I’m not by nature a brooder. My brother died sixteen months ago yesterday, enough time for his death to have taken its place in the region of memory I think of as a reliquary. Precious but not to be fiddled with too often. On Tuesday at Kaboom Books here in Houston I was talking to the owner, John Dillman. For some reason the topic was the late poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti. I told John a friend and I cut school in the spring of our senior year in high school to attend the first Earth Day – April 22, 1970. In a downtown church, Ferlinghetti spoke and read some poems, of which I remember nothing.
Memory, of course, is a
series of linkages. My talk with John reminded me that my brother once had a
cat he named Lawrence Ferlingkitty, which I hadn’t thought about in years. Coupled
with the nearness of Christmas another memory returned. My mother was a notoriously
indifferent housekeeper. Clutter accumulated on every horizontal surface. We even
felt sorry for the Christmas tree, freighted with too many ornaments, too
much tinsel. One year, my brother and I bought a sack of hotdog buns and hung
them all from the tree without telling anyone. No one noticed, not parents or
visitors, so it became an annual tradition. That may be my favorite memory of
my brother. The final stanza of Yeats’ “In Memory of Major Robert Gregory”:
“I had thought, seeing how
bitter is that wind
That shakes the shutter,
to have brought to mind
All those that manhood
tried, or childhood loved
Or boyish intellect
approved,
With some appropriate
commentary on each;
Until imagination brought
A fitter welcome; but a
thought
Of that late death took
all my heart for speech.”
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