| But I don’t believe in ghosts or anything, I know that you are gone and that
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| I’m carrying some version of you around
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| Some untrustworthy old description in my memories
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| And that must be your ghost taking form, created every moment by me dreaming
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| you so
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| And is it my job now to hold whatever’s left of you for all time?
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| And to re-enact you for our daughter’s life?
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| I do remember when I was a kid and realized that life ends and is just over;
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| that a point comes where we no longer get to say or do anything
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| And then what? |
| I guess just forgotten
|
| And I said to my mom that I hoped to do something important with my life
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| Not be famous, but just remembered a little more, to echo beyond my actual end
|
| And my mom laughed at this kid trying to wriggle his way out of mortality,
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| of the final inescapable feral scream
|
| But I held that hope and grew up wondering what dying means Unsatisfied,
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| ambitious and squirming
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| The first dead body I ever saw in real life, was my great-grandfather's
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| Embalmed in a casket in Everett, in a room by the freeway
|
| Where they talked me into reading a thing from the Bible
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| About walking through a valley in the shadow of death
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| But I didn’t understand the words, I thought of actually walking through a
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| valley in a shadow, with a backpack and a tent
|
| But that dead body next to me spoke clear and metaphor-free
|
| In December 2001 after having spent the summer and fall traveling mostly alone
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| around
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| The country that was spiraling into war and mania, little flags were everywhere
|
| I was living on the periphery as a twenty-three-year-old wrapped up in doing
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| what I wanted
|
| And it was music and painting on newsprint
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| And eating all the fruit from the tree like Tarzan, or Walt Whitman Voracious,
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| devouring life, singing my songs
|
| Sleeping in yards without asking permission
|
| But that December I was shaken by a pregnancy scale
|
| From someone that I’d been with for only one night, many states away,
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| who I hadn’t planned to keep knowing
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| A young and embarrassing over-confident animal night
|
| And the terror of the idea of fatherhood at twenty-three destroyed my
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| foundation, and left me freaked out and wandering around mourning the
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| independence and solitude that defined me then
|
| Though my life is a galaxy of subtleties
|
| My complex intentions and aspirations do not matter at all
|
| In the face of the crushing flow of actual time
|
| I saw my ancestors as sad and misunderstood in the same way
|
| That my descendants will squint back through a fog trying to see
|
| Some polluted version of all I meant to be in life
|
| Their recollections pruned by the accidents of time, what got thrown away,
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| and what gets talked about at night
|
| But she had her period eventually and I went back to being twenty-three
|
| Eleven years later I was traveling alone again on an airplane from New Zealand
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| to Perth, Western Australia
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| Very alone, so far away from you and the home that we had made
|
| I watched a movie on the plane about Jack Kerouac, a documentary going deeper
|
| than the usual congratulations
|
| They interviewed his daughter, Jan Kerouac, and she tore through the history
|
| She told about this deadbeat drinking, watching Three Stooges on TV
|
| Not acknowledging his paternity, abandoning the child, taking cowardly refuge
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| in his self-mythology
|
| And when she spoke I heard your voice telling me about the adults who had
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| abandoned you as a sweet kid and left you to grow precariously
|
| And when she spoke I looked in her face and saw you looking back at me
|
| On a tiny airplane seat screen at the bottom of the world
|
| I saw a French-Canadian resemblance, and I heard suffering echoing
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| A lineage of bad parents and strong daughters withstanding
|
| And she had black hair and freckles and pale skin just like you,
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| and she told the hard truth and slayed the gods just like you
|
| I saw the cracks in the façade of posterity
|
| I missed you so I went home
|
| The second dead body I ever saw was you, Geneviève
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| When I watched you turn from alive to dead, right here in our house
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| And I looked around the room and asked «Are you here?», and you weren’t,
|
| and you are not here, I sing to you though
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| I keep you breathing through my lungs in a constant, uncomfortable stream of
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| memories trailing out until I am dead too
|
| And then eventually the people who remember me will also die
|
| Containing what it was like to stand in the same air with me, and breathe and
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| wonder why
|
| And then distortion
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| And then the silence of space
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| The Night Palace
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| The ocean blurring
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| But in my tears right now
|
| Light gleams |