Unsettled Accounts: Poems
By Will Wells
()
About this ebook
To take the mess of life and make meaning from it is what all poets seek to do. For Will Wells, recipient of the thirteenth annual Hollis Summers Poetry Prize, this includes reaching across centuries and continents, into the minds and hearts of disparate individuals—Albert Einstein, Andrea Yates, the traveler from Porlock, Dante, or Holocaust survivors, including his own grandmother—to extract the personal value embedded there for him.
By turns funny, shocking, gentle, and musing, the poems of Unsettled Accounts reflect Will Wells’s constant attention to his environment and to his past—and to our environment and our past—and his persistent effort to keep them real and whole by turning them into art.
Ping-Pong with the Nazis
Bored couriers have kicked off boots and set
their pipes aside, a Dutch interior.
The slapped ball clacks over the table
like a telegraphic code, then trickles
like faint hope across the marble floor.
How quickly he bends to retrieve it
and puts it back in play, the Jewish boy
living with false papers in a villa
owned by his mother’s Gentile friends, and now
commandeered by retreating Germans
as divisional headquarters. The young
blond soldiers, deferential to a social
better, muss his blond locks like the kid
brothers back in the fatherland, like big
brothers steeped in genial menace.
He begs another game, so they relent.
As the ball resumes its chatter across
the no-man’s-land strung with a net,
he calculates the risk that each shot brings.
And so do they. He holds his pee and serves.
Will Wells
Will Wells has published poems and literary translations widely in the United States and the United Kingdom. His first book of poetry, Conversing with the Light, won the 1987 Anhinga Award. He is a professor of English/Humanities at Rhodes State College, Lima, Ohio.
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Unsettled Accounts - Will Wells
I.
Ping-Pong with the Nazis
Bored couriers have kicked off boots and set
their pipes aside, a Dutch interior.
The slapped ball clacks over the table
like a telegraphic code, then trickles
like faint hope across the marble floor.
How quickly he bends to retrieve it
and puts it back in play, the Jewish boy
living with false papers in a villa
owned by his mother’s Gentile friends, and now
commandeered by retreating Germans
as divisional headquarters. The young
blond soldiers, deferential to a social
better, muss his blond locks like the kid
brothers back in the fatherland, like big
brothers steeped in genial menace.
He begs another game, so they relent.
As the ball resumes its chatter across
the no-man’s-land strung with a net,
he calculates the risk that each shot brings.
And so do they. He holds his pee and serves.
Hard Water
The pipes shudder and spew a tainted stream.
Hard water. My mother seems to keep
it like a sabbath: tub baths one inch deep,
rigid towels, and tea with flakes of scum.
On my infrequent visits, I submit
to her economies. Widowed ten years,
she’s tightened habit down till few can bear
its torque, still unwilling to admit
age greases us to loosen and let go.
She repeats an elegy of bills, the costs
depleting her. But her scrapbook insists
on my success: clippings and class photos
pressed under plastic, for history is prone
to fray or crumble. Our conversation
is a dust disturbed, motes of words that turn
a moment in the light, here and then gone.
A radio preacher’s voice drawls between us,
praising devotion as a golden chain.
Ours is forged by dint of drips, the stain
under faucets spreading its gospel of rust.
Side by side, we stand at the kitchen sink.
She scours each piece of family