The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Roger Mitchell
Roger Mitchell is the subject of this issue’s Closer Look. Please also go there to better appreciate his work over time. New Poems by Roger Mitchell Drinking Wine on the Deck in Late
Afternoon
Watching
tiny grains of yellow dust
He
had set out, as they say in old books,
German
lady barber
Svetlana
Filipovich, doyenne
Dark
forests, shafts of light,
A
gas station just off Germantown Avenue,
Now
that I’m older than Wallace Stevens
The
clouds float sleek and low over the hills
Taking
Your Hands off the Wheel I sold the set of 1910s, as though they were mine. I meant to buy them back, return them, though I must have thought they were mine in a way. The set I replaced them with was newer but beaten up. It didn’t look as good on a shelf and so lay stacked sideways on the floor in a corner of my parents’ basement, never used as I recall, until it was hauled away by one of the handymen Mother hired around the house. That Hungarian, I think, who fled Budapest in ’56 and mowed lawns for a living. They thought I could use it at college. It was never like that at college. I took it (though I must have been sent it), but never used it. There never seemed to be any need for a broad, reliable, compendious view of anything, especially one from before the atom was smashed, or the Germans. Merely a book I had to have read the night before or a paper made out of facts I could only assemble quickly in a mind that couldn’t sort them and a prose that hardly concealed it. I was sorry I did it, later. My clumsy attempt to undo it almost appeased them, though the look on Mother’s face when I told her is still with me. Mother is not, though. It was fifty years ago at least, when the turn in my life began, and I could see the long bend of it out in front of me for years, taking me I didn’t know where. Here, I suppose. Thinking of Mother. Happy I had the chance to steal my life, and not have to pay it back. IIWhat, after all, was the good of an encyclopedia? I couldn’t have asked the question then. It was obvious what the value of so many carefully chosen words on all the leading subjects was. These were admittedly not Freud’s or Plato’s or Kepler’s original thoughts, but those passed through an approving or governing body of experts who explained everything. Everything, it seems, had an explanation, if it wasn’t already in the preferred mode, information itself: raw, digestible, ready for use. It was another world than mine. As was the world. That first year, I roomed with someone I almost never spoke to. Nor he to me. He had friends from the school he’d come from. They were cool, aloof, had an assured bearing, which I studied. They knew more than I did, though what it was never clear. They talked together in the next room, went in and out without a greeting. I stayed away. Came back late at night, fell asleep. The encyclopedia had nothing to say about not knowing things about yourself that you had to know before you could hope to know anything. So I wrote a paper on the origin of God. Four pages. The professor had me in for a chat. I wish I’d remembered his name. He was almost pleasant, bemused, and while he was wondering what sort of disturbance he had on his hands, I was wondering why I was there. In that room, of course. But, underneath, why anywhere. I spent my time sucking things in through my eyeballs. Years later, I could spot a classmate in a crowded air terminal, even one I’d never met or said a word to. III“Stealing it” may be over-dramatic, even false. As the phrase goes, they gave me life. I hardly stole it. But like the encyclopedia, it came in a set of matched bindings, embossed in gold, the pages thin, almost transparent, but densely crammed with words. All they thought I would need, much of which they didn’t know themselves–why should they?–justified right and left, in lordly columns, rolled like banners down the page. I confess I read in it from time to time, knew the population of Rome in 1900, the number of board feet of mahogany Peru exported, the currency of Curacao. I forget if there was an entry under “Sex.” There must have been, but it told me nothing, as most entries did. Nothing I could use to make my way across the quad or up to the dining hall and back, at the door of which they kept a few stained ties in case you forgot yours. Choosing where to sit, with whom, the subject of conversation, how much of your own ignorance to reveal so as to get some help with the incomprehensible assignment in a course as much removed from the world as I was,-- these were the issues, these the great tracts across which students tramped in the snow leading up to Christmas in the years after the Russians had the bomb and no one felt safe in a world we ourselves had made one morning in Hiroshima. But, yes, my parents wanted a world you could put in alphabetical, or, for that matter, any order. IVRiding the T into the city, I looked at the ads above our heads, or, if quick, at people across the aisle, unavoidably myself in the window. You have to look at something, if only the masked faces and slack limbs of the riders enduring the necessary death of movement that took them elsewhere. Everyone has a life and a want. Everyone has, too, the distance between them. Mine was to know who lived at the back of the brick tenements only fifty feet from the grinding roar of the train. There were lights on in some of them. People were eating or making love behind curtains that never opened in an approaching and receding rattle of metal, in intervals of throaty calm. On the platform, waiting, I watched rats scurry along the rails. Others watched, too. No one spoke. No one had to. Was it at Park that one came up onto Boston Common, a pool of somnolent black in the crash of city lights? My errand? Whatever it was, it was never the one I was on, which I was not to learn for years, when I would stop carrying other people’s dreams around in a dented suitcase, listening instead to late night radio jazz or writing knotted little phrasings I called poems, only of course to wind up carrying a different set of the dreams of others, the ones I thought of as mine. I had been born in that city, which you would think would make it mine, but I was nowhere in it. The trees were alien. The stones were cold. Remarkable that happiness grows in such cankered passages, that out of little so much comes, poems rising out of castoff glances, evasive mastery. VThese are a few extractable events surrounding a dubious act in the fifties. Our hero wanted to go out west to ski and hadn’t the cash. So, he sold what some might have called a part of his inheritance, the legacy of world intelligence, a fund of fact and opinion unmatched since the Dark Ages fell apart. But how could the sifters know what bashing the slopes at Aspen meant or how bunking four nights against the working end of an all-night bowling alley could bend the intellect? He learned to tell a strike from a split by the fast, hard, clean smack of the pins as they scattered in the pit, none of the split’s gradual dismantling dribble. And then there was the drive, non-stop, Boston-Denver, forty-two hours, with two strangers neither of whom he ever saw again, though one, called Milo, came from Italy and wore his coat over the shoulders, his arms free to gesticulate, and the other, he tried hard to recall, was either Jim or Dan. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |