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Mar. 30th, 2009

Two Falling Voices

This story was told as part of a performance, Saving Pagan Babies:  Catholic Culture Clashes, featuring myself, Ann Reay, Loren Niemi, and Curt Lund at the Spirit in the House Festival, February 27-March 9, 2009.  I am grateful to my fellow performers for helping me shape this story, and for producing such jewels of their own; to storytellers Nancy Donoval and Regina Carpenter, who provided incredibly useful feedback; to Dean J. Seal and the volunteers that made Spirit in the House possible, and to Northstar Storytelling League for providing promotional support. 

In retelling history, I have stuck to facts whenever possible, but allowed myself to imagine and infer motives and conversations. In addition to the sources on the life of Mary Jemison cited in this story, and my own independent research on the Sullivan campaign, I want to acknowledge the influence of Deborah Larsen’s historical fiction The White, published in 2001, a stunningly beautiful book which gave me additional insight into the character of Mary Jemison.  

In the storytelling community it is often said that not everything in a story need be factual, but all of it must be true.  May this be so.     

*****

 When the people of the longhouse, the Henosaunee, returned to the Chemung River Valley in the spring of 1780, after the Sullivan Campaign against the Six Nations, they found the corpses of pack horses - the horses that had carried Sullivan’s cannons, driven to exhaustion, slaughtered on the scorched earth. 

Forty towns of the Six Nations  –Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Tuscarora, Mohawk… Oneida  – were no more.  Twelve hundred longhouses, a million bushels of corn, and beans, and squash – the Three Sisters - torched.  That winter hunger had put an end to the oldest democracy in the world – the Iroquois Confederacy – to make way for our own. 

The Seneca warrior Hiokatoo turned in disgust to his chief.  “What kind of savages would treat an animal this way?”

“They are Christians,” Cornplanter replied.  “Their God had a Son who took their place and died for their sins.  What they do to horses does not matter to them.”

Hiokatoo got down from his own horse:  sleek, powerful, its eyes dark and liquid.  They were Seneca eyes.  “The God of the whites is no Great Spirit.  He is small and mean and stupid.”  Hiokatoo began to gather the bones for burial. 

Cornplanter watched the warrior in silence.  He had seen Hiokatoo kill a white captive by nailing one end of his intestine to a post and letting the raiding party take turns chasing the man with hot pokers till he disemboweled himself.  The wife of Hiokatoo was a white captive.  Cornplanter’s father was white.  Cornplanter got down off his horse to help bury the bones. 

They left the skulls there to shame us.  Staggered them along the trail like Stations of the Cross.  When the settlers came they named the town Horseheads, in honor of the Revolutionary War Hero General John Sullivan.  The Chemung County Historical Society says Horseheads is “the only town in the United States dedicated to the service of the American military horse.”

*****

It’s the town I grew up in. 

 In 1965 I was nine, and my family moved into our new house on the outskirts of Horseheads, a house we built ourselves, like pioneers.  The lot was on the edge of a golf course, so we would always have a nice view of nature.  My favorite book that year was Indian Captive:  The Story of Mary Jemison.  It was a true story. I loved the blue-eyed, blonde haired girl ripped from her white family at twelve during the French and Indian War and adopted by the Seneca, who named her “Corn Tassel” because of her yellow hair – her beautiful yellow hair.  A homesick girl who, when a trader finally told her that her family was all dead, realized this was her home, and learned to love the Indians.  

I loved Lois Lenski’s Indians too - their gracefully rounded faces and hands, limbs sturdy like trees, like trees that lift and move and carry, trees that build things.  I looked for their world beneath my own – beneath the blacktop and the golf course and the housing developments.  I couldn’t find it. I wanted to live in that world.  

I took the book out from the library five times in a row. 

Eventually Mrs. Berlozan told me that until there were two more names on the card that were not mine, I was not allowed to check the book out again.

I didn’t know how Our Lady would feel about my liking this Mary so much.  Had she died a martyr, thrown to lions or shut in a tower or gored to death by a mad cow, it would have been different.  But she lived, and she lived a pagan.  I tried not to think about it. 

Our Lady was my favorite part of being Catholic.  She had her own altar, her own statue and candles.  God the Father was scary, Jesus too perfect, the Holy Spirit…hard to get a grip on.  Mary interceded for you, like mothers do.  I loved the rosary, the click of beads, the grave beauty of the Latin phrases:  Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum. Hail Mary, full of Grace.  The Lord is with Thee.  Sancta Maria, Mater Dei,  ora pro nobis peccatoribus, Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners. 

I could follow along with the English in my St. Joseph’s Missal, but I really didn’t need to:  it sounded like prayer.  An older brother of a Protestant friend of mine had called Latin a dead language, which confused me.  What did that mean, dead language?  It seemed very alive to me – as alive as Jesus and Mary were, certainly, although they lived on this earth a very long time ago.  And if I’d learned anything in church, it was that there was more than one way to be alive. 

My father was a Protestant.  Not as bad as being a pagan, but bad. Sister had shown us that when Protestants pray, they hold their hands like this, with their fingers laced together – but when Catholics pray, they hold their hands like this, pointed upward to God, their thumbs in the shape of a cross.  And whose prayers do you think are going to heaven? Sister asked.   

That was when I was taken captive.

*****

“It will be better for us,” my mother said, “to worship together as a family,” “And to pray in English.”  My Protestant friend’s older brother agreed.  People should worship in the vernacular.  I looked the word up.  It meant “native to a country.”  It was from the Latin, vernaculus.  Go figure.

St. Matthew’s Protestant Episcopal Church was musty and dark, like the papery leaves of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer. The Mass – no, the service – was in English:  the King’s English, the language of Shakespeare.  What was native about that? 

We have left undone those things which we ought to have done; And we have done those things which we ought not to have done; And there is no health in us. 

There were old people everywhere.  Their papery skin was lined with such prayers.  Even the children looked old. 

At St. Matthews, they only brought Mary out with the other decorations at Christmas. She had no altar, and no one called her Our Lady or said prayers to her in any language.   

I needed a Mary.

After Mrs. Berlozan forbade me to check out Lois Lenski’s book, I did a risky thing.   I went to the adult section of the public library.   

I found  the 1824 biography by James Seaver, who interviewed Mary Jemison in her nineties.  His sentences were long and sanctimonious, like the Book of Common Prayer.  Yet beneath that voice, I found the voice of Mary.  Her native voice. 

It was not Corn Tassel’s. 

 My hair was chestnut.  Not blonde.

I knew from the beginning they were dead. Two days after they put the moccasins on my feet and separated me from the rest, I watched my family’s scalps prepared, scraped and stretched and dried over the camp fire.  I recognized my mother’s red hair. 

The Seneca sisters who adopted me named me Dehewamis, Two Falling Voices, because I took their brother’s place and ended their mourning.  My sisters loved me, as they loved him.  When I could feel at all, I hated them. 

But eventually winter turns to spring, as it always does.  And my sisters were persistent.  It is hard not to love back.  And things were better; my life was better, when I could love again.

I might have been twelve when I was captured.  I might have been sixteen.  I can’t remember.   

My marriage to Sheninjee was an arranged marriage, but  eventually winter turned to spring, as it always does.  I found I loved him.

It was my right as a Seneca woman to name our children. I named my son Thomas, after my father.  Then a fever killed Sheninjee.  And winter came.     

After the French and Indian War, after the death of Sheninjee, the King of England offered a bounty to anyone willing to ransom white captives.  The Seneca chief said  I had a choice.  I would not be taken against my will.  

I considered this.  I could still speak English, although I had forgotten how to read or write and  I no longer knew the Christian prayers.   I looked at my brown Thomas . He had the dark eyes of Sheninjee.  

I chose not to be redeemed. 

In the spring, when Thomas was three I caught the eye of the great warrior Hiokatoo.  I found myself looking back.   It was not an arranged marriage.  I chose him. 

The courtship was a strange one. He told me stories, as warriors do.  My sister thought he was bragging.  He told me every brutal thing he had ever done.  But at the end of each story, he would search my face, as if to say,  This is what it means to be a brave.  This is who I am.  Can you face it?  I opened to him. 

We had six more children.  All in all I had three sons and four daughters.  I gave them all Christian names.  They took the  place of the family I had lost.  Perhaps that was wrong.

After the Sullivan campaign, before the Winter of Hunger, I hired myself out as a farm hand so my family had corn. In the treaty with the colonies, I came to own land. And I became…naturalized. A naturalized citizen of the United States. 

Eventually, Hiokatoo died of consumption, well past one hundred, still telling stories to anyone who would listen.  Not his sons.  Whiskey told them stories.  

In his fifties John, his firstborn, my second, murdered first Thomas, then James.  Finally strong spirits brought a tomahawk to John’s head too, spilled his brains.

I buried all three.   

I was glad Hiokatoo had been spared this. This was not what it meant to be a brave.   I faced it for him.  Took his place.

 *****

On the outskirts of Horseheads, on the edge of a golf course, I grew up in the home my parents built. Houses rose up around us, one or two new ones each summer, till the creek bed went mysteriously dry, and the fields full of puff balls and thistles, milkweed pods and garter snakes were gone, and the green was all for sport. 

On Saturday morning, the construction workers were on overtime.  People were eager to move in.  I went downstairs and sat in a patch of sunlight coming in from the bay window.  The light poured down,  a wave of particles, full of the dust unto which we shall return. 

The house was quiet, I thought, until the refrigerator motor suddenly went off.  No, this was quiet.  A turtle dove sighed in the chimney.  Then the metallic clunk of the machinery began again, drilling a new Artesian well. 

Perhaps she thought it was the grinding of corn. Perhaps the scrape of a scalping knife, the beating of drums before a gauntlet was run, the clinking of coins in a false redemption. 

A volume of the encyclopedia was next to me, open to those plastic overlays of geological strata, The names sounded like books of the Bible:  Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus; Igneous, Sedimentary, Metamorphic.  The shaft hammered down, drilling for water.  Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum.

 I let my prayers drill down, down, past ranch houses and farm houses and log cabins, till they struck the soft thatch of a longhouse, and the Finger Lakes filled with living water and their names once more held the flowing vowels of the Iroquois: Seneca, Keuka, Cayuga, Owasco, Canandaigua. 

And there she was, the thick chestnut braids tumbling down, the beaded buckskin tunic, the trousers, the moccasins.  Mary Queen of Captives, Two Falling Voices, ora pro nobis peccatoribus.  

Praying for me. 

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Aug. 17th, 2008

Mashed Potatoes

I don’t have a lot of experience speaking Truth to Power, but I know about the power of lies. I was six years old when I told my first. And because the universe has an amazing sense of reciprocity, I immediately got a lie back in return. 
I can follow a trail of lies like breadcrumbs, back to that day. 
I am sitting on a red plastic chair at the gray laminate table in our kitchen on Stuart Street. My parents bracket the table like parentheses: my brother sits to my right, being a pest, because that’s what God invented him for. Across from me, where my mother can reach her, my sister sits in her high chair, humming as she eats. Mmm…mmm…mmm…. It’s against the rules to sing at the table – and humming is a type of singing, my mother has told me in no uncertain terms - but Stacey doesn’t count, because she is a baby.   Mmm…mmm…mmm.
On the table in front of me is Mt. Everest on a plate: a heap of cold mashed potatoes. My chicken leg is a greasy bone. The canned peaches are gone. I have even eaten all of the green beans in cream of mushroom soup, though I have tucked the mushroom bits beneath Mt. Everest. Now they sit there, those potatoes…white, lumpy, cold. And I must eat them because they are there.

I don’t like mashed potatoes.
“Everyone likes mashed potatoes,” says my father. “What’s not to like? They don’t even taste like anything! They’re just something to put butter and salt on.”
But they do taste like something. They taste like kindergarten paste.
I don’t like mashed potatoes.  
“Scott’s eaten his,” says my father. “He’s in the Clean Plate Club. He likes mashed potatoes.” 
 Scott’s eaten his. He’s in the Clean Plate Club. He likes mashed potatoes.

"What's that missy?  Let's  not have any lip now."
I try putting another pat of butter on. It sits there on that cold mountain like a frozen brick of dog pee. I turn over the shaker of salt, and it snows on Mt. Everest.
“Enough of that,” says my mother. 
Stacey has eaten all of her mashed potatoes – or rather, she’s eaten about half, and is wearing the rest. Baby fuzz sticks up like patches of crabgrass where her fists have left potato deposits. My mother sighs, pulls Stacey out of the high chair, and sits her on the edge of the kitchen sink. She starts The Wipe Down. 
My father tells me to clean my plate, and then I can leave the table. Those are the rules. My father is an elementary school principal, and principals like rules. Rules are what make my father sound like a principal, even when his voice isn’t coming out of the loudspeaker. 
Babies don’t have to follow rules, because you can’t reason with them. They don’t have any language. So you can’t make babies eat what they don’t like. They just spit it out. Or put it on.
I envy babies. What’s the use of having language if nobody listens to what you say? 

I don’t like mashed potatoes.      
When Stacey is finally clean, my mom takes her into the living room. She joins my dad and brother, who are watching Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom. Around the frame of the kitchen door I can just barely see the cheetah chasing down a young antelope. Eat or be eaten. That’s the rule of the wild.
I know the pounce is coming, but I still jump. 
My mother sees me and comes over to close the door. “You can watch TV when you’re done,” she says. “The Flintstones are on in ten minutes.”
The Flintstones are my favorite show. The Flintstones are not just a cartoon: they are a cartoon for grownups. The Flintstones are on at night. My parents watch the Flintstones. The Flintstones even star in their own commercials – where they smoke Marlboros. You can learn a lot about being a grownup by watching The Flintstones. 
Like the week before, when Fred and Barney got free tickets to the Saber Tooth / Mammoth game, then they found out it was the same night they promised to take Wilma and Betty to a prehistoric flower show. What to do? They dab on dots of boolahberry juice, and take to their beds. The Mesozoic Measles! What bad luck! No, you go to the flower show with Betty, dear. I’ll be fine
But when Fred and Barney come out of the sports arena they discover something they had not realized before – the flower show is right next door. And before you can say -  Uh-oh. The jig is up -   there are Wilma and Betty. Fred and Barney stutter and mumble excuses; Wilma and Betty put their hands on their hips, scold their husbands, turn up their noses, and walk away. But then the next day, Fred and Barney have red spots all over the faces. Turns out they are both allergic to boolahberry juice. Wilma and Betty have a good laugh, and all is forgiven.   
You can learn a lot about being a grownup by watching The Flintstones.
I take a bite of that mountain of kindergarten paste. I try to swallow, but my throat refuses to open, and I gag, loudly. I hear my mother heading for the door. “Sit down, Dorisanne,” my father says. “She’s fine.” I could choke to death in here, I really could.   Nobody would care.   
The Flintstones are a Modern Stone Age Family. They have pterodactyls that play records and pelican garbage disposals. They have a dinosaur for a pet. I don’t even have a dog to feed my potatoes to.
We do not have a garbage disposal at all, much less a pelican garbage disposal like the Flintstones.  But we have a sink. I stand on my chair, leaning over so I can see the drain where my mother rinsed the mashed potatoes out of my sister’s hair. No clog. 

No clog.
Here is my ticket to the Clean Plate Club. 
 I must move quickly like the cheetah, silently tipping the plate over the sink, waving it back and forth. The mashed potato mountain hangs there, defying gravity. I have to part it from the plate with my fingers. I turn on the water, and Mt. Everest erodes before me. Bits of mushroom re-surface like boulders. I wash all my troubles away.   
Then I push open the kitchen door, and announce: “Clean plate!”  
My mother raises one eyebrow, but says nothing. 
My father asks me if I finished all my potatoes. 
I hold up the plate for his inspection. “They’re gone,” I say. 
He gets more specific. “Did you eat all of your potatoes, Paula?”
 A moment of panic. Eventually, I know, those potatoes are going to leave the sink trap. Where are they going to they end up? In the bathtub?   In the toilet? Can they do that?
“Tell the truth, now.”
There is no escape. My father knows everything. The jig is up. 
He doesn’t want to spank me, but he has to, he says, or I will grow up to be a liar.  
"This is going to hurt me a lot more than it hurts you," he says.
I don’t have a lot of experience speaking Truth to Power, but I know about the power of lies. I was six years old when I told my first. And because the universe has an amazing sense of reciprocity, I immediately got a lie back in return.



 

Feb. 1st, 2008

Modern Love

The month of February often brings a lot of poets and storytellers out of the woodwork because it has a holiday in it dedicated to Love and Martyrdom -  which in my household is redundant – but storytellers and poets love both of these themes. One of the legends of St. Valentine has it that he was decapitated; in other words, he lost his head; this is possibly how he got associated with romantic love. Rome saved the head, though – even before eBay, things like that were valuable - and one of the ways Mother Church had for a long time of celebrating his feast day was to display the relic of his skull surrounded by roses. In this way St. Valentine also became the Patron Saint of Deadheads.  At any rate, this is the story I plan to tell on February 9 at the Open Tell at JavaJack's, should there be time.

I came across George Meredith's sonnet series Modern Love, which is the story of the death of a marriage, as an undergrad, probably first in that old cookbook the Norton Anthology of English Literature, and there was one sonnet in particular, number 16, that grabbed me with an intensity that just would not let me go, although at twenty I could hardly have understood why.
   
In our old shipwrecked days there was an hour,
When in the firelight steadily aglow,
Joined slackly, we beheld the red chasm grow
Among the clicking coals. Our library-bower
That eve was left to us: and hushed we sat
As lovers to whom Time is whispering.
From sudden-opened doors we heard them sing:
The nodding elders mixed good wine with chat.
Well knew we that Life's greatest treasure lay
With us, and of it was our talk. 'Ah, yes!
Love dies!' I said: I never thought it less.
She yearned to me that sentence to unsay.
Then when the fire domed blackening, I found
Her cheek was salt against my kiss, and swift
Up the sharp scale of sobs her breast did lift:-
Now am I haunted by that taste! that sound!

As I have been haunted for years by that sonnet.

Now if you are a connoisseur of sonnets, you are understandably shocked and outraged by this one. Because it defies convention. Even before you get to its subject matter, you’ve got a revolution on your hands here – this is a sixteen line sonnet. That’s like writing a five line haiku. Sonnets, by definition, are 14 lines. You know, like this Old Faithful:

Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no! it is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass come:
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.

Lots of Valentine's Day cards will be sent by one college sophomore to another with Shakespeare's 116 in them.  Meredith's Sonnet 16, with its pair of extra lines...not so much.

George Meredith, a young poet with a shamefully middle class background – his father was a tailor – married the widowed Mary Ellen Nicoll in 1849.   She was the daughter of Thomas Love Peacock, the English satirist, best known for his friendship with Percy Bysshe Shelley, and she’d grown up in an iconoclastic household full of romantic notions about free love and the equality of women. Her first husband, Edward Nicoll, was a sea captain who died three months after their marriage trying to rescue a drowning man in the Shannon Estuary in Ireland.   She was expecting their first child. Five years later, she married her brother’s friend, the handsome, brilliant and charming George Meredith.  He had to propose six times before she finally agreed to the match. He was 21; she was 28. They were very much in love.

So what went wrong? What ever goes wrong? There were problems with money. With inlaws. With sex. There was one healthy son, Arthur, and many, many miscarriages. And there was the painter Henry Wallis. He was a friend of the family. He painted Mary Ellen first, though that portrait has been lost; we only have a pencil sketch. Later Meredith himself modeled for a historical painting of Wallis’s, the Death of Chatterton. Thomas Chatterton was a romantic icon, a poet who forged medieval manuscripts and committed suicide at the age of 17. Keats and Byron and Shelley LOVED Chatterton. For them, the younger and more tragically you died, the better. And what was the difference between art and forgery anyway – if Beauty was Truth and Truth was Beauty, what else did you need to know? The Romantics left the Victorians this question with the same degree of responsible thought that we gave the next generation when handing off global warming and the national debt. Here: you agonize over this. And they did.

Two years after the Death of Chatterton,  Mary Ellen Meredith left what was by now a dead marriage and set up her own household. She had a small private income, her two children, and her own writing to support her.  Divorce was impossible, but so was the charade. Then Wallis came along and took her off to Wales for a holiday. The following April, there were three children. Once there was tangible evidence of adultery in the form of Harold – Henry affectionately called him Felix, for love child -  Mary Ellen lost all rights to the son she shared with her husband. She never recovered from this, living pretty much as a recluse with Felix and her daughter near her father. She died at the age of forty - of kidney failure. Her father was devastated, and never wrote again. None of the men she loved were among the three mourners at her funeral. Meredith remarried, this time more happily. But it is his unhappy marriage that made the best art. Imagine that.

What is particularly fascinating about Meredith to me is that although he never forgave his wife, he tried very hard to understand her. He saw the inequality of men and women as a social evil that hurt both sexes, and the women in his novels have been compared to George Eliot’s in their fullness and complexity. What I think caught my imagination about this sonnet, even before I knew why it would be so important to me, was how it captures an epiphany at the very moment when you understand that the realization has come too late. The author sees with perfect clarity exactly what he has lost, and the inevitability of that loss. There is no trace of bitterness – though that is not true of all Meredith’s sonnets – there is just the purity of grief. And somehow the sonnet transforms that.

The Romantics thought that you had to suffer to make art. The Victorians thought you had to make art to survive suffering. I did not understand that distinction as a college sophomore, but I do now. Paul and I have been divorced for a little over three years.  The wounds are no longer raw.  Paul has remarried. Now, where there was fighting and bitterness, there is polite indifference. We parent by email. There were no custody issues. The kids have adjusted well. It is a safe arrangement, most of the time.  But there is a scene in the death-throes of our marriage that still haunts me like the fireside scene in Meredith’s sonnet. 

Paul is trying to figure out what I want him to do. I don’t know what I want him to do. There’s nothing he can do. I’m just unhappy. We are returning from a storytelling event at the Hopkins Depot; he’s trying to become more interested in what I’m interested in, less preoccupied with his own job and more willing to let me be something other than a clergy wife. He is enthusiastic about one teller, critical of another – but mostly he is thinking about what stories he would do, how he would perform this or that. Paul has what my therapist would call “a strong personality.”  But he is trying.

He does not seem to notice that I have gotten quieter and quieter, that my responses are increasingly short, until we have pulled into the driveway of our home in Eden Prairie, the one we would be selling a year later. And then he gets it. He turns and looks at me, and I will never forget that look, that strange mixture of love and despair. “You don’t want me there, do you.” I am quiet. “Because I colonize everything you do.” 

And I think that is it, he is right

But what makes me want to cry is the fact that I also know with complete certainty that no one else in the universe would be able to come up with such a perfect phrase for what is happening. And even as I am losing him – even as I am pushing him away - I know he is irreplaceable. 
 

Oct. 22nd, 2007

How She Haunts Me

 
She haunts my nature; 
She haunts my nurture. 
She haunts my past; 
She haunts my future. 
She haunts for good; 
She haunts for ill. 
She haunts my heart; 
She haunts my will.
 
She haunts my nature. 

“You’re just like her,” my father said. “Creative.” This time, the word appeared to be a compliment. At any rate, I chose to take it as such. 
We were cleaning out the basement - he and my mother were trying to pare down, - and every time I went home for Christmas, more parings ended up in my luggage. 
“She would want you to have this.” The Housewife’s Guide to African Violets had already found its way into my briefcase. The photograph was a last minute addition, and I didn’t even know who it was, but I ended up stuffing it into my purse anyway, with the tampons and the Zoloft and the Tums. 
I made an excuse to head up the stairs again, quickly, before anything else was conferred upon me. 
“No, I can’t take the mantle clock this time, Dad. It won’t fit in my bag. If I need canning jars, I will buy some.” 
It’s not that I didn’t want my grandmother’s things, but they were fragile, as she had been.   
I don’t think she had what we would call a happy marriage. Her husband had been a minister –something else we had in common for awhile - but he did not minister at home. She raised four sons, three to adulthood. 
I can’t say what she was like with a houseful of boys. But the clock on the mantle ticked louder when the house was empty. We'd come to visit and she'd cry when we left. Eventually she'd cry before we left, in anticipation.
Menopause was joked about by doctors in small Pennsylvania towns, but otherwise ignored. Chronic depression was even more rarely discussed, and seldom treated. Finally, like her mother before her, she broke her hip. 
She had a walker, but not the will to use it. A year or two later she had a stroke. When she died, I was saddened, but not surprised. She had always seemed old to me, and sixty two was ancient.  
She haunts my nurture.  
I was fourteen when she died. My grandfather had wanted a white painted casket, trimmed in gold leaf. He showed us a brochure. It looked like a French Provincial dresser. 
"She wouldn't like it," said my father. "Get the pine – get the cherry if you have to spend money."  
At first Clay was stubborn, then his wallet got the better of him. He chose the pine.
Inside the pine box was a waxworks version of my grandmother: it was her, it was not her. Someone had put clear polish on the yellow fingernails. I had never seen them this long: she had always bitten them blunt. Now they grew.  
I stared hard for a few minutes while my father prayed, afraid the closed eyes would suddenly open. Yet I knew they could not; that too frightened me. 

She shouldn't wear glasses when she is sleeping, I thought.  But she's not sleeping.  She's dead.
When all the people had gone, my father went up to pay his own last visit. He blew his nose violently once or twice. Rearranged her blanket. Her big toe had been showing.
I went and stood beside him; still afraid, but unable to leave him there alone. He was my father. That would be him someday, lying in a box. That would be me, someday, blowing my nose.
The smell of cut flowers was overpowering. But my father took hold of my hand. 
She haunts my past.  
I remember the parlor heaped with flowers brought from the funeral service, the big farm kitchen full of covered dishes. There was scrapple and chicken pot pie, chow-chow and church spread; sugar cookies, shoo fly cake. But not my grandmother’s shoo fly cake. 
My uncles and their wives were milling about, talking to old neighbors and second cousins. Skinny Aunt Doris had worn red to the funeral, and I hated her. Aunt Jane was pregnant - not her fault, but still in poor taste. She had a good appetite, which bothered me. 
The noise in the room was almost cheerful. It drowned out the sound of the old mantle clock, as if time had stopped being important. Even my father, in some kind of nervous relief, had heaped his plate full.
My mother found me in Donnie’s room. "You've been around people all day," she said. 
"And flowers," I said.  
 My mom smiled. "You know, no one would mind if you went out for a walk.” 
I took the dirt road which ran along the cow pasture. It had rained the night before. The smell of manure hung in the spring air. 
Violets were everywhere: not the delicate African violets my grandmother had tended so carefully indoors, but the common hardy weed. I picked a few, held them to my nose. 
Their fragrance was light, like a music box melody, and the scent of manure still came through. But the drowsy, heavy air of the funeral finally slumped back and away.  
She haunts my future.

Even that year when she gave me and my brother our Supercapes – they were aprons tied backwards around our necks with the "S's" copied from my dad's old comic books -- she never smiled, though I think she might have wanted to. It was as if the muscles in her face had forgotten how. 
I flew round the lily pond, jumped a stone in the rock garden, rattled defiantly up and down the cellar door. "I’m Superwoman!" I cried. I was eight years old. I had a cape. I could do anything.
"Supergirl," my brother corrected me. "There's Superman and Superboy and Supergirl.”  
"Well, that’s not fair," I said. "If there's Superman and Superboy, there should be Superwoman and Supergirl." 
"Well there isn't!" My brother was the Reality Police when it came to superheros. I appealed to a higher authority.
"Shouldn’t there be a Superwoman, Grandma?"
For a moment she seemed lost in thought. That happened a lot. "I’m sure there will be,” she said finally. “When you grow up.” 
Her expression, as usual, was unreadable, and I was not entirely sure I had been blessed.
She haunts for good.

Understand that despite a full semester of Home Economics in eighth grade, I was only a Halloween seamstress – there has got to be a mother in the audience who knows what this means - yet every year I dutifully reacquainted myself with my grandmother’s old Singer. Aidan’s lion costume was the last thing I made on it. He was six at the time. His father was still my husband. We had named Aidan after the Celtic saint who founded the abbey at Lindisfarne. But Aidan was more taken by the fact that in Gaelic, the name meant “fierce.”
I made it easy for myself. Chose a Simplicity pajama pattern, took the tail from the belt to another pattern. My grandmother made her own patterns, but I was not that creative. 
So how hard could it be?
I spend forty‑five minutes getting the bobbin to catch, poking the thin gold thread around under the metal plate so it will be in just the right place at just the right time. The instructions in the manual look simple enough: maybe they only worked in the fifties. 
Or maybe, after twenty‑odd years, the machine still misses my grandmother. 
I picture those deft hands with their blue veins and ragged nails, the right on the wheel, the left on the thread trailing from the needle, dipping the sliver of stainless steel below the plate in a single motion and bringing up gold. 
That does the trick. 
The lasso of thread from my needle slips around the bobbin thread and carries it gently through the opening. I bring the blunt side of my scissors through the loop and the two threads run off in parallel lines toward the back of the machine, like lovers in a country dance.  
She haunts for ill.  
"I do like the fur at the end," my husband says. 
Aidan found that himself at the fabric store. It really does look like a lion's tail. I am encouraged. 
The top is done. The pants pieces are pinned and waiting. Attaching the tail to the back of the pants should be easy with the right gauge needles. A week to go before Halloween: I am definitely ahead of last year. 
But halfway through, for no apparent reason, the machine suddenly begins producing 25 stitches per inch. Then I remember last year. It’s The Tension from HellHere's one seam Aidan won't be splitting.
I turn the pants right side out to view my handiwork. 
A twenty inch long torso and twelve inch legs confront me, the tail hanging out of one leg like a cord on a lamp stand. 
I have confused the crotch with the inseam. 
"You can get him a green wig," my husband suggests. "He can be a tree."
"He doesn't want to be a tree. He wants to be a lion." 
I stare at the microscopic stitches. Slashing my wrists with the seam ripper would be quicker and less painful.
"You could buy him a costume, you know. Why don't you? There have to be Lion Kings out there."
That’s a good question, for which I have a bad answer. 
“Because,” I say, “I’m Superwoman.” 
She haunts my heart.  
I take the photograph out to look at on the plane, and am surprised. Twice. A dark haired woman smiles out at me, her hair bobbed too fashionably for a farm girl. She is standing at the entrance to Penn’s Caves.
Well, what do you know. My grandmother did have a woman friend. She wasn’t always alone in a houseful of men. 
There’s a dimple in this woman’s cheek, which gives her a teasing, playful expression. She looks daring, maybe a little fast. Now here is someone who might give a woman like my grandmother a moment or two of bravery, of fun.
I’m curious now: I pull out the back of the frame, remove the cardboard insert. And then comes the second surprise. The spidery script written in faded ink on the back of the picture, the name and a date: Catharine, 1924
My heart skips a beat. It was, indeed, a person I did not know. It was also my grandmother. 

She haunts my will.
 
My grandmother put up canned goods in the root cellar. There were rows and rows of Mason jars - peaches and tomatoes and apple butter - along the walls on shallow shelves beneath the kitchen pantry. The homestead hadn’t been a working farm since my grandfather had answered the call – but each year my grandmother canned like she still had a Victory Garden.   
My friend Barb, who was in the first grade and knew everything, said that cellars and basements were the same thing, but she hadn’t been to the root cellar. It had a floor of packed earth, cool and gravelike. The dirt smell frightened me. Concrete kept things where they belonged. 
The cellar steps had wooden planks you could see between, and fall through, surely. But my grandmother said no, no, not a big girl like me – not a girl who was going to kindergarten - and she sent me down, weak-kneed, for preserves, into that dank place, whose spidery corners you could not see into.  
I made her promise to stand at the top of the stairs, promise. And she did. She always kept her promises, but still I came up quickly, by leaps and bounds, afraid of the earth, not minding the gaps.
“Now see?” she said. “You are a brave girl.”  
Afterwards I sat in the kitchen window seat, soaking up sun with the African violets, eating bread and jam till my heart stopped pounding and my breath was slow and steady, liked the measured beat of the mantle clock. 
 
She haunts my nature; 
She haunts my nurture. 
She haunts my past; 
She haunts my future. 
She haunts for good; 
She haunts for ill -- 
She haunts my heart. 
She haunts my will.
 

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Jul. 1st, 2006

The Two Presidents of New Hampshire

Tuesday May 30, and a significant portion of Wednesday the 31st, we spent in New Hampshire, home state to two American Presidents.  Franklin Pierce, our fourteenth Commander-in-Chief, is widely thought to have been one of the worst presidents in American history.  Josiah “Jed” Bartlet was the President New Hampshire would like to have given us.  The name Franklin Pierce may seem familiar to you in a non-Presidential context.  It did to me. Benjamin Franklin Pierce was the “real” name of the fictional character “Hawkeye” Pierce in the book M*A*S*H, by Richard Hooker.  The book led to a successful Robert Altman film and an even more successful TV series with a very different tone from the book or the movie. It was the Korean War as seen from the post-Vietnam 1970’s, and it starred the man whose name became synonymous with SNAG (Sensitive New Age Guy): Alan Alda.  And what was Alan Alda’s most recent role? Arnold Vinick.  And who was he trying to succeed as President? Jed Bartlet. Coincidence?  I think not.

Brought in as a dark horse candidate (as was Jed Bartlet), Franklin Pierce won during the contentious years before secession primarily because he had expressed no strong opinions – though he was a “doughface” –  that is, a Northerner with Southern sympathies. (Recently I saw the phrase reinvented to refer to Democrats who cave when the Bush administration assaults the U.S. Constitution.) He was a charming, convivial man, who struggled with alcohol most of his life, in a profession whose wheels were lubricated by it. Pierce’s great- great- grandnephew, our current President, seems to have conquered that demon before he entered politics: now he’s just driving the rest of us to drink.

Pierce had wooed and eventually married the daughter of the president of Bowdoin College, Jane Appleton – painfully shy, deeply religious, pro-temperance and tubercular – partly to straighten himself out. The approach was not entirely successful. Neither she nor her family saw politics as a gentleman’s profession.  She detested Washington and often refused to live there. On several occasions Pierce swore off politics and alcohol for her sake, but the lure of both overcame his best intentions.  Pierce resigned his seat in the Senate in 1841 and returned to his law practice in New Hampshire, only to be nominated for President, with four other candidates, by the Democratic party. He assured Jane nothing would come of it; when she heard he had not only won the nomination, but had accepted it, she fainted. Later it came out that he had in fact actively courted the nomination, and he and Jed Bartlet had another thing in common: a wife who felt personally betrayed.  
Two months before Pierce’s inauguration, on a train between Andover and Lawrence, the Pierces and their eleven year old son Benjamin were  traveling together when their car derailed and toppled over an embankment. Benjamin, 11, was crushed to death before his parents’ eyes.  Jane's first child had died in infancy, and the second of epidemic typhus at age four.  She saw this final blow as divine retribution for her husband’s ambition. In a haze of guilt and grief, Franklin Pierce was not sworn in as President; he affirmed the Oath of Office on a law book, and left the Bible out of it. His wife did not attend the inauguration. There was no inaugural ball. That night, and for many nights thereafter, Jane Pierce spent her time writing to her dead son asking his forgiveness, trying to contact him in séances (something the wife of the sixteenth president, Mary Todd Lincoln, did as well), and seeking comfort in religion. The White House state rooms were decked in permanent mourning bunting.  
Pierce was a politician, not a leader, and politics is a fickle mistress. His unsuccessful attempts to acquire Cuba, where slavery and a plantation economy also reigned, were seen in terms of their impact upon domestic tensions.  That and the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which reopened the question of slavery in the West, made Pierce so unpopular in the North that his party refused to nominate him for a second term. "After the White House what is there to do but drink?" he reportedly quipped, and proceeded to make good on the observation. A letter he wrote expressing sympathies for his former cabinet member Jefferson Davis made him anathema in Washington, and when Jane Pierce died in 1863, the only person who came to mourn with him was his Bowdoin college friend and biographer, Nathaniel Hawthorne.    When Abraham Lincoln was shot, Pierce’s house was mobbed. He died in 1869, of cirrhosis of the liver. New Hampshire named a college after him; the school’s web site gives the years of the term Pierce “proudly served” and leaves it at that.  If Jed Bartlet did not exist, New Hampshire must be glad Hollywood chose to invent him.
Looking both presidents up on Wikipedia, you would be hard pressed to tell fiction from reality.  Pierce’s entry is about a thousand words longer than Bartlet’s, but the format is so similar as to be indistinguishable.  There is one telltale giveaway, besides the (very) occasional reference to the word “fictional.” The table listing Pierce’s cabinet members doesn’t have the actors playing each in parentheses.  When you compare Bartlet and his real-life namesake, Josiah Bartlett, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, the historical personage only beats out the fictional character by 76 words.  Take out the links to the former governors of new Hampshire, and Jed's entry is 121 words longer.  Some things about the brave new world of user-generated content make me a little squeamish.  You can find out anything on the Internet: whether it’s true or not.

August 2009

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