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All of Us: The Collected Poems

Page 30

by Raymond Carver


  The White Field (93—4)

  The Window (95)

  Its Course (96—7)

  Sinew (98—9)

  Eagles (100)

  Elk Camp (101—2)

  Earwigs (103—4)

  The Fishing Pole of the Drowned Man (105)

  My Boat (106—7)

  Shooting (108)

  Cutlery (109—10)

  IV

  Work (113)

  Cadillacs and Poetry (114—5)

  The Hat (116—18)

  The Young Fire Eaters of Mexico City (119)

  Powder-Monkey (120—1)

  The Pen (122—3)

  The Pipe (124)

  What You Need for Painting (125)

  Bonnard’s Nudes (126)

  A Squall (127)

  Kafka’s Watch (128)

  My Work (129—30)

  The Garden (131—2)

  My Crow (133)

  Grief (134)

  Bahia, Brazil (135—6)

  The House behind This One (137)

  Reading (138—9)

  Evening (140)

  Spell (141—2)

  The Schooldesk (143—5)

  V

  After Rainy Days (149)

  Hominy and Rain (150—1)

  Radio Waves (152—3)

  The Phenomenon (154)

  Fear (155)

  The Mail (156—7)

  Egress (158—9)

  The River (160)

  Migration (161—2)

  Sleeping (163)

  An Account (164—5)

  Simple (166)

  Sweet Light (167)

  Listening (168)

  The Eve of Battle (169—70)

  The Caucasus: A Romance (171—3)

  The Rest (174)

  VI

  Locking Yourself Out, Then Trying to Get Back In (177—8)

  The Old Days (179—80)

  Mesopotamia (181—2)

  The Possible (183—4)

  Waiting (185)

  In Switzerland (186—8)

  Ask Him (189—91)

  Yesterday, Snow (192—3)

  Where Water Comes Together with Other Water (194—5)

  The Fields (196—7)

  Slippers (198)

  Circulation (199—200)

  Scale (201—2)

  Asia (203—4)

  The Gift (205—6)

  The notes to Where Water Comes Together with Other Water and Ultramarine indicate which poems from those two books were included in In a Marine Light. The following poems were not included in In a Marine Light:

  Where Water Comes Together with Other Water

  Movement

  The Road

  The Ashtray

  Medicine

  Rain

  Aspens

  At Least

  The Grant

  The Poem I Didn’t Write

  In the Year 2020

  The Juggler at Heaven’s Gate

  My Daughter and Apple Pie

  Commerce

  Next Door

  The Party

  Interview

  The Windows of the Summer Vacation Houses

  Away

  Music

  Plus

  Extirpation

  The Catch

  My Death

  Afghanistan

  Reading Something in the Restaurant

  A Poem Not against Songbirds

  Late Afternoon, April 8, 1984

  Ultramarine

  An Afternoon

  The Cobweb

  Memory [2]

  Stupid

  The Jungle

  The Sensitive Girl

  The Minuet

  A Tall Order

  Where the Groceries Went

  Vigil

  In the Lobby of the Hotel del Mayo

  Wind

  The Best Time of the Day

  Company

  Yesterday

  The Prize

  Loafing

  The Debate

  September

  Heels

  The Phone Booth

  The Scratch

  The Child

  After Reading Two Towns in Provence

  Appendix 5

  Bibliographical and Textual Notes

  Abbreviations

  1st First magazine appearance or separate publication

  ANP A New Path to the Waterfall (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989)

  ANTSM At Night the Salmon Move (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Capra Press, 1976)

  AUP Advance uncorrected proof (publisher’s paperbound uncorrected page proofs sent to review sources in advance of finished book)

  F Fires (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Capra Press, 1983)

  EFTD Early for the Dance (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1986)

  IAML In a Marine Light: Selected Poems (London: Collins Harvill, 1987)

  NHP No Heroics, Please: Uncollected Writings (London: Harvill, 1991)

  NK Near Klamath (Sacramento, Calif.: English Club of Sacramento State College, 1968). Note: Because NK is unpaginated, page references to it are given in brackets.

  RC Raymond Carver

  TD Those Days: Early Writings by Raymond Carver, ed. William L. Stull (Elmwood, Conn.: Raven Editions, 1987)

  TW This Water (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1985)

  U Ultramarine (New York: Random House, 1986)

  WI Winter Insomnia (Santa Cruz, Calif.: Kayak Books, 1970)

  WWCT Where Water Comes Together with Other Water (New York: Random House, 1985)

  Notes

  Fires: Essays, Poems, Stories

  First edition: Santa Barbara, Calif.: Capra Press, 1983. A Noel Young Book. Simultaneously published in hardcover and paperback. Publication date: 14 Apr. 1983.

  First signed, limited edition: “Printed April 1983 for Capra Press by the Kingsport Press. Two hundred & fifty copies have been numbered and signed by the author and bound into boards” (limitation leaf).

  First expanded edition: New York, NY: Vintage Books, 1984. Adds “The Paris Review Interview”. Publication date: 30 May 1984.

  First English edition: London: Collins Harvill, 1985. Omits “The Paris Review Interview” and the “Afterword”; adds “My Father’s Life” and “John Gardner: The Writer as Teacher”. Publication date: 15 Apr. 1985.

  Dedication: For Tess

  Epigraph: From “Cows Grazing at Sunrise” by William Matthews, Flood (Boston: Little, Brown, 1982) 4.

  Copy-text: First edition, first printing, collated and corrected against later editions and printings overseen by RC.

  Small-press sources and separate publications: NK, WI, ANTSM, Distress Sale (Lord John, 1981), Two Poems (Scarab, 1982), At Night the Salmon Move (Capra, 1983), Looking for Work/Downstream (n.p., 1988).

  1 DRINKING WHILE DRIVING: in NK [26], WI 55.

  1—2 It is August.

  I have not read a book in six months NK, WI

  8 go, / go NK, WI

  15 will / is going to NK, WI

  2 LUCK: 1st in Kayak [Santa Cruz, Calif.] 50 (May 1979): 40; in The Poet’s Choice, a special issue of Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 9 (1980): 43—4.

  4 drank, too, but they

  could handle it. 1st, Tendril

  21 to take / and took 1st

  28—9 at the starry sky —

  it was always starry then 1st, Tendril

  38 morning. / morning, 1st, Tendril

  39—40 I saw a woman sleeping on our lawn. Tendril

  42 then / and then 1st

  54 no one / nobody 1st, Tendril

  55 luck, I / luck I Tendril

  59—61 for a house where nobody

  was home, and all I could drink. 1st, Tendril

  3 DISTRESS SALE: 1st in Kayak [Santa Cruz, Calif.] 49 (Oct. 1978): 16—17; separately published as a broadside (Northridge, Calif.: Lord John Press, 1981).

  2—7 the child’s canopy bed and vanity

  table, the sofa, end tables and lamps,

  the boxes of assorted books and rec
ords.

  We carried out kitchen items,

  a clock radio, hanging clothes, a big easy

  chair that had been with them from the beginning 1st

  10 and they set themselves up around that

  to do business. 1st

  12 I’m staying there with them trying to dry out 1st

  15 It’s / It is 1st

  24—5 of clothing before moving on.

  Everyone who wanders into this scene is embarrassed.

  The man, my friend, sits at the table 1st

  32 This reduces us all. Is this what we’ve come to? 1st

  38 I reach for my wallet before I understand 1st

  I reach for my wallet and that is how I understand:

  Lord John

  4 YOUR DOG DIES: 1st in CutBank [Univ. of Montana, Missoula] 1 (1973): 32; in ANTSM 25.

  14 it / the dog afterwards 1st, ANTSM

  16 it / it, 1st

  25 hear / suddenly hear 1st

  5 PHOTOGRAPH OF MY FATHER IN HIS TWENTY-SECOND YEAR: 1st in Colorado Quarterly [Univ. of Colorado, Boulder] 17.2 (Autumn 1968): 162; in NK [13], WI 17. All lines begin with capital letters in 1st, NK, and WI.

  6 denim / levi 1st

  7 1934 Ford / Ford circa 1934 1st, NK, WI

  9 wear his old hat cocked over his ear, stick out his tongue…1st, NK, WI

  13 And the beer. Father I loved you, 1st

  And the bottle of beer. Father, I loved you, NK, WI

  14 Yet how can I say thank you, I who cannot hold my liquor either 1st, NK, WI

  15 don’t / do not 1 st, NK, WI

  6 HAMID RAMOUZ (1818—1906): 1st in Mississippi Review [Univ. of Southern Mississippi] 21 [7.3] (Fall 1978): 118.

  1 began / started 1st

  3 gunshot / gutshot 1st

  7 BANKRUPTCY: in NK [7], WI 24. All lines begin with capital letters in NK.

  8 THE BAKER: 1st in Kayak [Santa Cruz, Calif.] 50 (May 1979): 41; separately published with “Louise” in Two Poems (Salisbury, Md.: Scarab Press, 1982).

  5—6 Pancho introduced his new girl friend

  and her husband who was made to wear

  his white apron, 1st

  8 him / him everything 1st

  17—18 The husband crossed himself,

  took off his boots and

  silently left the house 1st

  22—3 humiliated, trying to save his life,

  he is the hero of this poem. 1st

  9 IOWA SUMMER: 1st in Chelsea [New York, NY] 22—3 (June 1968): 57—8; in NK [2], WI 27. All lines begin with capital letters in 1st, NK, and WI.

  Title: “Iowa Summer 1967” NK, WI

  7—12 It is only later, after they have gone,

  I realize they have delivered a letter from my wife.

  “What are you doing there?” my wife asks. “Are you drinking?”

  I study the postmark for hours until it, too, begins to fade.

  Someday, I hope to forget all this. 1st, NK, WI

  10 ALCOHOL: 1st in New England Review [Hanover, NH] 4.4 (Summer 1982): 530.

  33—4 [stanza break between these lines in 1st]

  35—6 You hear the song. 1st

  11 FOR SEMRA, WITH MARTIAL VIGOR: 1st in Beloit Poetry Journal [Ellsworth, Maine] 16.2 (Winter 1965—6): 17—19; in NK [20—3], WI 40—1.

  6 things as well / things 1st, NK, WI

  19—20 [stanza break between these lines in 1st]

  33—4 O Semra Semra

  Istanbul nee

  Constantinople

  Next to Paris she said 1st, NK

  49—53 [omitted in WI]

  50 goddamn / goddam 1st, NK

  12 LOOKING FOR WORK [1]: in WI 16; see “Looking for Work” [2] in ANP; separately published with “Downstream” ANP as a broadside (n.p.: 1988). The F version differs from the texts in WI and ANP, which are identical. The broadside, which otherwise agrees with WI and ANP, lacks the comma ending line 6 (likely a typographical error).

  1 I’ve / I have WI, broadside, ANP

  13 door. / door, WI, broadside, ANP

  14 They are gleaming. / gleaming. WI, broadside, ANP

  13 CHEERS: 1st in Esquire [New York, NY] 86.1 (July 1976): 12; in Prism International [Univ. of British Columbia] 21.2 (Winter 1982): 28.

  7—8 or else they call, Come out and play,

  Raymond. 1st

  13 dropped / stopped 1st

  14 ROGUE RIVER JET-BOAT TRIP, GOLD BEACH, OREGON, JULY 4, 1977: 1st in Antioch Review [Antioch Univ.] 36.3 (Summer 1978): 372.

  Title: TRIP,/TRIP 1st

  2 marten, osprey / marten, mink, osprey 1st

  4 family, / family 1st

  20—1 His good eye, the left, is brown,

  is steady of purpose, and doesn’t 1st

  24 youth, and / and youth and 1st

  28 I am not drinking, though I am still weak 1st

  15 YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT LOVE IS (AN EVENING WITH CHARLES BUKOWSKI): 1st in Crazyhorse [Univ. of Arkansas, Little Rock] 12 (Autumn 1972): 1—5; in ANTSM 33—37.

  21 [omitted in ANTSM]

  62 could / would 1st, ANTSM

  118 old now / old ANTSM

  16 MORNING, THINKING OF EMPIRE: 1st in Kayak [Santa Cruz, Calif.] 27 (1971): 49; in ANTSM 11. All lines begin with capital letters in 1st.

  1 rim / rims 1st, ANTSM

  4—6 Eyes and fingers drop onto silverware that is not

  silverware. Outside the window, waves beat against

  the chipped white walls of the old city. Suddenly, 1st, ANTSM

  7 Your / your ANTSM

  9 To hell with the future, I want to say. 1st, ANTSM

  17 THE BLUE STONES: 1st in Mississippi Review [Univ. of Southern Mississippi] 21 [7.3] (Fall 1978): 114—15.

  18 TEL AVIV AND LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI: in ANTSM 22—3.

  9 Jones’ landing appears out ANTSM

  29 further / farther ANTSM

  19 THE NEWS CARRIED TO MACEDONIA: 1st in Discourse [Concordia College (Moorhead, Minn.)] 11.4 (Autumn 1968): 439—40; in WI 9—10.

  34 The / the 1st, WI

  41—4 wind

  bird flocks fill the air

  they clack their bills

  with a sound like iron on iron 1st, WI

  44—5 [stanza break between these lines in WI]

  48 trail / smell 1st, WI

  52—4 the Hetaeri touches

  each of the sleeping

  soldiers 1st, WI

  20 THE MOSQUE IN JAFFA: in WI 15.

  7 Killed he says WI

  8 Words / words WI

  14 love murder / murder love WI

  26—7 Time is running out as

  I look at me from his dark eyes. WI

  21 NOT FAR FROM HERE: in WI 29. All lines begin with capital letters in WI.

  5 careful. / careful, WI

  6 I look / Look WI

  12 do you / d’you WI

  14 in / There in WI

  16 closer, kneel / closer WI

  18 Corpse, she whispers. The dog grins. WI

  19—20 But I don’t have time for games

  This morning and send her away WI

  22 SUDDEN RAIN: 1st in Midwest Quarterly [Pittsburg (Kans.) State Univ.] 14.1 (Oct. 1972): 63; in ANTSM 18.

  8 the narrow streets. / narrow streets 1st, ANTSM

  9 and roll my eyes and clatter against stones. 1st, ANTSM

  23 BALZAC: 1st in Levee [Sacramento State Univ.] 2.2 (Jan. 1967): 4; in NK [11], Carolina Quarterly [Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill] 21.3 (Fall 1969): 21, WI 34.

  3—4 the mist rising from his face and

  shoulders, the gown clinging 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI

  7—8 [stanza break between these lines in 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI]

  10 stroke / smooth 1st, NK

  11 young / the young 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI

  13 by, / by 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI

  14—15 [stanza break between these lines in 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI]

  20 early / fragile, early 1st,
NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI

  21—5 chamberpot. 1st, NK, Carolina Quarterly, WI

  24 COUNTRY MATTERS: 1st in Ploughshares [Emerson College] 2.3 (1975): 92; in ANTSM 19.

  1 grass, / grass ANTSM

  8 call. / call; 1st, ANTSM

  9 Shreds / shreds 1st, ANTSM

  10—11 float out onto the wintry air,

  but the girl does not turn her head, 1st, ANTSM

  12 Cook / cook 1st, ANTSM

  13 sill. / sill, 1st, ANTSM

  13—14 in 1st and ANTSM there is an additional line between these lines:

  their faces marred with tears, their hair 1st

  their faces marred with tears, hair ANTSM

  14 knotted. He leans closer to hear the small 1st, ANTSM

  15 whisperings, the broken / whispering, the unhappy 1st

  whisperings, the unhappy ANTSM

  25 THIS ROOM: 1st in West Coast Review [Simon Fraser Univ.] 2.1 (Spring 1967): 22; in Grande Ronde Review [Sacramento, Calif.] 7 [2.1] (n.d. [1967]): 10, WI 51.

  4 Promises promises 1st, Grande Ronde Review

  7 parasols, / parasols 1st, Grande Ronde Review, WI

  8 sea, / sea 1st, Grande Ronde Review, WI

  10 behind - / behind 1st, Grande Ronde Review, WI

  11 listening smoking 1st, Grande Ronde Review

  12 taking notes? 1st, Grande Ronde Review, WI

  13—16 [omitted in 1st, Grande Ronde Review, WI

  26 RHODES: in ANTSM 20—1.

  2 or / nor ANTSM

  6 nearby / near ANTSM

  10 stay, / stay ANTSM

  11 though / but ANTSM

  17 stiff / stone ANTSM

  18 figure of a man keeps watch

  on Turkey. ANTSM

  21 from its tail and heads

  for cover. ANTSM

  30 there’s / I sense ANTSM

  35—6 as my soul, like a cat, leaps into sleep. ANTSM

  27 SPRING, 480 BC: 1st in Toyon [Humboldt State Univ.] 9.1 (Spring 1963): 17; in Western Humanities Review [Univ. of Utah] 17.3 (Summer 1963): 264, NK [27], ANTSM 15, Poetry Now [Eureka, Calif.] 15—18 [3.3—6] (1977): 19. In Toyon the poem is published under the pseudonym John Vale.

  9 that / the 1st, Western Humanities Review, NK, ANTSM, Poetry Now

  10 fetters, / fetters 1st, Western Humanities Review, NK, ANTSM, Poetry Now

  28 NEAR KLAMATH: in NK [1], WI 46, Sou’wester Literary Quarterly [Southern Illinois Univ., Edwardsville] Winter 1972: 36.

  3—4 [no stanza break in NK, WI, Sou’wester Literary Quarterly]

  5 drink it / drink NK, WI, Sou’wester Literary Quarterly

  6—7 [no stanza break in NK, WI, Sou’wester Literary Quarterly]

 

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