Imagination is All I Have When History Gives Me Nothing
Alex Carrigan
̶ Dani Putney
I don’t know who was the first person
in my family to arrive in America.
Odds are they came from Ireland in the
19th century, decked out in tweed,
Irish lilt on their tongue.
One of them made it to rural Michigan
and renamed a logging camp into
the town my father would come of age in.
I wonder what songs came to mind
when he compared the woods to Eden,
if there was a leaf or piece of bark
that felt just right in his hand.
Would he walk with his wife and children
through the trees, or would he keep
the happenings of nature to himself?
My dad said he was working on a family tree,
but I imagine he’s forgotten it under
a Fox News report or a case of Coors Light.
The binder with all our family member’s names
is probably in his basement somewhere next to
the old train set and the Christmas decorations.
Until I work up the nerve to go visit him,
I’ll have to think about who
that daring Carrigan was
to cobble up the coins needed to
come in search of opportunity.
Perhaps I’ll find some woods to walk around
in until then, and hope that something
about the feel of bark in my hand
ties me to something greater.
