A Sort of Memoir (after Louise Glück)
I was born skeptical, under the sign of Gemini.
The only intelligent one of my so-called friends said
I was a philosophical miscreant, a bear in a depressing
life. Cold comfort in anyone’s age. I grew up on the edge
of a medium-sized city in an unremarkable family.
I was taught gestures of faith and the forms of patriotism.
In the country’s brick-squared schools from an earnest tribe
of teachers, I learned of improbable adventures and wondrous
transformations and distant threats. No war and no famine
touched me. I lived an ordinary life, distinguished
only by my point of view from a million others—
all claiming uniqueness. Around my circumspect island
of a life, everything ran fast—out into space and in
toward the double helix. From my elders, I had a philosophy
of altruism inside a mantra of love—such as it was. And
when I wrote, if my tropes were fixed, it was because I
needed only a few words—I never knew who’d hear me.
But sometimes unbidden, a picture—thin as sliced tissue
for a pathologist—filled my invisible eye—some mountain
roadcut with a pipe flowing chill water, a field of snow
peopled by iced trees and all washed by that impossibly
crisp blue, but it took me a long time to learn words’
destructive power in the gut and blood. Words were piranha
nibbles that made lace of what they claimed to be private
and holy, and it was like remembering my wedding pictures
better than my wedding. Maybe I was celibate.
It seemed impossible that death’s deluge drowns all that.
Worse is being forgotten. I could remember my grandma
but not her mother. I even forgot that so old name,
and if I knew it when I saw it in the granite graveyard
somewhere in a far-away place—names with circles
for umlauts and fish-hook letters—all I had afterward
was a snapshot in my brain, and it too one day winked out.
Then I was a name with an inaccurately recalled CV attached
to certain things. And then these things, soon enough
cooling in my hand, became just things. And
they were stolen or broken or valued abstractly
for a surface existence that never was me anyway …
my memoir a remainder in the bookshop of ghost tales.
By Susan Maxwell Campbell
From: United States