Wind and the
sound of wind—
across the bay a chainsaw revs
and stalls. I’ve come here to write,
but instead
I’ve been thinking
about my father, who, in his last year,
after his surgery, told my mother
he wasn’t
sorry—that he’d cried
when the other woman left him,
that his time with her
had made him
happier than anything
he’d ever done. And my mother,
who cooked and cleaned for him
all those
years, cared for him
after his heart attack, could not
understand why he liked the other
woman more
than her,
but he did. And she told me
that after he died she never went
to visit his
grave—not once.
You think you know them,
these creatures robed
in your
parents’ skins. Well,
you don’t. Any more than you know
what the pines want from the wind,
if the
lake’s content with this pale
smear of sunset, if the loon calls
for its mate, or for another.
Jon Loomis, The
Mansion of Happiness (Oberlin College Press, 2016)
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