doesn’t make much sense
   to have twenty-seven roosters
   for forty-nine hens.
   He writes from Syracuse
   that there should be twice as many
   chicks, given the number of eggs set
   and incubated. He writes from Boston
   to suggest chicks be purchased.
   He telegraphs from New York City
   to point out that thirty-nine eggs
   are unaccounted for.
   Carver answers, “I have faith in the chickens.”
   But he watches twenty roosters
   weed themselves down to ten.
   He sees a pecking order established
   by ruthless omnivores, by cannibals.
   He sees chickens kill each other
   out of sheer boredom. He learns
   that if you don’t stop them,
   chickens will peck their pariahs
   to ribs and drumsticks.
   Slowly, he learns a new vocabulary.
   Blackhead: general weakness, unthriftiness,
   sulphur-colored droppings. Mortality high.
   Sorehead: wart-like nodules covered by black scabs
   on bare parts of the head, the feet, and around
   the vent. Mortality high.
   Coccidiosis: unthriftiness, diarrhea. Mortality high.
   Epidemic Tremor: loss of balance,
   wobbling gait, prostration, kicking.
   Mortality high.
   Cholera: Mortality high.
   Bronchitis: Mortality high.
   Newcastle: Can wipe out
   your whole flock.
   Toward the end
   of one of his daily pre-dawn rambles,
   Carver stops at the poultry yard.
   He notes the unlocked latch, the gate ajar.
   Old Teddy Roosevelt gives the man a beady look,
   flaps his wings, stretches
   his scrawny, good-for-nothing neck,
   and again, hope bleaches the horizon.
   Carver working in a lab
   1905
   Looking out of the front page, a wild-haired,
   gentle-eyed young German man stands
   before a blackboard of incomprehensible equations.
   Meanwhile, back in the quotidian,
   Carver takes the school to the poor.
   He outfits an open truck
   with shelves for his jars
   of canned fruit and compost,
   bins for his croker sacks of seeds.
   He travels roads barely discernible
   on the county map,
   teaching former field-slaves
   how to weave ditch weeds
   into pretty table place mats,
   how to keep their sweet potatoes from rotting
   before winter hunger sets in,
   how to make preacher-pleasing
   mock fried chicken
   without slaughtering a laying hen.
   He notes patches of wild chicory
   the farmers could collect
   to free themselves from their taste
   for high-priced imported caffeine.
   He and his student assistants bump along
   shoulder to shoulder in the high cab,
   a braided scale of laughter
   trailing above their raised dust.
   Today, Carver is explaining,
   as far as he understands it,
   that fellow Einstein’s “Special Theory of Relativity.”
   He’s hardly gotten to Newtonian Space
   when a platoon of skinny dogs
   announces the next farm.
   As they pull up,
   a black man and his boy straighten,
   two rows of shin-high cotton apart.
   With identical gestures they remove
   straw hats, wipe their foreheads with their sleeves.
   Their welcoming glance meets Carver’s eyes
   at the velocity of light.
   The Jesup wagon
   1906
   Carver initiates the Jesup wagon, outfitting a horse-drawn wagon to take his agricultural teaching to the rural poor.
   Clay
   “Beauty is the vocation
   of the earth.”—William Bryant Logan
   God’s breath on a compound of silica,
   alumina, and various oxides—
   primarily iron—gave Adam life.
   There is a primal, almost mystical
   connection between humankind and clay,
   from the footed, bellied first receptacles
   to frescoed Renaissance cathedral walls.
   To Carver’s eye, the muddy creek banks say
   Here, to be dug up, strained, and painted on,
   is loveliness the poorest can afford:
   azures, ochres … Scraps of discarded board
   are landscapes. Cabins undistinguished brown
   bloom like slaves freed to struggle toward self-worth.
   Beauty is commonplace, as cheap as dirt.
   Carver in the field
   Egyptian Blue
   From red clay spotted on a hillside
   Carver came up with a quadruple-
   oxidized pigment the blue
   of a royal mummy’s innermost windings,
   an Egyptian blue
   no artist or scientist had duplicated
   since the days of old King Tut.
   It’s the bluest blue,
   bluer than lapis.
   Paint factories and manufacturers
   of artists’ materials
   begged him for the formula,
   offering the top floor of Fort Knox.
   He sent it
   for the cost of the two-cent stamp
   it cost him to mail it.
   It’s an indescribable blue.
   You see it every day
   on everything from shutters
   to a child-sized flowered dress.
   We’ve learned to live with it
   without loving it, as if it were
   something ordinary,
   that blue the world sought
   for five thousand years.
   Look around with me: There it is
   in the folder on my desk,
   in my close-up photo of a fairy tern,
   in the thumbtacks in my corkboard
   holding up photos, poems, quotes, prayers,
   a beaded ancestral goddess juju doll
   (it’s the blue of the scarab in her hand).
   It’s the blue of that dictionary
   of American Regional English,
   of the box of eighty standard envelopes,
   the blue of that dress waiting to be ironed,
   the blue of sky in that Guatemalan cross,
   it’s the blue of the Black Madonna’s veil.
   Paint sample that includes a miniature landscape painted by Carver
   The Sweet-Hearts
   Sarah Hunt, rumored suicide
   Bright as I was,
   I knew Mama would suck her teeth
   an
d shake her head with disgust
   if she knew we were courting.
   He came to the schoolyard
   toward the end of every day,
   patted the children’s heads as they passed,
   let them find the roasted peanuts
   hidden in his pockets.
   Then he would turn to me,
   his tawny eyes grow golden.
   He’d hand me a flower.
   He in his mismatched
   secondhand suits
   with the top button always buttoned,
   always some kind of a flower
   in his faded lapel.
   He took my books,
   offered his arm,
   and as we walked
   told me about my flower.
   Every day a different Latin name.
   I flirted.
   He talked about the lilies of the field,
   about feeding the multitudes with the miracle
   of the peanut and the sweet potato.
   My invisible, disapproving family.
   With him, I could never again ride
   in the white car, or sleep in a decent hotel.
   He told me of the vision
   he’d had on his first day here:
   That the school would flourish,
   that Tuskegee was the place for him
   to be God’s instrument.
   I straightened his ties,
   told him when
   his sleeves and collars
   needed turning,
   suggested he give away
   his baggiest trousers,
   that there’s such a thing
   as too much mending.
   How he trembled
   the first time I took his hand.
   That gold light so fierce my shame
   was almost burned away.
   But our children would be dark,
   they might have his hair.
   For three years
   people smiled at us.
   We knew there were whispers:
   “The Sweet-Hearts.”
   He helped my fourth graders
   start a garden, talked to them
   about growing things.
   I wish I’d kept his little notes.
   The last one said something like
   “Miss Sarah, I believe you care
   more about my clothes
   than you do about me or my work.”
   He stopped coming around.
   How the children missed him.
   I left at the end of the school year
   and started a new life. Started you.
   Children, you are almost grown,
   and I have saved you from Negro shame.
   But the man in this clipping
   might have been your father.
   Charles. —
   I can live no longer
   this life of a fool.
   Dear ones,
   forgive me.
   c. 1905
   Carver meets Miss Sarah Hunt.
   A Patriarch’s Blessing
   1905
   Luke 1:68–79
   All night the train chug-chugs
   toward Missouri. In the last car,
   Carver tries to sleep
   with his head against the glass.
   A few hours later he’s showed in,
   the thin white face,
   white beard to the waist,
   and Uncle Mose’s right hand
   is saying Come near.
   Carver, his eyes lowered,
   kneels beside the rocker.
   In Moses Carver’s face
   the unveiled radiance of Moses’ face
   when he came down from the mountain.
   George, he says. Carver’s George.
   Carver says he’s just come back
   to get some of those paw-paws
   from his favorite tree.
   Uncle Mose says if he does,
   he’s in for a hiding.
   Them paw-paws ain’t ripe yet.
   Moses caresses the stubbly cheek,
   cups the bristly chin.
   Never could keep you boys away
   from my paw-paw tree. Where’s my switch?
   He pats the soft-crinkled hair
   with remembering fingers.
   God bless you, my boy.
   “For you will go before the Lord
   to prepare the way for him.”
   Unwiped tears
   disappear into his beard.
   Moses Carver
   The Lace-Maker
   for P.L.E.
   Late Sunday morning gilds the pins and needles,
   strokes the wall ochre, blanches the white collar.
   He bends, intent on detail, his fingers red
   in sunlight, brown in shade. Light calls
   through the open to April window directly
   into his illumined invisible ear,
   like, elsewhere, the trumpet
   whisper of an angel.
   Carver made time to crochet, knit, and do needlework. He found these activities satisfying and they enabled him to make useful gifts for his friends.
   Chicken-Talk
   1909: So many chickens were missing,
   and Washington so hounded Carver’s heels,
   that Carver bought replacements secretly
   and smuggled them into the poultry yard.
   In 1910, seven hundred sixty-five
   were unaccounted for, and Washington
   sent Carver almost daily telegrams
   tallying all the missing. Folks in town
   said they were “being liberated by ol’ John.”
   They told about how “back in slavery days …”
   The night was as dark as a barracks
   on Goree Island. John stepped to the doorway,
   and stepped back. Mariah held the baby close,
   her soft palm over his mouth. “He out there?”
   John leaned into the night, his face
   tasting its breezes. He looked back
   and shook his head. He clutched his juju,
   looked at his woman, and clenched his eyes
   in a prayer to the Ancestors. He ran out.
   The gate hinge creaked, but John slipped in
   through an inches-wide gap. No feather stirred
   as he entered the sleeping coop, until
   a stupid biddy squawked warning
   and the flock burst with alarm.
   John stood, shushing.
   “It ain’t the fox, fool; it’s me, your friend.”
   The melee fell to murmuring.
   John’s fist was under a fat warm hen
   when a voice rose in the yard.
   “Yes, I did remember to load it. Will you
   get on back in the house?
   (That damned fox!)”
   Uh-oh, John, you in bad trouble.
   He gone to get you this time.
   You say no?
   As Master’s boots crunched toward the door,
   a faint voice trebled inside.
   “Who’s in there?”
   Master took another step.
   He heard the voice again.
   Then another, another.
   “I say who’s in there?”
   He cocked his shotgun, stepped again.
   Ain’t nobody here but us chickens.
   Master just went on home,
   according to John’s children and John’s
   children’s children and their children and theirs. And John
   never told on Brer Fox.
   The Joy of Sewing
   First the threading of the needle,
   that eye nearly invisible
   held nearer and farther away,
   so the tip of the thread
   is a camel through a keyhole,
   a rich man
   carrying all of his belongings
   through the Pearly Gates.
   But at last, near cussing,
   you thread the filament
   into the orifice. Aha!
   The cloth lies on your
 lap
   like an infant in a christening gown,
   as smooth under your palm
   as your mother’s lost skirts.
   The needle slow at first,
   jackrabbits straight and true.
   The making.
   The focus.
   The stitches your fingers’ mantra.
   The finished products of contemplation:
   the ties Carver always wears
   with his secondhand suits.
   And the snickers behind his back.
   Veil-Raisers
   Sometimes one light burned late
   in The Oaks, the stately home of the great
   Principal, Booker T. He sat and wrote
   note after note, controlling faculty,
   philanthropists, and family
   with spiderweb reins.
   When a plank broke and he plunged
   into white hopelessness,
   he shook himself
   and rang up to the third floor,
   where a student exchanging service
   for tuition sproinged to his feet.
   The breathless summons reached
   Carver’s cluttered rooms
   down in Rockefeller Hall,
   where he dozed in his easy chair.
   He still had lab notes to write,
   tomorrow’s classes to prepare,
   letters, and his Bible reading.
   He’d been up, as always,
   since that godliest hour
   when light is created anew,
   and he would wake again
   in a few more hours.
   Roused, he nodded,
   exchanged slippers for brogans.
   You saw them sometimes
   if you were sneaking in past curfew,
   after a tête-à-tête on a town girl’s porch:
   shoulder to shoulder
   and dream to dream,
   two veil-raisers.
   Walking our people
   into history.
   Booker T. Washington
   The Year of the Sky-Smear
   1910
   That smear among the stars:
   Science may call it Halley’s Comet,
   but backwoods farm folks say
   it’s an iceberg headed for a ship’s hull,
   a chomping mouth trailing its hunger.
   They say it’s a millennial sign.