Authors: Raymond Carver
“and we kept going
up and up and up
and your brother
had a headache
from the al-titude
and we kept going
up and up and he said,
‘where we going, dad?’
and I said, up.”
just pleasant to sit here
this morning drinking fresh coffee
wearing a clean shirt. taking stock?
what does that mean? mum dead,
dad has sclerosis. sclerosis,
a hell of a word. what is tomorrow?
tuesday? ha. my wife wants
to bake me a cake. she says. most
of my birthdays I’ve had to work.
that means. birthdays? I remember
the road into jameson lake:
hardpan, switchback, dogwood
scraping the fenders and trailing
along the canvas top of the jeep
until, past timberline, we left
the woods and road behind
and nothing ahead but steep ridges
sided with wildflowers and bunchgrass,
then over the highest ridge
into jameson valley,
and the lake still frozen.
that was a giggle. ice fishing
in july. high country, indeed.
George Mensch’s cattle
have dunged-up the living room,
windows have fallen out
and the back porch
has caved in around the kitchen:
I move through each filthy room
like a finance company.
As I stare at the smoothly worn portrait of
The Sphinx, surrounded by a strange fading landscape,
I recall the remoteness of my own hands pulling
Themselves awake this morning, shaky, ready to begin
Their terrible round of questioning.
The latin winds of Majorca
are far away still. Here,
machineguns traverse each night. By day,
high-explosives, barbed wire,
snipers…
Rats work their way in and out
of the fallen. The corpses are like lorries,
the rats drive them deeper
into the mud. Behind the lines,
on both sides, officers and men queue
for a last fuck. All but Graves, anyhow.
First the hawk must grow in a man, a spur
to sex. We live
in difficult times.
There was always the inside and
the outside. Inside, my wife,
my son and daughters, rivers
of conversation, books, gentleness
and affection.
But then one night outside
my bedroom window someone —
something, breathes, shuffles.
I rouse my wife and terrified
I shudder in her arms till morning.
That space outside my bedroom
window! The few flowers that grow
there trampled down, the Camel
cigarette butts underfoot —
I am not imagining things.
The next night and the next
it happens, and I rouse my wife
and again she comforts me and
again she rubs my legs tense
with fright and takes me in her embrace.
But then I begin to demand more
and more of my wife. In shame she
parades up and down the bedroom floor,
I driving her like a loaded wheel-
barrow, the carter and the cart.
Finally, tonight, I touch my wife lightly
and she springs awake anxious
and ready. Lights on, nude, we sit
at the vanity table and stare frantically
into the glass. Behind us, two lips,
the reflection of a glowing cigarette.