My
brother is selling the house we grew up in. I wasn’t
quite three when we moved in, in 1955, the year of his birth. My earliest
memory is the grass in the neighbor’s backyard resembling a field of wheat. I
haven’t lived there in forty years. I’ve never paid the property taxes or
called the plumber, but the place remains as vivid as a road map. I still think
of a real house as one built of
brick. Upstairs in my room I read Hamlet
and The Adventures of Augie March for
the first time, and clipped Eric Hoffer’s column from the newspaper. When I
walked in the back door on Nov. 22, 1963, I saw my mother, two rooms away,
crying in front of the television. Even in my alienated days it stayed, in some
primal sense, home. Bowers included “Dedication for a House” in his first book,
The Form of Loss (1956):
“We,
who were long together homeless, raise
Brick
walls, wood floors, a roof, and windows up
To
what sustained us in those threatening days
Unto
this end. Alas, that this bright cup
Be
empty of the care and life of him
Who
should have made it overflow its brim.”
Growing
up means learning to carry home around with us, like nomads. That strangers may
soon be living in our old house is inevitable and right. Welcome! Johnson
writes in The Rambler #68:
“To
be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition, the end to which every
enterprise and labour tends, and of which every desire prompts the
prosecution."
1 comment:
Horatio: Oh day and night but this is wondrous strange.
Hamlet: Then as a stranger give it welcome.
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