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All of Us: The Collected Poems

Page 19

by Raymond Carver

want to buy the entire suit to bury my dad in,

  or just the coat? I don’t

  have to provide the answer to this,

  or anything else. But, hey, he went

  into the furnace wearing his britches.

  This morning I looked at his picture.

  Big, heavyset guy in the last year

  of his life. Holding a monster salmon

  in front of the shack where he lived

  in Fortuna, California. My dad.

  He’s nothing now. Reduced to a cup of ashes,

  and some tiny bones. No way

  is this any way

  to end your life as a man.

  Though as Hemingway correctly pointed out,

  all stories, if continued far enough,

  end in death. Truly.

  Lord, it’s almost fall.

  A flock of Canada geese passes

  high overhead. The little mare lifts

  her head, shivers once, goes back

  to grazing. I think I will lie down

  in this sweet grass. I’ll shut my eyes

  and listen to wind, and the sound of wings.

  Just dream for an hour, glad to be here

  and not there. There’s that. But also

  the terrible understanding

  that men I loved have left

  for some other, lesser place.

  Loafing

  I looked into the room a moment ago,

  and this is what I saw —

  my chair in its place by the window,

  the book turned facedown on the table.

  And on the sill, the cigarette

  left burning in its ashtray.

  Malingerer! my uncle yelled at me

  so long ago. He was right.

  I’ve set aside time today,

  same as every day,

  for doing nothing at all.

  Sinew

  The girl minding the store.

  She stands at the window

  picking a piece of pork

  from her teeth. Idly

  watching the men in serge suits,

  waistcoats, and ties,

  dapping for trout on Lough Gill,

  near the Isle of Innisfree.

  The remains of her midday meal

  congealing on the sill.

  The air is still and warm.

  A cuckoo calls.

  Close in, a man in a boat,

  wearing a hat, looks

  toward shore, the little store,

  and the girl. He looks, whips

  his line, and looks some more.

  She leans closer to the glass.

  Goes out then to the lakeside.

  But it’s the cuckoo in the bush

  that has her attention.

  The man strikes a fish,

  all business now.

  The girl goes on working

  at the sinew in her teeth.

  But she watches this well-dressed

  man reaching out

  to slip a net under his fish.

  In a minute, shyly, he floats near.

  Holds up his catch for the girl’s pleasure.

  Doffs his hat. She stirs and smiles

  a little. Raises her hand.

  A gesture which starts the bird

  in flight, toward Innisfree.

  The man casts and casts again.

  His line cuts the air. His fly

  touches the water, and waits.

  But what does this man

  really care for trout?

  What he’ll take

  from this day is the memory of

  a girl working her finger

  inside her mouth as their glances

  meet, and a bird flies up.

  They look at each other and smile.

  In the still afternoon.

  With not a word lost between them.

  Waiting

  Left off the highway and

  down the hill. At the

  bottom, hang another left.

  Keep bearing left. The road

  will make a Y. Left again.

  There’s a creek on the left.

  Keep going. Just before

  the road ends, there’ll be

  another road. Take it

  and no other. Otherwise,

  your life will be ruined

  forever. There’s a log house

  with a shake roof, on the left.

  It’s not that house. It’s

  the next house, just over

  a rise. The house

  where trees are laden with

  fruit. Where phlox, forsythia,

  and marigold grow. It’s

  the house where the woman

  stands in the doorway

  wearing sun in her hair. The one

  who’s been waiting

  all this time.

  The woman who loves you.

  The one who can say,

  “What’s kept you?”

  IV

  The Debate

  This morning I’m torn

  between responsibility to myself, duty

  to my publisher, and the pull

  I feel toward the river

  below my house. The winter-

  run steelhead are in,

  is the problem. It’s

  nearly dawn, the tide

  is high. Even as

  this little dilemma

  occurs, and the debate

  goes on, fish

  are starting into the river.

  Hey, I’ll live, and be happy,

  whatever I decide.

  Its Course

  The man who took 38 steelhead out

  of this little river

  last winter (his name is Bill Zitter,

  “last name in the directory”)

  told me the river’s changed its course

  dramatically, he would even say

  radically, since he first moved here,

  he and his wife. It used to flow

  “yonder, where those houses are.”

  When salmon crossed that shoal at night,

  they made a noise like water boiling

  in a cauldron, a noise like you were

  scrubbing something on a washboard.

  “It could wake you up from a deep sleep.”

  Now, there’s no more salmon run.

  And he won’t fish for steelhead

  this winter, because Mrs Zitter’s

  eaten up with cancer. He’s needed

  at home. The doctors expect

  she’ll pass away before the New Year.

  “Right where you’re living,” he goes on,

  “that used to be a motorcycle run.

  They’d come from all over the county

  to race their bikes. They’d tear up

  that hill and then go down

  the other side. But they were

  just having fun. Young guys. Not

  like those gangs today, those bad apples.”

  I wished him luck. Shook his hand.

  And went home to my house, the place

  they used to race motorcycles.

  Later, at the table in my room, looking

  out over the water, I give some thought

  to just what it is I’m doing here.

  What it is I’m after in this life.

  It doesn’t seem like much,

  in the end. I remembered what he’d said

  about the young men

  and their motorcycles.

  Those young men who must be old men

  now. Zitter’s age, or else

  my age. Old enough, in either case.

  And for a moment I imagine

  the roar of the engines as they surge

  up this hill, the laughter and

  shouting as they spill, swear, get up,

  shake themselves off, and walk

  their bikes to the top.

  Where they slap each other on the back

  and reach in the burlap bag f
or a beer.

  Now and then one of them gunning it

  for all it’s worth, forcing his way

  to the top, and then going lickety-

  split down the other side!

  Disappearing in a roar, in a cloud of dust.

  Right outside my window is where

  all this happened. We vanish soon enough.

  Soon enough, eaten up.

  September

  September, and somewhere the last

  of the sycamore leaves

  have returned to earth.

  Wind clears the sky of clouds.

  What’s left here? Grouse, silver salmon,

  and the struck pine not far from the house.

  A tree hit by lightning. But even now

  beginning to live again. A few shoots

  miraculously appearing.

  Stephen Foster’s “Maggie by My Side”

  plays on the radio.

  I listen with my eyes far away.

  The White Field

  Woke up feeling anxious and bone-lonely.

  Unable to give my attention to anything

  beyond coffee and cigarettes. Of course,

  the best antidote for this is work.

  “What is your duty? What each day requires,”

  said Goethe, or someone like him.

  But I didn’t have any sense of duty.

  I didn’t feel like doing anything.

  I felt as if I’d lost my will, and my memory.

  And I had. If someone had come along

  at that minute, as I was slurping coffee, and said,

  “Where were you when I needed you?

  How have you spent your life? What’d you do

  even two days ago?” What could I have said?

  I’d only have gawped. Then I tried.

  Remembered back a couple of days.

  Driving to the end of that road with Morris.

  Taking our fishing gear from the jeep.

  Strapping on snowshoes, and walking across the white field

  toward the river. Every so often

  turning around to look at the strange tracks

  we’d left. Feeling glad enough to be alive

  as we kicked up rabbits, and ducks passed over.

  Then to come upon Indians standing in the river

  in chest-high waders! Dragging a net for steelhead

  through the pool we planned to fish.

  The hole just above the river’s mouth.

  Them working in relentless silence. Cigarettes

  hanging from their lips. Not once

  looking up or otherwise acknowledging

  our existence.

  “Christ almighty,” Morris said.

  “This is for the birds.” And we snowshoed back

  across the field, cursing our luck, cursing Indians.

  The day in all other respects unremarkable.

  Except when I was driving the jeep

  and Morris showed me the three-inch scar

  across the back of his hand from the hot stove

  he’d fallen against in elk camp.

  But this happened the day before yesterday.

  It’s yesterday that got away, that slipped through

  the net and back to sea.

  Yet hearing those distant voices down the road just now,

  I seem to recall everything. And I understand

  that yesterday had its own relentless logic.

  Just like today, and all the other days in my life.

  Shooting

  I wade through wheat up to my belly,

  cradling a shotgun in my arms.

  Tess is asleep back at the ranch house.

  The moon pales. Then loses face completely

  as the sun spears up over the mountains.

  Why do I pick this moment

  to remember my aunt taking me aside that time

  and saying, What I am going to tell you now

  you will remember every day of your life?

  But that’s all I can remember.

  I’ve never been able to trust memory. My own

  or anyone else’s. I’d like to know what on earth

  I’m doing here in this strange regalia.

  It’s my friend’s wheat—this much is true.

  And right now, his dog is on point.

  Tess is opposed to killing for sport,

  or any other reason. Yet not long ago she

  threatened to kill me. The dog inches forward.

  I stop moving. I can’t see or hear

  my breath any longer.

  Step by tiny step, the day advances. Suddenly,

  the air explodes with birds.

  Tess sleeps through it. When she wakes,

  October will be over. Guns and talk

  of shooting behind us.

  The Window

  A storm blew in last night and knocked out

  the electricity. When I looked

  through the window, the trees were translucent.

  Bent and covered with rime. A vast calm

  lay over the countryside.

  I knew better. But at that moment

  I felt I’d never in my life made any

  false promises, nor committed

  so much as one indecent act. My thoughts

  were virtuous. Later on that morning,

  of course, electricity was restored.

  The sun moved from behind the clouds,

  melting the hoarfrost.

  And things stood as they had before.

  Heels

  Begin nude, looking for the socks

  worn yesterday and maybe

  the day before, etc. They’re not

  on your feet, but they can’t

  have gone far. They’re under the bed!

  You take them up and give them

  a good shaking to free the dust.

  Shaking’s no more than they deserve.

  Now run your hand down the limp,

  shapeless things. These blue,

  brown, black, green, or grey socks.

  You feel you could put your arm into one

  and it wouldn’t make a particle

  of difference. So why not do this

  one thing you’re inclined to do?

  You draw them on over your fingers

  and work them up to the elbow.

  You close and open your fists. Then

  close them again, and keep them that way.

  Now your hands are like heels

  that could stamp

  on things. Anything.

  You’re heading for the door

  when a draft of air hits your ankles

  and you’re reminded of those wild swans

  at Coole, and the wild swans at places

  you’ve never heard of, let alone

  visited. You understand now

  just how far away you are from all that

  as you fumble with the closed door.

  Then the door opens! You wanted it

  to be morning, as expected

  after a night’s uneasy sleep.

  But stars are overhead, and the moon

  reels above dark trees.

  You raise your arms and gesture.

  A man with socks over his hands

  under the night sky.

  It’s like, but not like, a dream.

  The Phone Booth

  She slumps in the booth, weeping

  into the phone. Asking a question

  or two, and weeping some more.

  Her companion, an old fellow in jeans

  and denim shirt, stands waiting

  his turn to talk, and weep.

  She hands him the phone.

  For a minute they are together

  in the tiny booth, his tears

  dropping alongside hers. Then

  she goes to lean against the fender

  of their sedan. And listens

  to him talk about arrangements.

  I watch all this fr
om my car.

  I don’t have a phone at home, either.

  I sit behind the wheel,

  smoking, waiting to make

  my own arrangements. Pretty soon

  he hangs up. Comes out and wipes his face.

  They get in the car and sit

  with the windows rolled up.

  The glass grows steamy as she

  leans into him, as he puts

  his arm around her shoulders.

  The workings of comfort in that cramped, public place.

  I take my small change over

  to the booth, and step inside.

  But leaving the door open, it’s

  so close in there. The phone still warm to the touch.

  I hate to use a phone

  that’s just brought news of death.

  But I have to, it being the only phone

  for miles, and one that might

  listen without taking sides.

  I put in coins and wait.

  Those people in the car wait too.

  He starts the engine then kills it.

  Where to? None of us able

  to figure it. Not knowing

  where the next blow might fall,

  or why. The ringing at the other end

  stops when she picks it up.

  Before I can say two words, the phone

  begins to shout, “I told you it’s over!

  Finished! You can go

  to hell as far as I’m concerned!”

  I drop the phone and pass my hand

  across my face. I close and open the door.

  The couple in the sedan roll

  their windows down and

  watch, their tears stilled

  for a moment in the face of this distraction.

  Then they roll their windows up

  and sit behind the glass. We

  don’t go anywhere for a while.

  And then we go.

  Cadillacs and Poetry

  New snow onto old ice last night. Now,

  errand-bound to town, preoccupied with the mudge

  in his head, he applied his brakes too fast.

  And found himself in a big car out of control,

  moving broadside down the road in the immense

  stillness of the winter morning. Headed

  inexorably for the intersection.

  The things that were passing through his mind?

 

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