Sometimes Idaho Isn't Unlike Jazz

 
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BY CODY SMITH

for Jonathan Johnson

 

They’re both better when someone shows you how

to love them, and so we took a Saturday to cut

a rick of wood, the two of us driving up to Sandpoint

from Spokane in my wife’s Mazda, a chainsaw in the trunk

wrapped in dirty clothes. He pointed from the passenger seat

toward his memories just off the road: this is the logger

bar where I’d write. This is the land I wanted to buy when I was kid.

 

When the red suspenders are pulled over the shoulders,

it’s time to work, and we took turns with the chainsaw

and wood maul. I fell into a rhythm, whistling

When the Roll is Called Up Yonder even though

the two-stroke engine swallowed the tune. The whop

of the wood maul shook the veins of my arms;

the weight of the chainsaw pulled apart my back.

 

When the sun threatened to drop, an October wind chilled

my clothes wet with sweat. Just before we lost the light,

we walked up the tram to the cabin he built for him and Amy

to raise a daughter by candlelight. We walked the field

to stand on a rock, to hold open the barbwire fence

for each other on our way to the ridge.

Everything my hands touched, his hands had held in time, too.

 

Sawdust in my beard, in his long hair,

sawdust in the laces of our boots. We shook

what there was to shake and drove back

home trying to remember poems.

 

He told me once that everything’s an elegy,

and I’ll tell you, reader, that it’s true,

that our own love quickens the leaving.

That night heading home, lights in the valley snuck up

before I remembered William Stafford’s poem about rivers.

 

When I think of Idaho now, I think of diesel fumes

stirring the smell of wet evergreens, the blaze

of larch on the mountains; I think of the grit

of sawdust rubbing my heels raw,

the high cheatgrass scratching my palms,

the sugary ammonia of sweat-soaked shirts dried

in the dusk breeze carrying chimney smoke.

 

Nic and I burned through the wood that winter

and left the Northwest after two years

taking nothing with us except a few books and pictures,

baby clothes to keep in a box. I stuffed into the trunk

the last log he and I cut and drove it down

to the lower Mississippi River Delta

where what little my people have kneels to rot.


Cody Smith is the author of Gulf: Poems (Texas Review Press). He is the 2018 Mississippi Review Prize and 2019 River Styx International Poetry Prize winner. His work has appeared in Poetry, Prairie Schooner, Willow Springs, and elsewhere.