Read The Road In Is Not the Same Road Out Online
Authors: Karen Solie
is largely involuntary.
March, and the capital lights one dim lamp.
Its restaurants are closed; its thoughts, inward.
The fat of its heart has been spent on winter.
In the National Gallery all the seeds of colour
are preserved. Lit like a mountain
laboratory, its concrete architectural prologue
aspires to stone in the floodlights.
Chambers, anterooms, great halls, rotunda, dome,
restaurant, theatre, gift shop, inside is a landscape
of the unconscious mind.
I can't find the elevator with the map
I've been given. Around the corner of every era,
every great advancement in perspective, the same
security guard and the twentieth century
is being rehung.
Joshua Reynolds, show me the way,
you whose career, all due respect, never
peaked, but who painted until your eyes
gave out. Your Colonel Charles Churchill,
visual allegories to hand, stares wanly
and imperfectly past the elements
of composition, like a ghost after the fugitive
carmine of his living complexion, another victim
of the experiment. Though the experiment
continues as he fades and is a kind of life.
Our eyes meet in the frame.
Back at the hotel, a message waits,
received through the crowded air's invisible
wires. The message is a liquid crystal display.
Distance's droning lecture on policy is interrupted.
Doors of the long grey hall fly open.
The 1980s. Beginning of the long decade, the century's
late works. Snow on the grid, field bisected
by a new-model John Deere's progress in low gear
with a front-end load of straw bales. Its operator's daughter
dons her brace, thinks her scoliosis the devil's work
on her, a not-good-enough Christian. Her mother talks
scripture on the phone in the kitchen and the kitchen
smells of coffee and it smells of dog. Christmas lights
strung along the eaves of bungalows, vehicles moored
to bungalows by their block heater cords. Rumours
of drunkenness and corruption sunk the Democrat's bid
for mayor.
For we favour the simple expression of the complex
thought. The large shape's impact of the unequivocal. Flat forms
that destroy illusion and reveal truth.
Now the union's eye
has twilight in it, and the city dump will stay where it is.
Evening falls, or rises, or emanates from the figures.
The SportsPlex and Model Aviation Museum, the Muncie
Mall and both quadrangles of Ball State University
shed their associations, perform an unknown adventure
in unknown space. Halogens illuminate an anecdote
of the spirit. You won't see his face around here again.
The violet quarry hosts a greater darkness further in,
the White River sleeps in its cabin of pack ice.
Among the graduating class an abstract feeling develops,
an inclination to symbolism born of the fatal car wreck on
New Year's, a spike in requests for Bob Seger
to the call-ins from a quasi-religious experience of limitless
immensity. To achieve this clarity is inevitably
to be misunderstood. Their lives take on the dimensions
of the fields, the city, its facades and its plan, whose happiness
will be their own. Rent, food budget, sweaters
indoors. Basketball, basketball, and a second marriage.
after Jack Chambers
Neither question nor assertion makes sense
when truth is a tone of voice. As if I were a wall,
              a former life
                            walks through me, each
              modest architectural feature
                            an anthology of meanings to which paint
has been applied. They don't retain
traces, that's in thinking.
One would do well to adopt
a chemically pure standpoint
              of appraisal, to lay down the repairs
                            and cleaning cloths, to set aside the planâ
              there is no plan.
As object of exchange and economic indicator,
              it entertains no hopes for us, is escorted
by its infestations back to ground.
Wind plays through its failings. Basement
cells divide toward the water table. The roof
              maintains no argument
              with rain, with shortcuts in
                            construction, the storm's many elements
as the one true storm.
              Evergreens, off-street parking, clouds at dusk
              like clouds in western art.
The gardener, after a time,
feels the garden belongs to him,
              familiar objects extend
his spirit:
a malady expressed by drowsiness.
             Â
Wind moves likewise the feather and the ash.
             Â
You are the spirits, you are the dust.
                           Â
Take them with you into the astonishing
             Â
night alien to us both.
Those new flagstones need undermining,
the concrete sundial could use a tilt and while he's at it
he'll make a disaster of the borders. His order
is not our order. He prays to his own ingenuity. His desires
feature a plump worm larder and gathering
the tender beechnuts while ducking horrors the surface
churns out: cat-things, dog-things, pellet guns, poison,
trowels to flip him over the fence into the neighbour's
as though that doesn't hurt. It doesn't work for us,
his gross body plan, eyes skinned shut and his front feet
hands, polydactylic and psychoanalytically proportioned
in that they are oversized and hairless. He does not require
an afterlife. When the consequence whose birth
we've outsourced, reared
extra-muros
on the output
of our comfort zone, comes of age, he'll rejoin
his live/work situation as manager and sole proprietor
of our old estates. He'll raise each molehill like a flag.
In the morning the lawn will be a field of victory.
Only through the train window is the idle backhoe
figurative, do electrical transformers astride
the fine and dwindling farmland pause
spellbound in their march toward the lakeshore.
At Oakville's irritable limits, hills of scrap aluminum glitter
like a picnic ground in heaven. No one gets on or off
at Ingersoll. Aldershot, Woodstock, Glencoe, Chatham
came of age in the corridor. It remembers where cars
and appliances came from when they came
from there, witnesses the fate of plastics
and obsolete electronics purchased
at big-box developments pinning the new grids down.
Whose architectures are illiterate, but whose lots
are full. Some good jobs have returned,
though diminished, untrustworthy in their refusal to commit,
and withholding benefits. They must be lived with
or left. Descendants of these unions construct
rumours, tributes, territorial admonishments
in fatcap and wildstyle on overpass and soundfence,
life-sized, largely unreadable at speed, though a sense
of form lingers. Of colour. Old service roads
partnered with criminal opportunism end
in abandoned lots, tears, and assurances
to the contrary. I never meant to hurt anyone.
No parties in formal wear await us at the stations,
no family vacations. Here are creosote and allergies,
energy drinks, your fellow passengers:
young mothers, elderly couples, gamers talking shop,
business travellers stuck in the minors, students
clothed in battlefields of competing logos, totally in love
from the neck down. You are a type, too.
Bereft, content, bored witless, anticipatory, according
to your natures, to the capabilities of your remote
devices, deflecting ministrations of a seatmate
with a theory. Or asleep in the mind's room decorated
in the cathode ray's flickering blue, maturing perfume
of boiled potatoes and 1970s optimism. By now
you're far from home. You've found out
who your friends are. A passing freight
throws a bag over your head, pushes your thoughts over,
roars and clatters at a forearm's distance like the exposed
mechanics of a parallel universe and for a moment
you belong to the ages, without affiliation.
Until the snack trolley arrives to restore you to yourself,
to managers and clerks smoking in solidarity
on loading docks of light industrial areas, to mid-morning
in October, pools of remaindered night on leesides
seeding winter in the vacancies. As you coast
into the original neighbourhoods, ruins imply not
failure, but a lesson in patience. Memorial
to all that will neither be remade nor fall apart
completely. In trackside yards roam brightly
coloured polymers of contemporary
playtime, rainsoaked furnitures of early marriage
left with the question of material integrity.
Playing fields, the Park & Ride, nursing homes
like ghost ships. Wholesale Monuments. Everywhere,
motives on display, arguments with the ideal,
though it makes no sense to say we've always
played this wrong. One doubt hides another.
A record of our conduct. Standing water. Off-world
junkspace with mysterious distributive protocols,
peevish piles of refuse under a “No Dumping” sign.
For a bit of certainty, you would do anything.
It's no use to look within. These towns,
like your own, lived in or yet to be, are forever inadequate
to the secret self who forges ahead, calls
from beyond any given incorporation, from the fog
into which the railbed steals, with your own,
better voice. It will catch you living somewhere
nearly by accident, but fluently, to all appearances
the station you were born to.
When they were together she thought it God's punishment.
When he left she thought it God's punishment.
When vermin overrun the city's boardinghouses
and highrises it's God sticking a hose
into the Devil's hole to flood him out.
And when the floodwaters rose,
where was everyone?
When fog risen from the lake assimilates varietals
of exhaust, evolves through the financial district, renders toxic
the neighbourhoods, swells over suburbs, the Devil
has forsaken another project, saying sometimes
I can't fucking concentrate on anything.
He says he does what he does sometimes because
the Devil gets in like water through his weak places.
When it rains like now the Devil yells at God
I've told you not to call me that. When it rains like now.
And every time God laughs at this
roofs lift off along the Eastern Seaboard. The Eastern Seaboard
will never understand.
When we are broken, to whom are we opened?
God's taken all the fish home to live with him, honey.
And when the earth shakes that's God rearranging furniture
not a bomb in the subway like we thought.
If you feel the Devil with you, he is there.
If you think God has abandoned you,
you are abandoned, his attention
on the World Series, more important than any one man,
smiting the hell out of the Rangers' big bats as the Giants
lift fingers to the sky in praise and the ordnance
deployed in his name, in making straight the way,
would fill the oceans.
And each foreclosure is a failure of belief,
each immortal jellyfish a failure of belief.
When those who will ruin us are elected,
where is everyone?
And when I return from the desert it's with the Devil
cast out. With God cast out. Because it wasn't really me
who did those things before, that wasn't me.
It's dark by five. The time of year
we cleave to lightboxes, their travel
versions, and dawn simulators ordered online
from the SADLight Super-Store. West, there is some
daylight left, and later, by the north's lantern, its plains
read in black, white, grey, and lighter
grey, a beauty acknowledged in the animal way
with the whole mind, in a strategy. Distance
lies heavily on that municipality, its roads,
as will the snow, more so now the school has
gone, and the store, closure of which inaugurated
the season and its proprietors' bankruptcy. Neighbours
rallied to keep their electricity on, but when even this
could no longer be done, they moved in
with family in some other town. He'd been back to gather
a few last thingsâpeople had seen him thereâ
and in his daughter's home died of heart attack