Poem
Paul Muldoon
The Rowboat
The Rowboat
The Rowboat
IEvery year he’d sunk
the old, clinker-built rowboat
so it might again float.
Every year he’d got drunk
as if he might once and for all write off
every year he’d sunk,
kerplunk, kerplunk,
one after another into a trough
no water would staunch.
Like a waterlogged tree trunk,
every year he’d sunk
just as he was about to launch
into a diatribe on the chunk
of change this bitch
was costing him, the debt into which
every year he’d sunk.
II
The old, clinker-built rowboat
with its shrivelled strakes
would be immersed in the lake,
the lake that itself rewrote
many a stage play for the big screen.
The old, clinker-built rowboat
in which he’d stashed the ice-tote
from L.L. Bean
for Crested Ten on the rocks
(one part Crested Ten, two parts creosote),
the old, clinker-built rowboat
he’d threatened to leave on the dock
and give a coat
of varnish that would somehow clinch the deal,
that would once and for all seal
the old, clinker-built rowboat.
III
So it might again float
the possibility one must expand
with Coutts and Co. (without the ampersand),
misquoting them as one might misquote
the price of Paramount stock
so it might again float.
More than once he’d written a promissory note
and put himself in hock
more than once to assuage
the fears for a property expressed by the Coutthroats
so it might again float
from the big screen to the stage
and gain by losing something of its bloat,
taking as he did the chance
it might be imbued with some new significance
so it might again float.
IV
Every year he’d got drunk
and railed at this one and that,
the baseball-birdbrain, the basketball-gnat,
the gin-soaked punk
he threatened with a punching out of lights
every year he’d got drunk,
the Coutts & Co. quidnunc
whose argument was no more watertight
than any by which he might inure
himself against the basketball-gnat’s slam dunk.
Every year he’d got drunk
but resisted taking a cure
just as every year he’d shrunk
from the thought, kerpow,
he’d most likely go under given how
every year he’d got drunk.
© 2007, Paul Muldoon
Poems
Poems of Paul Muldoon
Close
The Rowboat
IEvery year he’d sunk
the old, clinker-built rowboat
so it might again float.
Every year he’d got drunk
as if he might once and for all write off
every year he’d sunk,
kerplunk, kerplunk,
one after another into a trough
no water would staunch.
Like a waterlogged tree trunk,
every year he’d sunk
just as he was about to launch
into a diatribe on the chunk
of change this bitch
was costing him, the debt into which
every year he’d sunk.
II
The old, clinker-built rowboat
with its shrivelled strakes
would be immersed in the lake,
the lake that itself rewrote
many a stage play for the big screen.
The old, clinker-built rowboat
in which he’d stashed the ice-tote
from L.L. Bean
for Crested Ten on the rocks
(one part Crested Ten, two parts creosote),
the old, clinker-built rowboat
he’d threatened to leave on the dock
and give a coat
of varnish that would somehow clinch the deal,
that would once and for all seal
the old, clinker-built rowboat.
III
So it might again float
the possibility one must expand
with Coutts and Co. (without the ampersand),
misquoting them as one might misquote
the price of Paramount stock
so it might again float.
More than once he’d written a promissory note
and put himself in hock
more than once to assuage
the fears for a property expressed by the Coutthroats
so it might again float
from the big screen to the stage
and gain by losing something of its bloat,
taking as he did the chance
it might be imbued with some new significance
so it might again float.
IV
Every year he’d got drunk
and railed at this one and that,
the baseball-birdbrain, the basketball-gnat,
the gin-soaked punk
he threatened with a punching out of lights
every year he’d got drunk,
the Coutts & Co. quidnunc
whose argument was no more watertight
than any by which he might inure
himself against the basketball-gnat’s slam dunk.
Every year he’d got drunk
but resisted taking a cure
just as every year he’d shrunk
from the thought, kerpow,
he’d most likely go under given how
every year he’d got drunk.
The Rowboat
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