Coke Bottle Lenses
All his life he couldn’t see
and then he could and then he died.
I never saw him sans coke bottle lenses,
but they were gone. He’d
had a procedure.
The VA picked up the tab.
You might be thinking, he got in the army,
held and aimed an M16, and his sight
was poor? Yes. And was even in Viet Nam
and didn’t shoot anyone or get shot.
I last saw him in the parking lot
of a four-floor condo complex in Florida.
Months passed. Over the
phone he spoke
with enthusiasm, a sound of wonder,
about the blessing of seeing things clear:
the big W of the Waffle House sign
off the highway, the GMC logo on his SUV,
colours in a shirt he buttoned in a mirror.
Alone in his South Carolina apartment
he keeled over, maybe toppled from couch
to carpet. In ’68 “back
in the world,”
upstairs, the house he grew up in, he taped
a strip of mint green paper with black letters,
Duck Lizard Permit on a wall.
I asked what it meant, he never told me.
He wasn’t a hunter, and scoffed at people’s
differentiating: an outside dog,
an inside dog. He himself
had a Shepherd,
Bear, I never met, that was years ago.
He himself looked like a lion, and spoke
in snorts and had crude handwriting.
Robert Taylor, printed on the return address
on envelopes I opened through the years.
The VA doctor had told him he needed
a stent in a vein to prevent blockage,
to keep the blood flowing. He couldn’t walk
on sand because of his bad knees.
College Classroom
No pretty girls to impress,
no Jill teasing Cathy’s hair up front,
no James, his head on a desk in back
with me going down to shake his shoulder. Wake up!
No expounding my thoughts on what’s on the white board
in blue marker,
telling them how Cullen’s “To a Lady I Know,” four lines,
would be altogether different if “even” was not in
“She even thinks that up in heaven,”
with two or three actually listening.
This is Friday afternoon.
I’m alone in a spacious sea of empty desks,
erasing something, not Cullen, off the board.
Up in a corner
a TV on a black steel contraption hangs suspended.
On the screen breaking news: the Challenger exploded.
A flashback of the coned rocket’s lift-off in a smoke cloud,
power ascending.
A flashback of astronauts, helmets in hand,
among them Christa McAuliffe, the New Hampshire teacher,
in a blue jumpsuit, smiles into a crowd of photographers,
the first teacher to go into space.
The classroom was across the hall from my office.
White board erased,
I looked up at the screen, a man with papers on a desk,
a Windsor knot in his tie, his face
a struggle between professional and startled.
Today, recalling that day in 1986, I think of Countee Cullen’s
“She even thinks that up in heaven
her class lies late and
snores.”
The Dead
James Joyce’s “The Dead” is the final story
in his collection Dubliners.
I wasn’t Lily at the start of the party
bitter about the men these days
who wanted her only for what they
could get out of her, nor was I Gretta
at the end at a window, with snow
falling fast in the dark, lost in her memory
of Michael Furey. I was
Gretta on the stairs
listening, enraptured as
Bartell D’Arcy
sang “The Lass of Aughrim.”
I was in love, looking up
the staircase,
hearing “The Lass of Aughrim”
when the water welled and spilled
a little onto bags under my eyes,
the water standing as I stood
feeling the warmth of one who was absent.
Young Michael Furey cared for me
when I cared not a jot for him. He died.
Joyce nailed music and memory,
as did Baldwin in “Sonny’s Blues,”
maybe the greatest American story.
In “Notes of a Native Son,” music
takes Baldwin back to childhood,
His father dabbed iodine on his scraped
knee. Like Joyce, he knew
music
and memory’s stomping ground,
the human psyche. I was
Gretta
on the stairs rapt in rhythms of a voice,
only I wasn’t like Gretta seeing Michael Furey.
I’d none of her nobility with me that night.
I suppose I was more like Lily about men.
I was about a woman I felt things for.
When Byron wrote “She walks in beauty”
she was the one he was talking about.
There I sat, thinking “I’m over you.”
Many times those words came out of a juke
in a county bar at night.
I was at home.
I was fine, then I was Gretta on the stairs
hearing not Belle D’Arcy but you.
I felt jittery when you smiled.
Later,
out Getta’s window the snow was falling.
Forgery
I have done a thing that blooms
in me like a rose in snow.
I forged my
father’s name on a note, Krogstad
has found. Krogstad with his,
“Everyone
thinks of that, how would
you do it,
Mrs. Helmer? In the
river, under the ice
to float up..all bloated?”
No, not that.
Christine Linde, my true friend, says
“There are in this house
dark corners on which light must shine.”
I have my dear Doctor Rank,
“I have always loved you, Nora,
you must have known.”
Last should be
first, Torvald. “What about your duties
as a wife, a mother, your duties to God?”
That thing I was waiting for never happened.
Torvald never stepped up, never said
“I will take the blame.”
Yes, I lied
on paper. Signing my father’s name
I became for a moment someone other
than myself. I bend and
pluck a rose
from a snowbank, and have that rose
in my hand. Forget the pen that lied.
Forget Krogstad’s threat, Doctor Rank
in his ardour, Torvald at a desk
in his inner sanctum. I am leaving
his house, these three children we share.
“Your duties as a mother, your duties
to God.” I have done
something Torvald
must never know of. I am leaving
his life. I have in mine this red flower
I’ve plucked from the snow.
Peter Mladinic’s fifth book of poems, Voices from the Past, is available
from Better Than Starbucks Publications.
An animal rights advocate, he lives in Hobbs, New Mexico, United States.
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