Winter's Journey by Stephen Dobyns
Author:Stephen Dobyns
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
BALANCE
The other day I looked for Jimmy Hoffaâs grave
(I didnât find it) as our southbound train sped through
the New Jersey Meadowlands buried beneath two
or three inches of snowâacres and acres of dead
marsh grass the exact color of Willie, a friendâs
yellow Lab â and I thought, why shouldnât Jimmyâs
skeletal hand be poking up there, too? But it wasnât,
or at least I didnât see it in the time it took the train
to pass. Jimmy was last glimpsed in the parking lot
of Machus Red Fox, a restaurant in Bloomfield Hills,
where I once went for lunch in my early twenties,
about nine years before Jimmy left us, prematurely,
after an apparent meeting with two mobsters, which
was the closest Jimmy and I ever got to becoming
acquainted, and, who knows, I might have saved him.
Stranger things have happened, although I never
thought of it till now. Once as a reporter, I watched
a seven-foot-tall Teamster thug called Tiny toss a guy
six feet off a picket line as if he were no more than
a wad of wet paper, so perhaps Jimmy and I might
never have been close â he being the Teamster boss.
But Jimmyâs planting in the Meadowlands typified
a tough guyâs attempt to fix a problem, and effectively,
it seems. My wife and I were traveling to D.C. to see
a bunch of paintings, a city I hadnât visited for at least
ten years. The White House and Capitol were ringed in
by more armed guards than hairs on a hog. And Al Gore
was in town to warn Congress about global warming
and was praised or sneered at along strict party lines,
but when Floridaâs voting machines are under ten feet
of water, then perhaps the Republicans will think again â
pardon the oxymoron. Attila (not the Hun) once said:
Thatâs not me shouting, itâs the earth that roars. While
Clarence Darrow said the only thing in life that ever
matched his expectations was a baseball game, which
is how I feel about certain paintings. I mean, Cézanne
and Vermeer were good in the way Stalin and Hitler
were bad; in the extremity of accomplishment they
towered over their competition. Hard to know who
was better or worse. You might think my comparison
somewhat frivolous, but if it werenât for the former,
why would I want to live in a world with the latter?
I have some friends who talk about a higher power,
which leads me to imagine a big guy with a big club
standing on a chair, but seeing Vermeerâs painting
A Lady Writing a Letter makes me think that if
a flawed human being can create an object so closely
approaching the perfect, then perhaps thereâs hope
for the race as a whole, which is a notion I mostly
doubt and which I went to Washington to reaffirm.
In the painting a young woman in a yellow coat sits
at a desk lightly holding a quill to a sheet of paper
as she stares not at the viewer but a bit to the right,
as if pondering what word to put next, what word
exactly articulates her thought, a moment caught
three hundred and forty years ago and in the next
moment the correct word will strike her and she will
end her letter, though for all I know itâs a grocery list.
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