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	<title>Dave Jarecki &#187; Joseph Millar</title>
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		<title>The Poetry of Joseph Millar</title>
		<link>http://davejarecki.com/creative/2009/joseph-millar/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2009 05:00:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dave Jarecki</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guest writer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joseph Millar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eastern Washington University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joe Millar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oregon poets]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Joseph Millar is the author of Fortune, from Eastern Washington University Press. His first collection, Overtime (2001), was finalist for the Oregon Book Award. Millar grew up in Pennsylvania, attended Johns Hopkins University and spent 25 years in the San Francisco Bay area, working at a variety of jobs, from telephone repairman to commercial fisherman. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><strong>Joseph Millar</strong> is the author of <strong>Fortune</strong>, from<a href="http://www.ewu.edu/ewupress/" target="_blank"> Eastern Washington University Press</a>. His first collection, <strong>Overtime</strong> (2001), was finalist for the Oregon Book Award. Millar grew up in Pennsylvania, attended Johns Hopkins University and spent 25 years in the San Francisco Bay area, working at a variety of jobs, from telephone repairman to commercial fisherman. His poems have appeared in numerous magazines including <strong>TriQuarterly Review, Prairie Schooner, DoubleTake, Ploughshares, New Letters, Manoa, </strong>and<strong> River Styx</strong>. He has won fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts in Poetry, the Moncalvo Center for the Arts, and Oregon Literary Arts. He now lives in Raleigh, North Carolina, with his wife, poet <strong>Dorianne Laux</strong>, both of whom are on the faculty of <a href="http://www.pacificu.edu/as/mfa/index.cfm" target="_blank">Pacific University&#8217;s MFA</a> in Writing program. His poems are published here with his permission. </em></p>
<p><br/><br />
HOMEMADE KILN<br />
&#160; &#160;&#160; &#160;<em>from<strong> Fortune</strong></em></p>
<p>We humped the fire bricks eight steps down<br />
into the root cellar, laid them up<br />
with castable mortar, the drawings<br />
in <em>Pottery Magazine</em>: archway, damper,<br />
recessed firebox, fuel line fed<br />
from a number two diesel drum<br />
resting above in the grass. We loaded<br />
the pots glazed with cobalt and gold,<br />
laughing and passing a fifth<br />
of Jim Beam. That year my drinking<br />
would land me in jail, I&#8217;d wreck<br />
two cars and a five-year marriage<br />
while everywhere the gas crunch choked off<br />
the pumps. Ford&#8217;s Pinto with its<br />
exploding gas tank selling into the millions,<br />
Nixon and Iacocca shaking hands on TV.<br />
Soldiers came back from Vietnam,<br />
raspy, thin, haunting the unemployment lines,<br />
hitching rides under freeway bridges<br />
smoking their monster dope in the rain. </p>
<p>We fired the kiln for thirty-two hours<br />
while we drank and played cards, passed<br />
out and slept, while the bright flame growled<br />
and sang to itself. Until both shelves<br />
melted and the pots all fell, broken except<br />
for one yellow vase, shining intact<br />
in the rubble. The new moon rose and set<br />
like a stone over battered fields of Maryland corn,<br />
the pond bottom&#8217;s silts, red mud of streambeds<br />
hardened like limestone and flint.<br />
We had nothing to sell, nothing to show,<br />
shoveling burnt shards into the trash.<br />
Cattle slept standing up in the pasture,<br />
the death frost burning under their feet<br />
and a siren began to swell in the distance,<br />
kilos of gray ash traveling away from us:<br />
highway ashes, ashes of flight,<br />
ashes of worship and follow-your-bliss. </p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>COMING HOME<br />
&#160; &#160;&#160; &#160;<em>from<strong> Fortune</strong></em></p>
<p>I&#8217;m fifty miles west of town,<br />
a stranger driving this coal dust valley,<br />
bottom land chopped into the river.<br />
Bunch grass stabs its glittering arrows<br />
up through the frozen gravel. I can<br />
remember holidays like repeat episodes<br />
of schizophrenia, furniture breaking<br />
downstairs in the dark, everyone&#8217;s heads<br />
bowed like hostages over the evening meal.<br />
I&#8217;m passing close to the villages:<br />
Avonmore, Saltsburg, Leechburg, Apollo.<br />
Forgive me my history, I want to say<br />
to those broken hills, the slow river,<br />
it feels like it happened to someone else.<br />
Forgive these ghost&#8217;s hands bringing you nothing,<br />
this heart filled with cobwebs and rain. </p>
<p><br/><br />
TELEPHONE REPAIRMAN<br />
&#160; &#160;&#160; &#160;<em>from<strong> Overtime</strong></em></p>
<p>All morning in the February light<br />
he has been mending cable,<br />
splicing the pairs of wires together<br />
according to their colors,<br />
white-blue to white-blue<br />
violet-slate to violet-slate,<br />
in the warehouse attic by the river. </p>
<p>When he is finished<br />
the messages will flow along the line:<br />
<em>thank you for the gift</em>,<em><br />
please come to the baptism</em>,<em><br />
the bill is now past due</em>.</p>
<p>We live so much of our lives<br />
without telling anyone,<br />
going out before dawn,<br />
working all day by ourselves,<br />
shaking our heads in silence<br />
at the news on the radio.<br />
He thinks of the many signals<br />
flying in the air around him,<br />
the syllables fluttering,<br />
saying <em>please love me</em>,<br />
from continent to continent<br />
over the curve of the earth. </p>
<p><br/><br />
NEAR THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE<br />
&#160; &#160;&#160; &#160;<em>from<strong> Overtime</strong></em></p>
<p>I said goodbye to my father in a black Oldsmobile,<br />
unwilling to park and linger, waiting for the flight<br />
to Pittsburgh. It was August, almost time<br />
for his classes, and the mountain sky was clear<br />
over Denver as I herded the big car down<br />
through the switchbacks, leaving the airport behind.<br />
That night I camped by a stream in the foothills<br />
named for a saint I&#8217;d never heard of. </p>
<p>I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;d planned on dying any time soon,<br />
stumping through the terminal doors in moccasins<br />
and shorts, the end of a dead cigarette in his teeth.<br />
He&#8217;d insulted my poems as  usual,<br />
eaten his pork chops and eggs, leering<br />
at the waitress when she brought the Bloody Marys.<br />
Before he got out of the car he&#8217;d stuffed two fifties<br />
into the ashtray and told me to keep firing. </p>
<p>When I was twelve I didn&#8217;t want to be President<br />
or King of England. I didn&#8217;t want to be in movies<br />
like my children do, lying dazed in the TV&#8217;s astral glow<br />
listening to the guitars. I wanted hair on my arms<br />
and big shoulders. I wanted to be a man like him,<br />
draped in mystery. A cigar and a hat flecked with rain<br />
singing, &#8220;If I Loved You&#8221; on the way to work, or leaning<br />
against the Turb Club bar, relaxed and elegant,<br />
the Racing Form in one hand and a whisky in the other,<br />
gazing down at the horses and sighing, &#8220;Christ, Mac,<br />
would you look at the wanton splendor of it all.&#8221;</p>
<p>That night in the Rockies, jumpy from five days<br />
of drinking, I couldn&#8217;t sleep, listening to the darkness.<br />
I wanted to tell him about the wild mustangs<br />
at Pyramid Lake, the Northern Lights crackling across<br />
the Yukon, ask if he thought they might be angels,<br />
ask if it hurt him that I never came home. </p>
<p>My father was six miles above the earth,<br />
Melville&#8217;s <em>Typee</em> in his lap, wedged into an aisle seat<br />
and calling for another gin, the lights winking on<br />
across the wing: red, right, returning,<br />
and his hat pulled low<br />
over the yoked forebones of his skull.<br />
The next day I would drive west through deep canyons<br />
into the splintered light of Utah,<br />
electric dust rising from cracked blue hills<br />
where nobody knew my name,.<br />
Whatever it was he gave me, in the early years<br />
after my mother died,<br />
that fierce kindness I&#8217;d required<br />
to believe in the world&#8217;s sudden reckonings,<br />
was mine now. In a few months<br />
he&#8217;d be gone.<br />
Reagan would be President<br />
and I&#8217;d be struggling, bankrupt, divorced. </p>
<p>But that night the stars came down close to the road<br />
like the eyes of the coyote<br />
as I cut across Nevada,<br />
remembering how we collapsed in the snow<br />
when the Steelers lost the title,<br />
and laughing to myself through the darkness<br />
all the way back to the coast.  </p>
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