Here you will find the Long Poem A Happy Childhood of poet William Matthews
My mother stands at the screen door, laughing. ?Out out damn Spot,? she commands our silly dog. I wonder what this means. I rise into adult air like a hollyhock, I?m so proud to be loved like this. The air is tight to my nervous body. I use new clothes and shoes the way the corn-studded soil around here uses nitrogen, giddily. Ohio, Ohio, Ohio. Often I sing to myself all day like a fieldful of August insects, just things I whisper, really, a trance in sneakers. I?m learning to read from my mother and soon I?ll go to school, I hate it when anyone dies or leaves and the air goes slack around my body and I have to hug myself, a cloud, an imaginary friend, the stream in the road- side park. I love to be called for dinner. Spot goes out and I go in and the lights in the kitchen go on and the dark, which also has a body like a cloud?s, leans lightly against the house. Tomorrow I?ll find the sweat stains it left, little grey smudges. Here?s a sky no higher than a street lamp, and a stack of morning papers cinched by wire. It?s 4:00 A.M. A stout dog, vaguely beagle, minces over the dry, fresh-fallen snow; and here?s our sleep-sodden paperboy with his pliers, his bike, his matronly dog, his unclouding face set for paper route like an alarm clock. Here?s a memory in the making, for this could be the morning he doesn?t come home and his parents two hours later drive his route until they find him asleep, propped against a street lamp, his papers all delivered and his dirty paper- satchel slack, like an emptied lung, and he blur-faced and iconic in the morning air rinsing itself a paler and paler blue through which a last few dandruff-flecks of snow meander casually down. The dog squeaks in out of the dark, snuffling me too me too. And here he goes home to memory, and to hot chocolate on which no crinkled skin forms like infant ice, and to the long and ordinary day, school, two triumphs and one severe humiliation on the playground, the past already growing its scabs, the busride home, dinner, and evening leading to sleep like the slide that will spill him out, come June, into the eye-reddening chlorine waters of the municipal pool. Here he goes to bed. Kiss. Kiss. Teeth. Prayers. Dark. Dark. Here the dog lies down by his bed, and sighs and farts. Will he always be this skinny, chicken-bones? He?ll remember like a prayer how his mother made breakfast for him every morning before he trudged out to snip the papers free. Just as his mother will remember she felt guilty never to wake up with him to give him breakfast. It was Cream of Wheat they always or never had together. It turns out you are the story of your childhood and you?re under constant revision, like a lonely folktale whose invisible folks are all the selves you?ve been, lifelong, shadows in fog, grey glimmers at dusk. And each of these selves had a childhood it traded for love and grudged to give away, now lost irretrievably, in storage like a set of dishes from which no food, no Cream of Wheat, no rabbit in mustard sauce, nor even a single raspberry, can be eaten until the afterlife, which is only childhood in its last disguise, all radiance or all humiliation, and so it is forfeit a final time. In fact it was awful, you think, or why should the piecework of grief be endless? Only because death is, and likewise loss, which is not awful, but only breathtaking. There?s no truth about your childhood, though there?s a story, yours to tend, like a fire or garden. Make it a good one, since you?ll have to live it out, and all its revisions, so long as you all shall live, for they shall be gathered to your deathbed, and they?ll have known to what you and they would come, and this one time they?ll weep for you. The map in the shopping center has an X signed ?you are here.? A dream is like that. In a dream you are never eighty, though you may risk death by other means: you?re on a ledge and memory calls you to jump, but a deft cop talks you in to a small, bright room, and snickers. And in a dream, you?re everyone somewhat, but not wholly. I think I know how that works: for twenty-one years I had a father and then I became a father, replacing him but not really. Soon my sons will be fathers. Surely, that?s what middle-aged means, being father and son to sons and father. That a male has only one mother is another story, told wherever men weep wholly. Though nobody?s replaced. In one dream I?m leading a rope of children to safety, through a snowy farm. The farmer comes out and I have to throw snowballs wel