For years I went to the Peruvian barbers on 18th Street —comforting, welcome: the full coatrack, three chairs held by three barbers, oldest by the window, the middle one a slight fellow who spoke an oddly feminine Spanish, the youngest last, red-haired, self-consciously masculine, and in each of the mirrors their children’s photos, smutty cartoons, postcards from Machu Picchu. I was happy in any chair, though I liked best the touch of the eldest, who’d rest his hand against my neck in a thoughtless, confident way. Ten years maybe. One day the powdery blue steel shutters pulled down over the window and door, not to be raised again. They’d lost their lease. I didn’t know how at a loss I’d feel; this haze around what I’d like to think the sculptural presence of my skull requires neither art nor science, but two haircuts on Seventh, one in Dublin, nothing right. Then (I hear my friend Marie laughing over my shoulder, saying In your poems there’s always a then, and I think, Is it a poem without a then?) dull early winter, back on 18th, upspiraling red in a cylinder of glass, just below the line of sidewalk, a new sign, WILLIE’S BARBERSHOP. Dark hallway, glass door, and there’s (presumably) Willie. When I tell him I used to go down the street he says in an inscrutable accent, This your home now, puts me in a chair, asks me what I want and soon he’s clipping and singing with the radio’s Latin dance tune. That’s when I notice Willie’s walls, though he’s been here all of a week, spangled with images hung in barber shops since the beginning of time: lounge singers, near-celebrities, random boxers —Italian boys, Puerto Rican, caught in the hour of their beauty, though they’d scowl at the word. Cheering victors over a trophy won for what? Frames already dusty, at slight angles, here, it is clear, forever. Are barbershops like aspens, each sprung from a common root ten thousand years old, sons of one father, holding up fighters and starlets to shield the tenderness at their hearts? Our guardian Willie defies time, his chair our ferryboat, and we go down into the trance of touch and the skull-buzz drone singing cranial nerves in the direction of peace, and so I understand that in the back of this nothing building on 18th Street —I’ve found that door ajar before, in daylight, when it shouldn’t be, some forgotten bulb left burning in a fathomless shaft of my uncharted nights— the men I have outlived await their turns, the fevered and wasted, whose mothers and lovers scattered their ashes and gave away their clothes. Twenty years and their names tumble into a numb well —though in truth I have not forgotten one of you, may I never forget one of you—these layers of men, arrayed in their no-longer-breathing ranks. Willie, I have not lived well in my grief for them; I have lugged this weight from place to place as though it were mine to account for, and today I sit in your good chair, in the sixth decade of my life, and if your back door is a threshold of the kingdom of the lost, yours is a steady hand on my shoulder. Go down into the still waters of this chair and come up refreshed, ready to face the avenue. Maybe I do believe we will not be left comfortless. After everything comes tumbling down or you tear it down and stumble in the shadow-valley trenches of the moon, there’s a still a decent chance at—a barber shop, salsa on the radio, the instruments of renewal wielded, effortlessly, and, who’d have thought, for you. Willie if he is Willie fusses much longer over my head than my head merits, which allows me to be grateful without qualification. Could I be a little satisfied? There’s a man who loves me. Our dogs. Fifteen, twenty more good years, if I’m a bit careful. There’s what I haven’t written. It’s sunny out, though cold. After I tip Willie I’m going down to Jane Street, to a coffee shop I like, and then I’m going to write this poem. Then © 2015 Mark Doty. Used with permission of the author. |
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