My father said the dog had wolf blood in him;
dogs like that — rangy, rowdy dogs just a little too dumb
to be trusted inside, dogs nobody bothers to teach —
are always said to have wolf blood in them.
He was nobody’s pet except his own:
lived outside, did not take walks, ate like a horse,
and his sole pleasure was escape.
From time to time he would slip out and run like thunder
five or six miles from home and kill chickens.
Cursing, scowling, my dad would go to fetch him,
bring him back daubed in blood and grinning wildly,
A mad king in the back bed of a shitty pickup.
He’d lay in the summer shade panting:
dumb as a bag of hammers, soft as cotton,
just canny enough to be aware
of all the ways a wire fence can bend.
Original Work
October 5: Build
He spilled carbolic acid in the hall once; the stink was terrible,
and no apology, either. All summer he’s been
up and down the stairs, feverish, a dozen times a day.
And yes this is, of course, what one gets
with tenants in a town like this, but still.
It’s not even that I mind the smell or the racket
or him coming in and out at every hour of night with fingers or jars of organs or bundles of long bones wrapped in oilcloth,
but Christ almighty, he’s a crushing bore.
He doesn’t shake hands, which is the custom here,
and he talks too much on the subject of himself.
Next time I’ll rent out to a musician, someone
who at least will have a good story to excuse his sins.
October 4: Freeze
The moment she sees me she goes
Still in every ink-dipped limb, not even her nose
twitches, not even an ear swivels,
the amber liquid of her eyes glassy
as a pond in winter. I have been moving
my big, loud body carelessly through the stubbled
field and she is caught now, watching. She is not sure
if I am a predator like her, or merely something
large and stupid passing through the world.
Any moment now one of us will crack like ice thawing,
one of us will dart away,
one of us will slip soundless through the fabric of the autumn
and one of us will be here standing still.
October 3: Bait
He put the flashlight in my hand, said
I should follow him into the night, he draped his own sweater
over my pajamas, helped me pull on my sneakers.
My glasses were smudged, my feet were stupid with sleep,
but I followed him (always, anywhere)
out to the yard. Swept the beam like he showed me,
while he bent and straightened, bent and straightened, bucket in hand.
I saw how the soil had unburied itself for the night,
how the ground lived, how the dark parted just enough
to let his hands dip in.
October 2: Mindless
I watched her once or twice when I was tiny,
How her gnarled hands worked their own image into the dough
Over, and over, and over, how her voice
Skipped over the tempo of her kneading, disregarded it, set it aside,
How her hands were at their own work that was nothing to do with her.
I can’t do that. Haven’t practiced enough yet, maybe, or maybe
Hers wasn’t the blood that passed down a restless brain, a brain that ticks
And ticks and ticks and looks for things to pick up, turn over like a magpie
Scavenging. Regardless
when I’m kneading I am always thinking about it, the bread, the dough, the rhythm
of my hands that aren’t like hers. Not yet.
October 1: Ring
In the old days, I tell him, we had to wait until people were home,
You couldn’t just expect they would be there when you called.
You could maybe try the office, if they had one,
But it was a different world before you were in it, I say.
He closes his eyes and tries, tries, I can see it,
Tries to trace the shape of a world so disconnected
You could reach through the air and not find someone listening every time.
And I picture that world, the empty rooms of the past,
I reach back, call up the memory he’s trying to imagine.
I find it there, still echoing with no answer. How it felt
To need someone who wasn’t picking up.
list of things I’m discarding (incomplete)
- Books I picked up in airports to read on flights I ended up sleeping through
- Keys to houses where I’ve never lived
- Buttons so old they’ve crumbled
- Dried flowers given to me by someone
- (probably not my wife)
- Rosaries I have not prayed on
- Postage stamps I was not collecting until I was
- Eight dollars seventy-seven cents (Canadian)
- Fifteen plastic straws meticulously trimmed to a length of three inches by my son who does not know
- when or why he did so
- A certain class of adjectives
- Notebooks of bad poetry (now digitized)
- Shoes that don’t fit me
- dresses that don’t fit me
- names that don’t fit me
- Diploma from a school my parents invented
- Hats that fit me but not my style, and also:
- Several of my former styles
- Dried nail polish
- Hair dryer
- Several generations of dried tears (in handkerchiefs)
- The eternal burden of Keeping
- An extremely fine collection of graveyard dirt
The First Mrs. G.
Use it up, wear it out,
make it do or do without.
In their fortieth year of marriage she took
barbiturates in two handfuls; he took
a mistress to Reno and soldiered on.
Maybe love is the enormity of what we lose.
Maybe love is what fills
what we lack.
Maybe love is only making do.
For my son, who had to ask me twice
If ever you think I couldn’t hear you, know:
sometimes we are treading
water, sometimes we are watching
history happening one slow monstrosity at a time,
and sometimes
I bend myself to write because
it is the only labor I can do.
Sometimes I know that something you will read about is happening, sometimes
the world’s sharp teeth are right outside the door, and yes
sometimes you say my name and I don’t answer. Son,
I am pouring ink from wounds that you can’t see.
Cork City, January, 2007
That Friday that it pelted rain in Cork, and we went out despite it,
Down the Western Road towards the long white bridge;
The day we saw the swans, white as chalk and heedless of the rain.
Up Sunday’s Well towards the gaol we put our heads down
and walked against the current in the gutters.
I saw the raindrops beat across your back
and hid my hands from January’s cold.
The world was strange and silvered, and I watched my breath
cloud and dissolve beneath the fall of rain.
Still we kept walking, both of us knowing
we’d follow the other til the weather cleared.