Sentences
for the Baker
In jail, they say, he learned tactics of a tiny
man, slept in his own shit, foiled the sodomizers & years before demoted
from baker to mopper among rumors of incest, illiteracy—the twelve-year old
chicken-plucker of Water Street known to feed the Vernon mice, those tiny
sailors, saltines & nips at noon. Once, on a Friday night, two spangled
Holy Cross girls plunged their hands into that bearded nest, danced him beneath
Joe Miron’s muraled sailors & seas, the Mariner’s albatross still in
flight, circa 1940.
He said: some
thing was sprouting in his neck.
He said: I
don’t come down here for the beer, you know.
He said: It’s lonely all day alone up there.
American poet Lea Graham, originally from Arkansas but now living, teaching and writing
in New York State, finally follows her debut collection Hough & Helix & Where & Here & You, You, You (No
Tell Books, 2011) [see my review of such here] with From the Hotel Vernon (Co. Clare, Ireland: Salmon Poetry, 2019). As
the back cover offers: “The poems in this book grow out and around the Hotel
Vernon, built at the turn of the 20th century in Worcester,
Massachusetts. Once an elegant place for local politicians to make their
backdoor deals at the edge of the city, it slowly fell into decline each decade
following Prohibition.” From the Hotel
Vernon focuses on the central point of the real hotel and echoes of
history, composing a collection of
poems that gives a sense of being a series of sketches or small studies
populated by tourists, poets, ghosts, an array of local characters, Keno and
historical figures (for the sake of full disclosure, there is even a poem
included here dedicated to me, and on/around her reading of my poetry
collection paper hotel).
Graham
the poet has approached the real Hotel Vernon as pilgrimage and personal study,
occupying both real and imaginary spaces, somewhere between the articulation of
voice of some of Ottawa poet Stephen Brockwell’s poems (in which he records the
storytelling and speech of specific people to shape into poems) to the
mythologies wrapped around Michael Redhill’s Lake Nora Arms (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 1993) [see my note on such here]. Graham’s poems don’t miss much, and her studies invoke both
mythology and study, whether writing out or invoking cab drivers, Roy Orbison,
drunks at the bar, Bakery Joe, Frank O’Hara, Al Capp and multiple others, as
she writes:
I’m writing this from the Hotel Vernon where
Louis just slid me a note on a Keno card—Fats
is Saved! reads the scribbled news flash across ovals & numbers. The
boys sit out back between dumpster & 290, grilling dogs, singing “The Night
the Lights Went Out in Georgia” & “Gentle on My Mind.” They call Roy
Orbison, “that kid,” as in that kid can
sure sing or that kid really had
something. If the bedbugs weren’t so frequent & the hound-eyed man down
the hall didn’t shit in the shower every Thursday, this could be home. Some
nights, Al & I sit on the roof, watch the square blink on & off,
memories in motion.
Once in Paris near the St. Michel station, I
was homeless after missing the last train to Saint-Cloud & losing my shoes.
The French the hotelier spoke—even poorer than mind—still managed to send me
through the accordion gates & up a hall which couldn’t avoid The Shining in my mind: isolate
parallelograms beckoning red with no red in sight. I was sleepless to a dubbed Law & Order SVU, three showers.
Compelled to rise each hour on the hour, detecting a figure across the
courtyard at a window. How did she know to push the curtain back a bit, to
shift in that way? Why was she searching this Parisian dark? How did I wake
precisely to see her each time? Six a.m. appeared. I saw myself, a mirrored
window. Like Arbus twins, one-armed & lazy-eyed. That ambiguity of lips. Wherever you go, there you are. (“Notes from
the Hotel Vernon”)
In an undated interview conducted by Caroline Bernier and posted at Poor Yorick when the collection was still in manuscript form, she spoke of her connection to Worcester,
Massachusetts, and specifically to the Hotel Vernon:
PY: What is your connection to the city of
Worcester, Massachusetts?
I moved to Worcester from Chicago in 2000, following a former spouse who
had just gotten a job there. I lived there for seven years, teaching in various
colleges and universities, most notably Clark University.
I didn’t really like Worcester for most of the time I lived there. I
found it gritty and hard to break into socially. It wasn’t until the very end
when I worked at the Hotel Vernon that I began to have a greater understanding
of the city. This was largely due to a sense of community that existed there
and also my learning its history through long-time residents. People would come
in and tell me all kinds of stories about the city and its neighborhoods. Its
name actually means “city of work”—and it is a place that so many people came
to work and still do. From my own work experience bartending at the Hotel
Vernon, I began to really see the city for the first time through the prism of
pride that people who really knew it had.
I think that having such a changed perspective about Worcester because
of the personal-historical connection taught me a lot about place and how any
place can be a good place to be—depending on what and who you know and your
openness to it and them. I stopped being snobby about places and was able to
move beyond the cliché of “here is hip/sophisticated/interesting versus there
is only poor/dirty/dull.”
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