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    Failure: Poems

    Failure: Poems

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    by Philip Schultz


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      ISBN-13: 9780547539379
    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    • Publication date: 04/06/2009
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 128
    • File size: 79 KB

    PHILIP SCHULTZ won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for his book of poems, Failure. His poetry and fiction have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, the Nation, the New Republic, and the Paris Review, among other magazines. In addition, he is the founder and director of the Writers Studio in New York.

    Read an Excerpt

    It’s Sunday Morning in Early November
     
    and there are a lot of leaves already.
    I could rake and get a head start.
    The boys’ summer toys need to be put
    in the basement. I could clean it out
    or fix the broken storm window.
    When Eli gets home from Sunday school,
    I could take him fishing. I don’t fish
    but I could learn to. I could show him
    how much fun it is. We don’t do as much
    as we used to do. And my wife, there’s
    so much I haven’t told her lately,
    about how quickly my soul is aging,
    how it feels like a basement I keep filling
    with everything I’m tired of surviving.
    I could take a walk with my wife and try
    to explain the ghosts I can’t stop speaking to.
    Or I could read all those books piling up
    about the beginning of the end of understanding . . .
    Meanwhile, it’s such a beautiful morning,
    the changing colors, the hypnotic light.
    I could sit by the window watching the leaves,
    which seem to know exactly how to fall
    from one moment to the next. Or I could lose
    everything and have to begin over again.  
    Talking to Ourselves
     A woman in my doctor’s office last week
    couldn’t stop talking about Niagara Falls,
    the difference between dog and deer ticks,
    how her oldest boy, killed in Iraq, would lie
    with her at night in the summer grass, singing
    Puccini. Her eyes looked at me but saw only
    the saffron swirls of the quivering heavens.
     
    Yesterday, Mr. Miller, our tidy neighbor,
    stopped under our lopsided maple to explain
    how his wife of sixty years died last month
    of Alzheimer’s. I stood there, listening to
    his longing reach across the darkness with
    each bruised breath of his eloquent singing.
     
    This morning my five-year-old asked himself
    why he’d come into the kitchen. I understood
    he was thinking out loud, personifying himself,
    but the intimacy of his small voice was surprising.
     
    When my father’s vending business was failing,
    he’d talk to himself while driving, his lips
    silently moving, his black eyes deliquescent.
    He didn’t care that I was there, listening,
    what he was saying was too important.
     
    “Too important,” I hear myself saying
    in the kitchen, putting the dishes away,
    and my wife looks up from her reading
    and asks, “What’s that you said?”  
    Specimen
     
    I turned sixty in Paris last year.
    We stayed at the Lutetia,
    where the Gestapo headquartered
    during the war, my wife, two boys, and me,
    and several old Vietnamese ladies
    carrying poodles with diamond collars.
     
    Once my father caught a man
    stealing cigarettes out of one
    of his vending machines.
    He didn’t stop choking him
    until the pool hall stunk of excrement
    and the body dropped to the floor
    like a judgment.
     
    When I was last in Paris
    I was dirt poor, hiding
    from the Vietnam War.
    One night, in an old church,
    I considered taking my life.
    I didn’t know how to be so young
    and not belong anywhere, stuck
    among so many perplexing melodies.
     
    I loved the low white buildings,
    the ingratiating colors, the ancient light.
    We couldn’t afford such luxury.
    It was a matter of pride.
    My father died bankrupt one week
    before his sixtieth birthday.
    I didn’t expect to have a family;
    I didn’t expect happiness.
     
    At the Lutetia everyone
    dressed themselves like specimens
    they’d loved all their lives.
    Everyone floated down
    red velvet hallways
    like scintillating music
    you hear only once or twice.
     
    Driving home, my father said,
    “Let anyone steal from you
    and you’re not fit to live.”
    I sat there, sliced by traffic lights,
    not belonging to what he said.
    I belonged to a scintillating
    and perplexing music
    I didn’t expect to hear. 
    The Summer People
     
    Santos, a strong, friendly man,
    who built my wife’s sculpture studio,
    fixed everything I couldn’t,
    looked angry in town last week.
    Then he stopped coming. We wondered
    if we paid him enough, if he envied us.
    Once he came over late to help me catch a bat
    with a newspaper and trash basket.
    He liked that I laughed at how scared I got.
    We’re “year rounds,” what the locals call
    summer people who live here full time.
    Always in a hurry, the summer people honk a lot,
    own bigger cars and houses. Once I beat a guy
    in a pickup to a parking space, our summer sport.
    “Lousy New Yorker!” he cried.
     
    Every day now men from Guatemala, Ecuador,
    and Mexico line up at the railroad station.
    They know that they’re despised,
    that no one likes having to share their rewards,
    or being made to feel spiteful.
     
    When my uncle Joe showed me the shotgun
    he kept near the cash register
    to scare the black migrants
    who bought his overpriced beer and cold cuts
    in his grocery outside of Rochester, N.Y.,
    his eyes blazed like emerald suns.
    It’s impossible to forget his eyes.
     
    At parties the summer people
    who moved here after 9/11
    talk about all the things they had to give up.
    It’s beautiful here, they say, but everything
    is tentative and strange,
    as if the beauty isn’t theirs to enjoy.
     
    When I’m tired, my father’s accent
    scrapes my tongue like a scythe.
    He never cut our grass or knew
    what grade I was in. He worked days,
    nights, and weekends, but failed anyway.
    Late at night, when he was too tired to sleep,
    he’d stare out the window so powerfully
    the world inside and outside
    our house would disappear.   
     
    In Guatemala, after working all day,
    Santos studied to be an architect.
    He suffered big dreams, his wife said.
    My wife’s studio is magnificent.
    We’d hear him up there in the dark,
    hammering and singing, as if
    he were the happiest man alive.

    Copyright © 2007 by Philip Schultz
     
    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
     
    Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be submitted online at www.harcourt.com/contact or mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

    Table of Contents

    Contents 
    It’s Sunday Morning in Early November    1
    Talking to Ourselves    2
    Specimen    3
    The Summer People    5
    The Magic Kingdom    7
    Louse Point    9
    The Idea of California    11
    Kodak Park Athletic Association, 1954    14
    Grief    15
    The Absent    16
    My Dog    17
    The Garden    18
    Exquisite with Agony    19
    Bronze Crowd:
      After Magdalena Abakanowicz    21
    Why    23
    My Wife    25
    Husband    27
    Uncle Sigmund    28
    The Amount of Us    30
    What I Like and Don’t Like    31
    Blunt    32
    Shellac    34The Adventures of 78 Charles Street   36
    Isaac Babel Visits My Dreams    39
    Dance Performance    41
    The Traffic    43
    The Truth    45
    The One Truth    46
    Failure    48
    The Wandering Wingless    50
    Acknowledgments    105

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    This superb Pulitzer Prize–winning collection gives voice to failure with a wry, deft touch from one of this country’s most engaging and uncompromising poets. In Failure, Philip Schultz evokes the pleasures of family,marriage, beaches, and dogs; New York City in the 1970s; revolutions both interior and exterior; and the terrors of 9/11 with a compassion that demonstrates he is a master of the bittersweet and fierce, the wondrous and direct, and the brilliantly provocative. Filled with poems of "heartbreaking tenderness that [go] beyond mere pity" (Gerald Stern), Failure is a collection to savor from this major American poet.

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