The Invention of the Present

    Encounter groups about the present sprang up
    even in rural areas. People learned
    to laugh together and let go
    of empty relationships. Everybody held hands.

    In religious shows on TV fat women
    with rouge like bruises on their cheeks
    and men with silver wigs who looked dead
    sang never mind about yesterday,

    Jesus loves you as you are. Operators are standing by
    scrolled left to right under their feet.
    On TV someone was always standing by
    or shooting somebody or being shot

    or telling jokes or saying don’t delay
    and be sure to act now. For suddenly,
    it seemed to be all the present all the time.
    Yet not even the present just happened

    without the contributions of a number
    of pioneers: Cher, for instance,
    who experimented with gels and plastic surgery
    to develop a face impervious to change,

    the journalist who brought history into the present
    by discovering that a bill signed
    in Washington or a good day on Wall Street
    were actually “historic moments,”

    the manufacturers of automobiles
    that made the future as near
    as the neighborhood showroom.
    For lacking them -- and the creators

    of multi-tasking and e-mail,
    and the first voyagers into cyberspace,
    bringing to that starless darkness
    web-sites, on all the time at the same time --

    we would never have known
    that the whole idea of the past
    could become a thing of the past;
    we would never have had, in short, today.

     



    Home

    Under bands of light
    in the long hall, the old
    woman walks, her face

    bright as if she knows
    where she is going
    and dull again and bright

    and dull again; she turns
    and walks the other way.
    The man in #203 stands

    in the back field
    all afternoon calling
    the hired man. Johnson

    is also the name of the one
    in the wheelchair
    though he would not

    respond to it, now reduced
    to the question
    on his face: What

    happened to me?
    Near him in the lobby,
    squinting, Do I Know You

    leans forward, and beside her,
    face fastened
    to an oxygen tube,

    I’m Scared. They don’t
    raise their eyes to the TV,
    jumping with its

    fake life. Three times
    a day they hold
    their forks and do not

    eat their food. And when
    the family arrives, tourists
    from a country they’ll never

    see again, they can’t think how
    they have ended up
    in the home

    where they are all
    homeless, or why
    they are waving back

    to those they hardly recall,
    or why their visitors
    are smiling.

     




    Bio Note
      Wesley McNair is the author of four books and a chapbook, all in print, most recently Talking in the Dark and The Town of No & My Brother Running, a dual reprint. The recipient of grants from the Rockefeller, Fulbright and Guggenheim foundations, he has won two NEA Fellowships, prizes in poetry from Poetry, Poetry Northwest, and Yankee magazines, the Sarah Josepha Hale Medal, and an Emmy Award. His poems have appeared in over forty anthologies, including the Pushcart Prize Annual, and two editions of The Best American Poetry. In 2001, his first book, The Faces of Americans in 1853, for which he won the Devins Award, was reissued as a Classic Contemporary by Carnegie Mellon University Press. During the spring of 2002 Carnegie Mellon will publish his book of essays on place and poetry, Mapping the Heart. His new collection of poems, Fire, will be available from Godine in April. For more information see www.wesleymcnair.com.

    Contents


     



     Wesley

     McNair