My tutelary spirit of recent days has been the American poet L.E. Sissman, dead from Hodgkin lymphoma at age forty-eight. Out in the hall I spoke with three oncologists after they had yet again examined my brother. I asked the question no one had yet asked: How much time does he have? The guy in the middle, without hesitation and much to his credit, replied: “Weeks.” I had already expected as much. My brother has become nearly the opposite of himself. For more than half a century he worked making custom picture frames. He is a craftsman and loves wood, collecting exotic species like ebony. He was enormously strong and he had the forearms of the guy who delivers beer kegs by hand, but they have shrunk. His voice is a pained rasp because of the mass in his esophagus. He used to be the second- or third-funniest person I had ever known.
Sissman’s “Homage
to Clotho: A Hospital Suite” was published posthumously in his Hello, Darkness: The Collected Poems of L.
E. Sissman (1978). Sissman
often wrote suites of poems, as his punning title suggests. One needn’t have
cancer or know someone who does to appreciate the wit and craft. This was not
poetry written by a victim, for victims. It was written by an adult, that
endangered species, for adults. Clotho, for the Greeks, was the youngest of the
Fates, who spun the threads of life for all mortals. On Tuesday I witnessed
most of the scene recounted in the sixth of the poem’s seven stanzas:
“The riddle
of the Sphinx. Man walks on three
Legs at the
last. I walk on three, one of
Which is a
wheeled I.V. pole, when I rise
From bed the
first time to make my aged way
Into the
toilet, where, while my legs sway
And the pole
sways, swinging its censer high,
I wait to
urinate, and cannot make
My mortal
coils distill a drop, as time
Stumps past
and leaves me swaying there. Defeat:
I roll and
hobble back to bed, to the
Refrain of
cheeping wheels. Soon the young man
With his
snake-handler's fist of catheters
Will come to
see me and supply the lack
Of my
drugged muscles with the gravity
Of his
solution, and I'll void into
A beige bag
clipped to the bedside, one of
The bottles,
bags, and tubes I'm tethered to
As a
condition of continuance.
The body
swells until it duns the mind
With
importunities in this refined,
White-sheeted
torture, practiced by a kind,
Withdrawn white face trained in the arts of love.”
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