Read When I Was Young and In My Prime Online
Authors: Alayna Munce
Tags: #Literary Novel, #Canadian Fiction
New Year's Day, 1932
As I said everything is going fast
and where a poor guy knows it first
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is when he starts counting the few slippery greenbacks
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which he has earned by pulling four horses
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and the implement
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and pulling cows teats of course.
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About the hired girl Jean Wilson there is little to write
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though I know plenty
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about her. All I can say is Youth
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will have its fling and she certainly had hers
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and how. Poor kid in a way I feel sorry for her but
oh well who am I to take life serious I'm free
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in a free country
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so here goesâwhoopee
for 1932!
What does that mean Grandpa?
What? Eh?
That curse you always say. What does it mean?
Come again?
You know,
ay-ay-ay, matoushka ri-nanka,
or whatever it is.
Yessir and what about it?
What does it
mean
?
Damned if I could say now.
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Oh come on. You must know what it means.
Of course I know what the goddamn thing means. It's just to try to switch it over and get it across to you what it means is a whole other kettle of fish goddammit.
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Just give me a general idea then.
Alright, alrighty. If it means that much to you. Let's see. Close as I can come is something to do with your mother, a goat, and a bolt of lightning.
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Your mother a goat and a bolt of lightning?
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That's right. You do the math.
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things buried with us (2)
1
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Lately James and I have been eating only soup and bread.
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Funny what happens when the hunger
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to be simple is whetted daily;
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after a while it stops being dull.
2
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He rowed before he knew me, and I love this
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odd and unimportant detail (come to me
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from that time like someone else's keepsake):
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rowers face backwards so he'll
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always have starboard and port reversed.
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How my head is
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hushed and my skin strokes
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hot at the thought of his
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unknown hands at
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dawn on those oars.
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3
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When we fight we
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go from room to
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room, closing doors
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behind us, then
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opening them again
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moments later.
4
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I notice we put on our t-shirts differently:
I shake my arms into the
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sleeves first then slip my
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head through the
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neck hole as quickly as
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possible so as not to
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miss a thing.
He lassoes the whole thing over his head and pulls it down.
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Then he pushes his arms up through, as if climbing
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out of a manhole.
5
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Sometimes when I hug him around the neck he lifts
me just a little to his height,
my back crackles into alignment
and then he sets me down again,
taller.
There's a man who travels
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the sidewalks of my neighbourhood
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in a wheelchair pulled by huskies.
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I see him often at intersections,
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two dogs panting, waiting
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for the light to change.
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At the exact moment it turns
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green they spring
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forward so if you didn't know better
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you'd be confused
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(do they trigger the light,
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or the light,
Â
their movement?).
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They pass the dishevelled man who stands
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barefoot in undone sneakers no matter what
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the weather, one leg of his track pants
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lodged up around his shin,
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the other, ragged
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under his heel.
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He stands at the same
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intersection all day long,
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conducting traffic,
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urging the cars forward and back
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in perfect unison with the traffic lights.
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This, perhaps, is as likely as anything else to
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turn out to be
what makes the world go around.
The man in the wheelchair calls
yee
and
haw
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for right and left,
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speaking the same language
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my grandfather spoke behind his plough horses
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once upon a time.
As they glide away
you can almost hear
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the earth turning in response,
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the
shshsh
of sled runners over snow,
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can almost bear
Â
to call the city home.
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Someone has tapped a maple tree
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in the parkette down the street.
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I think now I'll be able to sleep at night knowing
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somewhere nearby there is an apartment,
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windows fogged with steamâ
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shshshsh
âwhen it's all boiled down there will be just enough
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to fill a teacup,
a bird's nest,
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a bell.
One garbage day
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my neighbour Connie
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spotted an old leather couch on the curb
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on her way to trade in her emptiesâ
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the springs in the couch were
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shot, so she skinned it.
Connie is Ojibway,
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makes dream catchers
with couch leather and seagull feathers
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dyed eagle.
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I'm standing at the intersection, waiting
for the streetcar. I see her pass
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with her bundle buggy, waving.
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I wave back, aware I'm only
Â
human but hoping I have the human
Â
touch. When you say the word
Â
human, do you mean it
Â
as excuse or incantation? Ask me
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and I am torn
between the two,
again and again my head
turned by how we make
Â
do
      Â
on the way
to trade in
Â
our empties.
Well, we got out of doing the dishes, didn't we Grandma?
Although you always said you liked doing dishes, right?
I know what place
Â
I should be now
    Â
I think
It's okay Grandma, you're fine right here. Just relax. Okay? We'll go back in when they call us for pie. Okay?
(pointing to the ploughed garden) like that
(silence)
I love watching the leaves fall.
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You like fall, don't you Grandma?
(silence)
You're looking at the wind chimes.
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Do you like the wind chimes Grandma?
if you call it right
Call it right?
I should name it
You should name it?
I should
but I don't think it wants to be named
(silence)
Fall's my favourite season.
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Do you have a favourite season Grandma?
What's your favourite season?
I don't think
there's any pie left
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for me
I need to leave now Grandpa. I have to catch my train so I can be back in the city by nightfall. Make sure the nurses are good to you. And don't let the doctors do anything to you that you don't want them to do.
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