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    Frenchtown Summer Frenchtown Summer

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    unable to withstand

      the onslaught of memories

      Frenchtown held for them.

      Sometimes at night,

      awaking suddenly,

      hearing the chuffing of an engine

      in the Boston & Maine freight yards,

      I'd ponder the possibility

      that the tramp had been

      innocent after all,

      remembering the rumors

      that Marielle LeMoyne

      had been three months pregnant

      when she was slain.

      Was it possible

      that a murderer still stalked

      the streets of Frenchtown,

      kneeling in St. Jude's Church on Sundays,

      buying hamburg steak

      at Fournier's Meat Market,

      drinking beer with the men,

      my father among them,

      at the Happy Times,

      and, maybe,

      maybe looking right into my eyes

      as he passed me unidentified

      on Third Street?

      Or had he died?

      Or simply moved away?

      Those last thoughts

      were like rosary beads of comfort

      as I lay sleepless,

      waiting for daylight

      to arrive.

      My uncles and aunts

      came and went in my life

      like gaudy ghosts,

      playing bid whist at kitchen tables,

      dancing the quadrille at weddings,

      singing old songs on le Jour de l'An

      at my pépère's house,

      sitting on the evening piazzas,

      the uncles gruff in their talk

      and raucous with sudden laughter,

      the women murmuring delights

      of gossip,

      gasping sometimes

      at a surprising bit of news.

      My uncle Philippe passed the collection basket

      at the ten o'clock High Mass

      Sundays at St. Jude's Church.

      Uncle Albert was a clerk

      at Fournier's Meat Market

      and washed his hands all day long.

      Raymond and I counted with delight

      his many trips to the kitchen sink

      as he listened to the Red Sox games

      with my father,

      the hanging towel near the sink

      limp and damp

      at the end of the afternoon.

      My poor aunt Olivine

      visited St. Jude's Church

      every afternoon at four o'clock,

      lighting a candle

      for the soul of her child, Theo,

      who spent only twelve minutes

      in this world.

      Years after he died,

      she still dampened handkerchiefs

      with her tears

      and they waved

      like small flags of distress

      on her clothesline,

      nobody able to come

      to her rescue.

      My uncle Eldore,

      who laughed at everything,

      claimed that her tears

      came from a “sinus condition”

      but we all still mourned

      for poor Aunt Olivine.

      The children in the family,

      Raymond and me

      and all my cousins,

      made birthday visits

      to my aunts and uncles,

      passing our hats

      like church collection baskets,

      receiving nickels and dimes,

      always a quarter from Uncle Med

      and three shiny pennies

      from Aunt Julienne,

      who never married

      and sewed and mended

      for Frenchtown women

      in Pépère's sitting room.

      My uncles patted me on the head

      as they walked by,

      my aunts bestowed wet kisses

      on my cheeks.

      They called me Eugene

      but most of them seldom

      looked into my eyes

      and I wondered

      if they really knew

      who I was.

      My uncle Med

      wore a white shirt

      every day of the week,

      buttoned to the top

      for Sunday Mass, weddings and funerals,

      but top button open

      at the Monument Comb Shop,

      where he wrestled boxes

      in the shipping department.

      He never wore a tie.

      I picked up his shirts

      every Saturday morning

      at Henry Wong's Chinese Laundry

      and laid them out neatly,

      white as Communion wafers,

      in his bureau drawer.

      Friday night was my uncle's

      downtown gambling night

      and whether he won or lost,

      he tossed me a quarter

      the next day,

      which paid my fare

      to the Saturday movie at the Plymouth

      with change left over

      for a Baby Ruth or Mr. Goodbar

      at Laurier's Drug Store.

      He was my bachelor uncle,

      target of my busy aunts,

      who suggested,

      sometimes arranged,

      dates with available

      but respectable Frenchtown girls

      until he said:

      “No more.”

      My aunts murmured

      about a lost, unknown love

      he still mourned

      but raised their stubby fingers

      to their lips

      when he looked their way.

      He lived in a two-room tenement

      above LaGrande's Ice Cream Parlor,

      the smell of chocolate

      rising through the floorboards.

      He never owned a car

      but walked everywhere

      to church and work,

      tramped the woods and fields

      of Frenchtown and Monument,

      hiked occasionally

      to Mount Wachusum,

      a knapsack on his back,

      blotches of sweat

      on his white shirt.

      Sometimes he invited

      Raymond and me to join him.

      He pointed out flowers and birds,

      giving them names—

      Queen Anne's lace by the side of the road,

      barn swallows in sudden flight.

      We always stopped

      for sweet cider at Fontaine's Farm

      on Ransom Hill

      or banana splits

      at the Boston Confectionery Store

      downtown.

      He was my happy uncle.

      Yet sometimes I caught him

      looking out the window,

      so far away in his staring

      that he'd forgotten I was there,

      his shirts in my hands,

      waiting for permission

      to place them in his bureau.

      What did he see outside his window

      that I knew I would not see

      even if I looked?

      In my heart

      was the knowledge,

      lodged like a chunk of ice,

      that I would never find out.

      The tombstones of St. Jude's Cemetery

      at the far end of Mechanic Street

      shimmered in the afternoon heat

      as Raymond and I arrived,

      a pilgrimage we made

      when there was nothing else to do.

      An ancient elm,

      the cemetery's solitary tree,

      guarded the entrance,

      its benevolent shade

      falling on the seven sad stones

      that marked the graves

      of the St. Jude nuns who died

      far from the France of their birth.

      We always stopped first

      at the small stone

      bearing the name of my cousin Theo,

      who had lived only twe
    lve minutes

      twenty years before.

      Marielle LeMoyne's marble angel

      made us pause and look around

      as if we were being watched

      by whoever scrubbed her angel

      free of bird droppings,

      neatly combed the grass

      and placed geraniums there

      for Memorial Day.

      As usual, we hurried past

      the gray mausoleum

      of the Menier family,

      still not brave enough

      to peek in the stained-glass windows

      to see if the coffins

      were visible.

      We always ended our visits

      at the Edges,

      that unconsecrated ground

      at the far end,

      with the lonesome graves

      of those who did not die

      in the state of grace,

      had taken their own lives

      or abandoned their faith

      or disgraced themselves

      in ways I could only imagine.

      No tombstones here,

      only small tilted markers,

      names long ago faded,

      or no markers at all,

      only lumps of earth

      often decorated with debris.

      We looked in vain

      for the grave of Joe Latour,

      who years ago had hanged himself

      in a cell at the Monument police station

      after his arrest

      for drunken behavior

      one Sunday morning

      in front of St. Jude's Church.

      He used to wander

      the streets of Frenchtown,

      weeping sometimes,

      sleeping in Pee Alley,

      which, Uncle Med claimed,

      he baptized

      on many occasions.

      We were always glad

      to leave the cemetery,

      not looking behind us,

      and I wondered

      why we went there

      in the first place.

      Like setting a clock,

      my mother adjusted

      the octagonal card in the window,

      telling Mr. Harrold, the ice man,

      when he arrived on the street

      how many pounds we needed—

      fifty, seventy-five, one hundred.

      Mr. Harrold wore a rubber apron

      on his back

      onto which he swung the blocks of ice

      with huge tongs.

      He lumbered up the stairs

      without even grunting,

      beads of sweat

      like chips of ice

      on his cheeks,

      dumped the block into

      the icebox in the kitchen.

      My mother always offered him

      a glass of Kool-Aid,

      lime or orange.

      Raymond, Alyre and I

      waited for him to return

      and when he arrived

      he wielded the same pick

      to shave wedges of ice

      from the mounted blocks,

      and handed them to us.

      The ice, stingingly cold,

      burned my lips and fingers

      but at the same time

      brought delicious

      tingling to my tongue.

      As Mr. Harrold went on his way

      I stood with the other kids

      in the pungent fragrance

      of horse dung

      and knew bliss

      in a sliver

      of ice.

      I emerged from Dr. Sampson's office,

      (“The Eyes Have It”)

      blinking into the sunlight,

      and suddenly everything

      had sharp edges,

      the corners of buildings,

      the curbstones,

      a leaf tumbling

      from the maple in Monument Park.

      The glasses,

      with steel frames,

      were a strange weight on my nose.

      A world suddenly vivid,

      people's faces across the street

      no longer blurs.

      I saw the red spiderwebs

      in the cheeks

      of the cop directing traffic,

      looked up to see

      white clouds

      clearly outlined

      as if pasted on a page

      in a child's coloring book.

      And looked down to see

      cracks of lightning

      frozen in the sidewalk,

      a shard of green glass

      from a broken bottle

      gleaming like a distant planet

      fallen into the gutter.

      Reeling as if drunk

      on Uncle Philippe's home-brewed beer,

      I knelt down to watch

      a glistening ant

      at the curb's rim,

      and in my glorious generosity,

      my state of grace,

      did not squash it underfoot,

      the world too sweet

      and brightly lit

      for anything,

      even an ant,

      to the today.

      The glasses were a miracle,

      bringing the sweet

      gift of sight

      until

      in front of Laurier's Drug Store,

      Ernie Forcier

      placed his hands on his hips

      and yelled to me

      across the street:

      “Hey, Four-Eyes.”

      Love came to Frenchtown

      in the middle of June

      when Sister Angela arrived

      on the last day of school

      to teach piano

      at the convent.

      Meeting her one hazy afternoon

      as I took a shortcut

      through the convent gardens,

      I fell into the violet pools

      that were her eyes

      and signed up for summer lessons,

      soon plunging

      into agonies of longing.

      Dumb with desire,

      I stumbled through my days and evenings

      just as my fingers stumbled

      as I struggled to play

      “The Song of the Rose.”

      Delirious with her closeness

      beside me on the bench,

      the scent

      of strong soap her perfume.

      Her long fingers

      were so lovely in their paleness

      I longed to crush them

      to my mouth

      and kiss the palms of her hands,

      not daring to dream

      of touching her lips

      with mine.

      Mute in her presence,

      tripping on the carpet's edge,

      I was a pathetic lover.

      By the time I had learned

      to play “The Song of the Rose”

      without tripping fingers

      she had vanished,

      gone to some unknown convent,

      her sudden departure,

      like her arrival,

      unexplained,

      a mystery,

      just as so much of life

      behind the shuttered windows

      of the convent

      was a mystery.

      My anguish tore

      my life into shreds

      and I never played

      the piano

      again.

      “So you're going.”

      My mother's voice

      an off-key violin string,

      while my father,

      not answering,

      tightened the knot

      in his Sunday tie,

      blue with cardinals flying

      on the silk.

      His white shirt glistened

      in the bedroom mirror.

      I watched him toss her question away

      with the tilting of his chin.

      He often didn't answer my mother

      but his silences

      could contain lightning,


      at other times,

      tenderness.

      He shrugged into his Best Suit,

      dark blue with faint stripes,

      his suit for weddings and funerals

      or special times

      like the day he watched

      President Franklin D. Roosevelt

      waving from the final car

      as the train slowed down

      but did not stop

      at the Monument depot.

      “Spiffy,” my mother always said

      when my father put on his Best Suit.

      But today, she said only:

      “Go then.”

      Her voice

      a violin string

      snapping.

      I followed him like a spy

      through the thrumming Saturday crowds

      on Third Street,

      women clutching grocery bags,

      the men lounging outside the Happy Times,

      basking in the cellar smell of whiskey.

      Mechanic Street led us downtown

      while I dodged

      from doorway to telephone pole

      behind him.

      He never turned around,

      head down,

      as if the sidewalk held a map

      charting his way.

      Through Monument Park

      past the wartime statues,

      and the Civil War cannon

      aimed at the five-and-ten

      across the street.

      The North Side lay ahead,

      big white houses

      with wide verandas

      and birdbaths on carpet lawns.

      My father's steps faltered

      and he stopped at a telephone pole.

      Would he turn back?

      He lit a Chesterfield,

      then began to walk again,

      more briskly now

      as we passed Merryweather Lane

      and Holly and Cranberry Avenues.

      Frenchtown had streets,

      not lanes or avenues,

      piazzas, not verandas.

      My father finally paused

      at the two marble columns

      guarding the entrance

      to the Estate,

      the home of Lanyard C. Royce,

      owner of the Monument Comb Shop.

      “Benefactor and Philanthropist,”

      according to the Times,

      reporting his death that week at age eighty-nine

      in big black headlines on the front page.

      “Inventor of machines that produced combs

      eight hours a day without stopping.”

      I had seen his signature

      scrawled on my father's Friday paychecks.

      The Times did not report

      what the men called Lanyard C. Royce

      at the Happy Times:

      Skinflint.

      Strikebreaker.

      A hard man, my father said at home,

      striking a kitchen match

      on the sole of his shoe.

      I watched him enter the Estate,

      diminishing in size

      as he walked up the half-moon driveway,

      past men gathered

      near Mack limousines,

      puffing at long cigars,

      and he disappeared

      into veils of smoke.

      Waiting, I thought of the times

      he dressed in that Best Suit

     

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