Read Elegy for a Broken Machine Online
Authors: Patrick Phillips
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
Copyright © 2015 by Patrick Phillips
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random House companies.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.
Due to limitations of space, acknowledgments can be found at the end of the volume.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Phillips, Patrick, [date]
[Poems. Selections]
Elegy for a broken machine : poems / Patrick Phillips.—First edition.
pages cm
“This is a Borzoi Book”—Title page verso.
ISBN
978-0-385-35375-5 (hardcover)—
ISBN
978-0-385-35376-2 (eBook)
I. Title.
PS
3616.
H
465
A
6 2015 811’.6—dc23 2014026436
Jacket image: E+/Getty Images
Jacket design by Oliver Munday
v3.1
For Ellen
My father was trying
to fix something
and I sat there just watching,
like I used to,
whenever something
went wrong.
I kept asking where he’d been,
until he put down a wrench
and said
Listen:
dying’s just something
that happens sometimes.
Who knows
where that kind of dream comes from?
Why some things
vanish, and some
just keep going forever?
Like that look on his face
when he’d stare off at something
I could never make out
in the murky garage,
his ear pressed
to whatever it was
that had died—
his eyes listening for something
so deep inside it, I thought
even the silence,
if you listened,
meant something.
In the dark he grunts
The fuck you want?
fists ripping
tubes out in his sleep.
*
I dream in my chair
he’s young: walking towards me,
squinting at the sun.
*
A P.A. hunches
in the half-light. I wake and
hear the Foley drain.
*
Out the window, rain.
Behind a paper curtain
someone worse off moans.
They came into
this cold white room
and shaved his chest
then made a little
purple line of dashes
down his sternum,
which the surgeon,
when she came in,
cut along, as students
took turns cranking
a shiny metal jig
that split his ribs
just enough for them
to fish the heart out—
lungs inflating
and the dark blood
circulating through
these hulking beige machines
as for the second time
since dawn they skirted
the ruined arteries
with a long blue length
of vein that someone
had unlaced from his leg,
so that by almost every definition,
my father died
there on the table
and came back in the body
of his own father,
or his mother at the end,
or whoever it was
the morphine summoned
up out of the grave, into his dreams—
like that figure
in the floor-length mirror
he kept talking to
as we inched a fluid-hung
telemetry pole
past the endless open doors,
until he was finally close enough
to recognize a flicker
in those bloodshot eyes
and a quiver in the mumbling lips—
so slack and thin
he leaned a little closer
to catch their ghostly whisper
before he even
realized it was him.
the father
of my son’s friend
watched his father die.
Then for some reason
came, still grieving,
to a soccer field where I,
a guy he knew,
or kind of knew,
stood with the others
trying not to stare
at the
there-
but-for-the-grace-of-God-
go-I
of him:
his eyes raw-rimmed
behind dark glasses
as herds of little bodies
shrieked and galloped
all around us—
whoever he was before
a trace, a remnant now,
shaking in the gray October wind:
the truth about love, about all of us,
so plain in him
there was nothing left
but to pretend
I was not watching
out the corner of my eye
when the muddy dog,
and the bouncing ball,
and the children
chasing after it
all seemed to veer
and disappear inside him.
to take his pulse and shut off the alarm,
her pink nails leaving little jaundiced dents in his forearm.
Today he cannot eat or walk or read or speak.
His glazed eyes follow me around the room, and blink.
When I shake the cup of ice, he flicks his gray bird-tongue—
as she commands, under her breath,
You must be the son.
By the time we got out on the water
the sun was so low, it wasn’t like water
but a field of gray snow that we plowed
in one endless white furrow of water,
skirting the rocks and wrecked trawlers
and abandoned old jetties just under the water—
my father in the bow, slick with fever,
whispering back to whatever the water
chattered and hissed through the hull—
until at last I saw lights on the water
and let the old Mercury rattle and sputter
its steaming gray rainbows out onto the water
as we drifted, at idle, the last time in his life,
through that beloved, indifferent harbor.
After his friends
rigged a pulley
and lowered the pack
of Kool menthols;
after he’d laughed
and then winced
and squinted up
at the trickle of dirt
dusting his lashes;
after his wife
had come sobbing
through the glare of the kliegs
and called down
to where the men pointed
how much she loved him;
after their son
sat cross-legged
at the edge of the hole
saying
yessir,
yessir
to whatever
came through the receiver;