| Poem for Tuesday |
[Jun. 23rd, 2009|12:42 am] |
Five Houses Down By Christian Wiman
I loved his ten demented chickens and the hell-eyed dog, the mailbox shaped like a huge green gun. I loved the eyesore opulence of his five partial cars, the wonder-cluttered porch with its oilspill plumage, tools cauled in oil, the dark clockwork of disassembled engines christened Sweet Baby and benedicted Old Bitch; and down the steps into the yard the explosion of mismatched parts and black scraps amid which, like a bad sapper cloaked in luck, he would look up stunned, patting the gut that slopped out of his undershirt and saying, Son, you lookin' to make some scratch? All afternoon we'd pile the flatbed high with stacks of Exxon floormats mysteriously stencilled with his name, rain-rotted sheetrock or miles of misfitted pipes, coil after coil of rusted fencewire that stained for days every crease of me, rollicking it all to the dump where, while he called every ragman and ravened junkdog by name, he catpicked the avalanche of trash and fished some always fixable thing up from the depths. Something about his endless aimless work was not work, my father said. Somehow his barklike earthquake curses were not curses, for he could goddam a slipped wrench and shitfuck a stuck latch, but one bad word from me made his whole being twang like a nail mis-struck. Aint no call for that, son, no call at all. Slipknot, whatknot, knot from which no man escapes— prestoed back to plain old rope; whipsnake, blacksnake, deep in the wormdirt worms like the clutch of mud: I wanted to live forever five houses down in the womanless rooms a woman sometimes seemed to move through, leaving him twisting a hand-stitched dishtowel or idly wiping the volcanic dust. It seemed like heaven to me: beans and weenies from paper plates, black-fingered tinkerings on the back stoop as the sun set, on an upturned fruitcrate a little jamjar of rye like ancient light, from which, once, I took a single, secret sip, my eyes tearing and my throat on fire.
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From this week's New Yorker.
I had a lovely day with dementordelta, gblvr, and perkypaduan (or hufflepants depending on where you're reading this). The former got here first and we watched some Merlin and I dragged her to the bank with me. Then we met the others for lunch at the mall food court -- easiest place with all of us plus my kids. And after a stop in Hot Topic to check out the new Harry Potter merchandise (which seems sadly outnumbered by the new Twilight merchandise), we came back to my house, sent the kids to the pool, and watched Nobel Son (because some of us wanted to watch Alan Rickman and some of us wanted to watch Eliza Dushku).
The opening sequence was so graphically violent that I wasn't sure I'd make it through the rest of the movie, but the rest of it was largely quite entertaining, though this is very black comedy -- terrific cast (Mary Steenburgen, Danny DeVito, Bill Pullman), unpredictable script, most amusing car chase sequence I've ever seen (in a mall via remote control). Parts of it are actually quite sad, though Alan is hilarious as a man completely infatuated with himself. When the movie ended, I showed them the business card scene from Arrested Development and we had cookies. Here are some photos of Cisne Branco in Baltimore yesterday:







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