Man of the House by David Wagoner
My parents left today, after a week and a half visit. This time my father: painted his workbench (which he constructed on a previous visit) and pegboard (for all the tools), studied the operation of and installed a new filter for the Aprilaire system, hung some artwork, plowed/shoveled much snow, and assisted my mother with dog training (my dog). He’s my favorite man of the house.
Man of the House
By David Wagoner
My father, looking for trouble, would find it
On his hands and knees by hammering on walls
Between the joists or drilling through baseboards
Or crawling into the attic where insulation
Lay under the leaks like sleeping-bags.
It would be something simple as a rule
To be ingenious for, in overalls;
And he would kneel beside it, pouring sweat
Down his red cheeks, glad of a useful day
With something wrong unknown to the landlord.
At those odd times when everything seemed to work
All right, suspiciously all right like silence
in concrete shelters, he’d test whatever hung
Over our heads: such afternoons meant ladders,
Nails in the mouth, flashing and shaking roofs.
In safety shoes going down basement stairs,
He’d flick his rewired rearrangement of lights
And chase all shadows into the coalbin
Where they could watch him, blinking at his glare.
If shadows hadn’t worked, he would have made them.
With hands turning to horn against the stone
He’d think on all fours, hunch as if to drink
If his cold chisel broke the cold foundation
And brought dark water pulsing out of clay,
Wrenching at rows of pipes like his cage-bars.
He made them creak in sockets and give way,
But rammed them back, putting his house in order.
Moonlight or rain, after the evening paper,
His mouth lay open under the perfect plaster
To catch the first sweet drop, but none came down.
