Tomás Q. Morín
Lake Limerick

 

               It was late summer,

I think.

 

               The white brown

bow of the boat

 

               rocked gently

as I situated

 

               my feet, shoulder-

width apart

 

               and sat down.

I promised

 

               myself more times

than I could count

 

               that sad year

that I would row

 

               every other morning.

Why are boats

 

               always rocking

in the water?

 

               Or a better question,

why can’t we

 

               use a fresh word

when they do?

 

               Sway or swing

or toss would work

 

                if our boat

was in trouble.

 

               Ditto for roll

or reel or heave.

 

                Some of my people

came from islands

 

                and would have

had better words

 

               for what happens

when you add

 

               your weight

to a piece of wood

 

               cradled by water.

Those words are lost

 

               to me now and

I know a teacher

 

               somewhere is wagging

a finger at me

 

              for gently

rocking the boat

 

              in this poem.

But it really

 

               happened,

I could say,

 

               like an earnest

student I taught once,

 

               and anyway didn’t

someone far wittier

 

              than I am once

say proudly

 

              that a cliché

is only a metaphor

 

              that succeeded?

Don’t we still

 

              love a winner

in this country?

 

              If you feel your

finger twitch

 

             like it wants

to wag at me

 

             because this poem

takes the cake

 

             and I must be

pulling your leg,

 

            then the ball

is in your court.

 

            Step up to the plate

and dive right in

 

           on the perils of

stale language

 

          or dead metaphors.

In another poet’s

 

           poem, a tall, dark,

and handsome

 

           hero like myself

would be no hero

 

          at all. But today

I’m the captain

 

          of this boat and

we’re pushing off

 

         from the ramp

into the quiet

 

         waters of the lake

with the most

 

         poetic name.

I wonder if a man

 

         from Nantucket

who relocated

 

         to Ontario gave

this placid lake

 

          in the land of bears

and moose its name.

 

         When I’m on the water

I forget the people

 

         who would ask

me, “Where

 

          are you from?”

with that curious,

 

        and innocent

face they wear.

 

         When I’m on the water

I can forget

 

         the doctor, and others

like her, who would,

 

         if given half a chance,

whisper again

 

         to my mama in her

hospital bed

 

         that maybe she would

be more comfortable

 

         at home with Covid

during an ice storm.

 

        How does that old

Seinfeld joke

 

         go again? “People.

They’re the worst.”

 

         Only one person

lives on this lake

 

         year round. I see

the same three

 

        folks always

standing

 

         looking at God

knows what

 

        when I push away

from shore.

 

        Do they know,

I wonder,

 

        that the lake was

once called Big

 

         Salmon Lake?

Fall to spring

 

         it stays frozen,

but not still,

 

         because below

the floor of ice

 

         hikers snowshoe

across, bass and

 

        perch and trout

sway and heave

 

         like teenagers

at the prom

 

         moving quietly

under the bleachers

 

         of an old gymnasium.

I’ve been rowing

 

         for five minutes now.

At the reception

 

         after the funeral,

my brother

 

         tells the story

of our father

 

         sometimes rowing out

on Lake Mathis

 

         with his tackle and rod

but zero intentions

 

         of catching any fish.

He’d bait his line

 

         half-heartedly and throw

it out and watch

 

         the bobber wobble

this way and that

 

         like his mind that

was now free

 

         from family and bills

and hope and health.

 

         I never meant to keep

writing about you

 

         dad, but here you are

pretending to fish

 

         in my poem.

Don’t worry,

 

           I won’t become

a sad trout

 

           in this poem,

inspecting the sad

 

         worm on your hook

or worse yet,

 

         the bobber. God no,

I won’t be that

 

         white and blue cousin

of Christmas ornaments

 

         attached to your line.

Nine out of ten

 

         bobbers are red and white.

I was going to swap

 

         that blue one for a red,

but I’ve grown fond

 

          of accidents in a way

that you never were.

 

         Anyway, I gotta go

back to my lake

 

         and this poem,

but thanks

 

          for stopping by

all the same.

 

           I’m sure I’ll see you

again before long.

 

          The wake of my boat,

the trees, the clouds,

 

         the day, they all look

just like they did

 

         a couple of days ago 

and all the days

 

         before that. I haven’t

said much about

 

         the colors of my lake.

Would you guess

 

         that a depressive

favors a gray film

 

         on all the shades

of the color wheel?

 

        Not this one.

If Wes Anderson

 

        sold crayons, my bag

would be filled

 

         with coloring books.

Kiwi green trees

 

         with egg brown trunks

crowd under

 

         coconut white clouds

against cotton

 

         candy pink skies

turning blueberry.

 

         Somehow all of this

comforts me, calms

 

         my nervous system

that stays stuck

 

        on high alert

but now the clouds

 

         are frozen

and the water

 

         is still, even

though my arms

 

         are moving…

-Buffering-

 

         -Buffering-

I keep rowing

 

         and my eye

drifts up to

 

         the stone stairs

in the giant

 

         poster behind

the frozen

 

         monitor that’s

like an escape

 

         hatch for me

when I am away

 

         from my family.

The stairs go

 

         up and bend

to the right

 

         into a bright

green forest

 

         of bamboo.

When I was a boy,

 

          a soft wind

caressing bamboo

 

          leaves was my

silky lullaby.

 

         This is why

in my dreams

 

          the last few steps

to heaven have

 

         bamboo on both sides.

Not like sentries,

 

         but more like concierge

offering to take

 

         your coat and carry

your luggage up

 

         to the suite you’ve

been waiting for

 

         all your life.

The screen pops

 

         and the boat is moving

again. With every

 

         stroke I push farther

away from heaven.

 

         I’m on the center

of the lake now.

 

         I want a lake like this

for us. I want

 

         to walk onto the deck

in my robe, a drowsy

 

         sun dreaming under

its blanket of clouds

 

         while I nurse a smooth

chai in my mug.

 

         I want to look out

on a slow morning

 

         and watch the rower

with a camera

 

         fastened to the prow,

recording this slice

 

          of paradise for city

folks like me

 

         who only have time

to row on a machine

 

         in the fitness center

of their hotel.

 

         -Buffering

-Buffering-

 

         -Please Refresh

the Screen-

 

         -System Update-

-Reboot-

 

         The black screen

comes back to life

 

         after a few long

minutes of nothing.

 

         I scroll through

the menu

        

          looking for my lake:

Lake Bled,

 

         lakes Lucerne, Como,

Shojiko, Lugano,

 

         even the river Thames

is here to help me

 

         get my heartrate up.

When I find it,

 

         I notice that in small

letters under Lake

 

         Limerick, it says,

Washington, USA.

 

         I unstrap my feet

from the machine

 

         and towel my face

and neck. My phone

 

         tells me Limerick Lake

is in Ontario,

 

         but the Lake Limerick

I’ve been rowing

 

         is the private body

of water for a private

 

         community on the

Olympic Peninsula.

 

         Instead of moose

and bear and snow-

 

          shoes, it hosts

well over

 

          eleven hundred

unique waterfront

 

          homes. Lord, even

in my daydreams,

 

          this country

won’t let me be.

 

Found In Volume 55, No. 01
Read Issue
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Tomás Q. Morín
About the Author

Tomás Q. Morín’s novel Cat Love is forthcoming from Pantheon, which will be followed by the poetry collection My Favorite Things from Knopf. He is also the author of the poetry collections Machete, Patient Zero, and A Larger Country, which was the winner of the APR/Honickman Book Prize. He has published two memoirs, Where Are You From: Letters to My Son and Let Me Count the Ways, recipient of the Nonfiction Book Award of The Writer’s League of Texas. He is co-editor with Mari L’Esperance of the anthology, Coming Close: Forty Essays on Philip Levine, and translator of The Heights of Macchu Picchu by Pablo Neruda. He is the recipient of fellowships from the Civitella Ranieri Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Guggenheim Foundation. He teaches at Rice University.