The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Myrna Stone
Five Poems from In the Present Tense: Portraits of My Father
I Drive Him Back to His Vacant Childhood Home
The barns, the fields, the woods he trapped in and creek he fished, the ice and smoke and out houses, and the house itself, its clapboards and kitchen ell, all look, he swears, the same. He grouses
a moment at the ramped-up wind and cold that keeps us in my car, then starts a full-bore description of how he and his siblings, bold as ravens, watched through gaps in the floorboards
their parents making love. "Weren't you about six?" I ask, but he's pointing toward the parlor. That's where my mother was when she bled out, he says, then tells me what he told his brother
that day, busy tossing jacks at a skillet: Basil—Mommy's dying—you've got to be quiet.
How He Managed His Heart's Desire
He took our mother, whom he'd loved for years, to Dayton to his boarding house, and during the course of an afternoon confirmed her fears by seducing her. He was headstrong, blurring
and breaking his own rules, and mad to marry. She had just turned nineteen, and though smitten, had made it quite clear she was in no hurry. I need time. I'm just too young, she'd written
him weeks before, to get engaged. Afterwards, as he tried to hold her she pummeled his chest, crying "Kenny, look what you've done," words that both shamed and thrilled him. His bequest:
love is blind, and if that day he transgressed, he also plainly saw the path to yes.
How He Assuaged His Loneliness
Just nineteen months after our mother's death he wed a widow over ten years younger who proved his equal in the ambitious breadth of her desire to control. With her umber
wigs artfully coiffed and big expressive eyes she was a knock-out on our father's arm at yacht and country clubs, in dressy guise or shorts, his social alter ego who charmed
him into cruises, Paris trips, and turning our mother's house into a faux confection of French-ish gilt and gloss, adroitly telling us that she owned the bulk of his affection.
She was Little Tessie, not to be surpassed. If not his first love, she was clearly his last.
In the Hours Before He Dies
Mary still calls him "darlin'," even when he can't reply, or in any way respond. "It's time to turn you over now, darlin'," she says, like clockwork through the day and on
into the night. For months, she's bathed, brushed, shaved, dressed and undressed him without me while he charmed or raved, my proxy blessed with a mission. "Girl, we gotta' be gutsy
'cause this is hard," she tells me now, awash in unshed tears. In two more hours, back she'll come with laundered sheets and her panache restored, and I'll thank my luck. She's got a knack
for love, this one, and the right to reach him. "Hey, darlin'," she'll say, "hey, daddykins."
For Richard and Brad, Who Couldn't Be There
After days of stupor he awoke and, wide-eyed, seemed to be tracking something, or someone, through the room. Then he choked, inhaled, exhaled, and passed, with us clinging
to what the two of you have clung to since: that it was our mother who'd come for him. I'd gladly accept that now, but like him, wince at such easy assumptions. Later, when Kim,
Shirley, and I, began to wash his body, there was a sort of peace I hadn't expected. For days, I've wracked my brain for an elegy worthy of him, but find myself distracted.
I can only say with certainty that he remains here in the present tense, his legerdemain. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |