Authors: Raymond Carver
The mind can’t sleep, can only lie awake and
gorge, listening to the snow gather as
for some final assault.
It wishes Chekhov were here to minister
something—three drops of valerian, a glass
of rose water—anything, it wouldn’t matter.
The mind would like to get out of here
onto the snow. It would like to run
with a pack of shaggy animals, all teeth,
under the moon, across the snow, leaving
no prints or spoor, nothing behind.
The mind is sick tonight.
In winter two kinds of fields on the hills
outside Prosser: fields of new green wheat, the slips
rising overnight out of the plowed ground,
and waiting,
and then rising again, and budding.
Geese love this green wheat.
I ate some of it once too, to see.
And wheat stubble-fields that reach to the river.
These are the fields that have lost everything.
At night they try to recall their youth,
but their breathing is slow and irregular as
their life sinks into dark furrows.
Geese love this shattered wheat also.
They will die for it.
But everything is forgotten, nearly everything,
and sooner rather than later, please God —
fathers, friends, they pass
into your life and out again, a few women stay
a while, then go, and the fields
turn their backs, disappear in rain.
Everything goes, but Prosser.
Those nights driving back through miles of wheat fields —
headlamps raking the fields on the curves —
Prosser, that town, shining as we break over hills,
heater rattling, tired through to bone,
the smell of gunpowder on our fingers still:
I can barely see him, my father, squinting
through the windshield of that cab, saying, Prosser.
At night the salmon move
out from the river and into town.
They avoid places with names
like Foster’s Freeze, A & W, Smiley’s,
but swim close to the tract
homes on Wright Avenue where sometimes
in the early morning hours
you can hear them trying doorknobs
or bumping against Cable TV lines.
We wait up for them.
We leave our back windows open
and call out when we hear a splash.
Mornings are a disappointment.
Here my assurance drops away. I lose
all direction. Gray Lady
onto moving waters. My thoughts
stir like ruffed grouse
in the clearing across the creek.
Suddenly, as at a signal, the birds
pass silently back into pine trees.
•
Last night I dreamt a priest came to me
holding in his hands white bones,
white bones in his white hands.
He was gentle,
not like Father McCormick with his webbed fingers.
I was not frightened.
•
This afternoon the maids come with their mops
and disinfectant. They pretend I’m not
there, talk of menstrual cycles as they
push my bed this way and that. Before leaving,
they embrace. Gradually, the room
fills with leaves. I am afraid.
•
The window is open. Sunlight.
Across the room a bed creaks, creaks
under the weight of lovemaking.
The man clears his throat. Outside,
I hear sprinklers. I begin to void.
A green desk floats by the window.
•
My heart lies on the table, a parody
of affection, while her fingers rummage
the endless string of entrails.
These considerations aside,
after all those years of adventure in the Far East,
I am in love with these hands, but
I’m cold beyond imagining.
Turning through a collection
of old photographs
I come to a picture of the outlaw,
Wes Hardin, dead.
He is a big, moustached man
in a black suitcoat
on his back over a boardfloor
in Amarillo, Texas.
His head is turned at the camera
and his face
seems bruised, the hair
jarred loose.
A bullet has entered his skull
from behind
coming out a little hole
over his right eye.
Nothing so funny about that
but three shabby men
in overalls stand grinning
a few feet away.
They are all holding rifles
and that one
at the end has on what must be
the outlaw’s hat.
Several other bullets are dotted
here and there
under the fancy white shirt
the deceased is wearing
— in a manner of speaking —
but what makes me stare
is this large dark bullethole
through the slender, delicate-looking
right hand.
In our cabin we eat breaded oysters and fries
with lemon cookies for dessert, as the marriage
of Kitty and Levin unfolds on Public TV.
The man in the trailer up the hill, our neighbor,
has just gotten out of jail again.
This morning he drove into the yard with his wife
in a big yellow car, radio blaring.
His wife turned off the radio while he parked,
and together they walked slowly
to their trailer without saying anything.
It was early morning, birds were out.
Later, he propped open the door
with a chair to let in spring air and light.
It’s Easter Sunday night,
and Kitty and Levin are married at last.
It’s enough to bring tears to the eyes, that marriage
and all the lives it touched. We go on
eating oysters, watching television,
remarking on the fine clothes and amazing grace
of the people caught up in this story, some of them
straining under the pressures of adultery,
separation from loved ones, and the destruction
they must know lies in store just after
the next cruel turn of circumstance, and then the next.
A dog barks. I get up to check the door.
Behind the curtains are trailers and a muddy
parking area with cars. The moon sails west
as I watch, armed to the teeth, hunting
for my children. My neighbor,
liquored up now, starts his big car, races
the engine, and heads out again, filled
with confidence. The radio wails,
beats something out. When he has gone
there are only the little ponds of silver water
that shiver and can’t understand their being here.
Now for the other life. The one
without mistakes.
—
LOU LIPSITZ
My wife is in the other half of this mobile home
making a case against me.
I can hear her pen
scratch, scratch.
Now and then she stops to weep,
then—
scratch, scratch.
The frost is going out of the ground.
The man who owns this unit tells me,
Don’t leave your car here.
My wife goes on writing and weeping,
weeping and writing in our new kitchen.
Hanging around the house each day
the mailman never smiles; he tires
easily, is losing weight,
that’s all; they’ll hold the job —
besides, he needed a rest.
He will not hear it discussed.
As he walks the empty rooms, he
thinks of crazy things
like Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey,
shaking hands with Franklin D. Roosevelt
at Grand Coulee Dam,
New Year’s Eve parties he liked best;
enough things to fill a book
he tells his wife, who
also thinks crazy things
yet keeps on working.
But sometimes at night
the mailman dreams he rises from his bed
puts on his clothes and goes
out, trembling with
joy…
He hates those dreams
for when he wakes
there’s nothing left; it is
as if he’d never been
anywhere, never done anything;
there is just the room,
the early morning without sun,
the sound of a doorknob
turning slowly.
3 fat trout hang
in the still pool
below the new
steel bridge.
two friends
come slowly up
the track.
one of them,
ex-heavyweight,
wears an old
hunting cap.
he wants to kill,
that is catch & eat,
the fish.
the other,
medical man,
he knows the chances
of that.
he thinks it fine
that they should
simply hang there
always
in the clear water.
the two keep going
but they
discuss it as
they disappear
into the fading trees
& fields & light,
upstream.
FOR STEPHEN DOBYNS
You are falling in love again. This time
it is a South American general’s daughter.
You want to be stretched on the rack again.
You want to hear awful things said to you
and to admit these things are true.
You want to have unspeakable acts
committed against your person, things
nice people don’t talk about in classrooms.
You want to tell everything you know
on Simon Bolivar, on Jorge Luis Borges,
on yourself most of all.
You want to implicate everyone in this!
Even when it’s four o’clock in the morning
and the lights are burning still —
those lights that have been burning night and day
in your eyes and brain for two weeks —
and you are dying for a smoke and a lemonade,
but she won’t turn off the lights that woman
with the green eyes and little ways about her,
even then you want to be her gaucho.
Dance with me, you imagine hearing her say
as you reach for the empty beaker of water.
Dance with me, she says again and no mistake.
She picks this minute to ask you, hombre,
to get up and dance with her in the nude.
No, you don’t have the strength of a fallen leaf,
not the strength of a little reed basket
battered by waves on Lake Titicaca.
But you bound out of bed
just the same, amigo, you dance
across wide open spaces.
On the Columbia River near Vantage,
Washington, we fished for whitefish
in the winter months; my dad, Swede —
Mr Lindgren—and me. They used belly-reels,
pencil-length sinkers, red, yellow, or brown
flies baited with maggots.
They wanted distance and went clear out there
to the edge of the riffle.
I fished near shore with a quill bobber and a cane pole.
My dad kept his maggots alive and warm
under his lower lip. Mr Lindgren didn’t drink.
I liked him better than my dad for a time.
He let me steer his car, teased me
about my name “Junior,” and said
one day I’d grow into a fine man, remember
all this, and fish with my own son.
But my dad was right. I mean
he kept silent and looked into the river,
worked his tongue, like a thought, behind the bait.
The mallard ducks are down
for the night. They chuckle
in their sleep and dream of Mexico
and Honduras. Watercress
nods in the irrigation ditch
and the tules slump forward, heavy
with blackbirds.
Rice fields float under the moon.
Even the wet maple leaves cling
to my windshield. I tell you Maryann,
I am happy.
FOR JOHN HAINES AND KEITH WILSON
I stalked a cougar once in a lost box-canyon
off the Columbia River gorge near the town and river
of Klickitat. We were loaded for grouse. October,
gray sky reaching over into Oregon, and beyond,
all the way to California. None of us had been there,
to California, but we knew about that place—they had
restaurants
that let you fill your plate as many times as you wanted.
I stalked a cougar that day,
if stalk is the right word, clumping and scraping along
upwind of the cougar, smoking cigarettes too,
one after the other, a nervous, fat, sweating kid
under the best of circumstances, but that day
I stalked a
cougar…
And then I was weaving drunk there in the living room,
fumbling to put it into words, smacked and scattered
with the memory of it after you two had put
your
stories,
black bear stories, out on the table.
Suddenly I was back in that canyon, in that gone state.
Something I hadn’t thought about for years:
how I stalked a cougar that day.