When our father died in 2005, my brother inherited the house on the West Side of Cleveland we had lived in as kids. I lived there from 1955 to 1970, when I left for college, and in some primal way – in dreams, in memory -- it remains “home.” About seven years ago, Ken sold it. During my last visit to Cleveland, in 2016, we drove by the house and it was a mess – trees and hedges chopped down, grass overgrown, windows patched with cardboard. A neighbor said squatters were living in the garage and the owners were dope dealers. Now I see the house and yard have been cleaned up and the realtors have posted a “virtual tour” of the interior.
That too is jarring but in
different ways. The carpets have been stripped to expose plank floors. I never
knew we had so much knotty pine and I’d forgotten the fireplace my father built
in 1964. In photo 3, I see the room we called “The Little Room” – it once held
my mother’s clothes mangle -- has been painted Delft blue. My bedroom, in photo
16, is painted red like a New Orleans bordello. The place looks familiar, yet
not. There’s no sense of outrage, of a fondly recalled place defiled. I’ve been
away too long for that and I’m not by nature sticky-sentimental. Rather, the
memories I associate with those rooms no longer match. There’s a sense of
temporal dissonance. Two poets have described similar experiences. Eric Ormsby
writes in “Childhood House” (Coastlines, 1992):
“Somehow I had assumed
That the past stood still,
in perfected effigies of itself,
And that what we had once
possessed remained our possession
Forever, and that at least
the past, our past, our child-
Hood, waited, always
available, at the touch of a nerve,
Did not deteriorate like
the untended house of an
Aging mother, but stood in
pristine perfection, as in
Our remembrance.”
The least sentimental of
poets, Kingsley Amis, remembers a neighbor’s house in “Bobby Bailey” (Collected
Poems 1944-1979, 1979):
“Of course. I know that,
every year, some people
Simply get up and go
Too far for you to see, much
less drop in on,
Less yet stay with. I know
“‘The past’ is a good name
for what’s all over;
You can’t, in fact, return
To what isn’t a place. It
does sound like an
Easy lesson to learn.”
1 comment:
Great lines from Amis. A friend of mine was killed on Pearl Road, not far from there. She always predicted that she'd be hit by a bus before she could die of old age. In fact, she was hit by a car while running to catch a bus.
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