Going Forward
The Ericksons didn’t get the name Sheba
from the Bible. Lutherans, from Minnesota,
at least Edith was. Not that Lutherans
don’t read the Bible. Maybe Sheba
came from Come Back, Little Sheba.
Theirs, a black and white Boston terrier,
ran the length of chain link between their
yard and ours. I remember Edith, blonde,
stout in a flowered apron at a birdbath.
Bill, knuckles gnarled from arthritis,
behind a push mower. A sun-visor,
khaki shirt and slacks. He worked in lumber.
Nancy, obese at ten, splashed in a rubber
pool. In her future, a teachers college
in Kansas, marriage to a mail carrier
who already had two children. Nancy,
Bill and Edith’s only child. They climbed
into a Continental. Bill drove to a restaurant
with knotty pine walls. This morning
I open a gate, go in. Sheba’s frantically
running up and down, going forward.
Raleigh Coupons
A smoker of Raleigh straights, Adele saved
her coupons, and got a silver toaster.
Quiet by nature, she said little to the smoke
rising to the ceiling, less to Sir Walter
on her pack. Her parents were from Germany.
Her mother gutted fish on a breezeway.
Her father, a black fedora; a full, trim, white
moustache; a silver pocket watch kept
to himself. Her husband’s humped back
was shadowy. He owned an auto upholstery
shop. Their son Frank and I culled Dude
and Nugget girlie fantasies from fishbone
patterns in his coveralls. In their finished
basement of knotty pine I asked Frank
who he thought was prettier, Marilyn Monroe
or his mother. He looked at me really
seriously. I heard the clump of chain on wood;
the big, mangey, black dog Prince’s platform
in their backyard. I saw my reflection
in Adele’s toaster. Her skin like wrinkled
parchment, black hair covered her ears
but didn’t come to her shoulders. Frank’s
was darker. Her mother’s mouse-brown hair
in a bun in oak shade told me nicely
not to walk on my toes. Her father drove
a black coupe. On their breezeway he stood
at the top of stairs, boasted Frank’s all A’s
and laughed at my report card. He barely
spoke English. His wife could speak it a bit
better. I liked watching her hands working
a knife in Cold War America. Three of Frank’s
cousins visited from Germany. The eldest
walked us home from our first day at school.
Pitchers
You’re too young to remember the Yankees’
Ryne Duren? The pinstripes, the dark blue
cap, the face blond and wide, the rimless
glasses. He was blind and fast, practically
blind. On the mound the wind up, delivery.
Even the TV viewers’ Schlitz commercials
between innings were afraid of him, Ryne,
in his grave with impresarios of stillness:
starters Ford, Span, Burdette, reliever Labine.
Denny McClain of the prison sentence won
thirty games, the last to do so, I believe,
in America. We teach kids they can be
what they want to be. The aforementioned
from their silence cry, Poets dead and gone!
In that great stadium in the sky Duren is
William Faulkner, who left poetry’s
marble fawn for The Sound and the Fury.
Ford is Richard Wilbur; Span, Tony Hecht;
Labine, Miss Bishop. If pitchers were poets,
McClain, the one still living would be Louise
Bogan, the woman in Roethe’s “I Knew
a Woman.” While we’re at it, let’s throw in
knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm, baffling batters
from the mound in that stadium in the sky,
He’d be the great E. A. Robinson,
character creator, rhymer, classics lover,
and, like the Yanks’ Arroyo, a reliable closer.
The Black Path
Stephanie Evans lived in Tyler, Texas
but somehow found her way
into my classroom that was like a cellar
corner. Even with its high
rectangular windows and high ceiling
it seemed dark. Her face seemed like a face
out of a Renoir painting: soft eyes, dimpled
chin, light complexion, a late Victorian face
in that corner of southeast New Mexico
I knew as our room.
I’m not sure if she was in class the day
I lost my temper (some days I thought,
there are twenty of you, only one of me)
and dismissed class thirty minutes early.
I walked out of the building into a sunny late
morning and encountered Mitchell Pierce,
my dean, surprised to see him
on that part of the campus. I felt compelled
to tell him I let the class out early, and why.
He said little, only indicated he understood,
then walked on toward the building I’d left.
It wasn’t long after that
that he became the college’s president.
A job he worked hard at, and for which
he was paid well for the next twenty years.
He could have had a dream retirement,
but shortly after he retired he fell ill.
He couldn’t stay retired. For a while he
served as interim president, then stayed on
in an advisory capacity. I heard that
sometimes he’d be walking on campus
and he’d fall. He could never quite move on,
let go of the job he was so dedicated to.
But even if he’d travelled to Tahiti, the illness
would have been inside him, taking over.
He could have gone anywhere,
but he was needed at the college, happy
at the college. That day I told him I “lost it”
I didn’t have to. As busy as he was,
he must have had a lot on his mind.
Students were all around. He saw me,
I saw him. I could have just nodded hello
and kept walking across campus,
toward my office. That was one of the rare
instances I dismissed class early
due to my being upset. I can’t remember
what upset me or if Stephanie was there,
at desk, thinking lesser of me than when
class began. (There are twenty of you,
more often twenty-five, one of me.)
The common denominator of any class.
Stephanie looked like a girl out of the horse
and carriage era. Mitch wore a suit and tie,
most often a red tie.
The Skyliners
Everybody must have loved somebody
from Pittsburgh at some time
in their lives. I have. It wasn’t romantic.
It happened slowly from being with a person
five days a week for the good part of a year,
1966-67, in a warehouse where we kept
capacitors with little wires in bins,
and generators with globes on shelves,
Electronic parts, on a naval base in Cutler,
Maine. The person I worked for, and loved
came from Pittsburgh’s The Hill. His hair
a widow’s peak, he twirled a toothpick,
he sang softly in a high-pitched voice.
He was Black, with copper skin, a navy lifer.
Each Monday and Thursday, very early in
the morning, I wheel my Waste Management
barrel from my yard out to the back alley
behind my cinderblock fence. Recently
out there, and it was all dark, I looked up
at the sky just starting to get light. I’d like
to think it was shifting clouds, but honestly
I can’t remember. I glanced at the sky
and thought of The Skyliners, a vocal group
from Pittsburgh whose records charted in
the early 1960s. Jimmy Beaumont their lead
is gone, so is Janet Vogel, the one female
in the group. I then thought of R. K. Brown.
If alive, he’s well up in years today.
Back inside, a mouse, in fluorescent light,
sprinted across the floor, from fridge
to automatic washer. I wondered if, late
at night, it goes beyond the kitchen. Mice,
I’ve heard, live in walls. This one looked well fed.
I sat in the living room, thinking The Skyliners
were really good; when their songs charted
I didn’t realize just how good.
Just like with Brown, I was too busy rubbing
shoulders with him, to realize what I felt
was love. If you really love someone, do you
ever stop loving them? That mouse is alive.
Jimmy and Janet are gone. But I can hear
them, and Brown, as clearly as I see his face.
Peter Mladinic's most recent book of poems Maiden Rock, is available from UnCollected Press. An animal rights advocate, he lives in Hobbs, New Mexico, United States.
Just finished Mladinic's most recent book on Amazon, Maiden Rock. My favorite poems have a few things in common: they cut to the heart of humanity, and they see the poetic and the universal in the nitty-gritty details of daily life. Nothing is ordinary. Everything is indicative...
ReplyDeletePete Mladinic is one of the best writers of poetry on the scene today.
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