Provo
It’s hard to
get anywhere in Utah
without going through
Provo.
I can’t tell
you the number of times
I went there
as a teenager, the
number
Of times I
drove into town in
the early
Afternoon,
hungry, and had to
look around
For a place
to eat. You don’t
have to starve
In Provo but
you eat at your own
risk.
At no risk. I
would never have gone
to Provo
On my own. I
went accompanied--
For reasons
almost too trivial--or
personal--to mention.
~
There are moments
when you simply must
get into the car and
drive
And from Salt
Lake there are only
a few ways to go,
Toward the
Great Salt Lake or
toward the canyons
and to get
To Zion or
Moab you had to pass
through Provo.
~
I remember the population
because it went
With the number
of miles from outskirt
to outskirt,
45 miles,
45,000 people, 45 minutes
(Keeping to
the speed limit)
$45 to spend
on a suit at a 45%
discount....
There was nothing
Provo’s department
store did not carry,
Including
pearl handled Colt
45’s,
But for a
wider selection of
fire arms, rifles
With narrowing
focal points, with
greater precision over
vast
distances,
You were better
off
Next door.
~
O I guess it wasn’t
that different from
entering
A thousand
other American towns,
but this one
Made my flesh
crawl. I wanted
to howl.
The men walked
with their
hands deep
in their pockets.
The women
were afraid
to lift their
eyes.
It was as
if something
terrible had
happened
Or was about
to happen.
~
I’m
not saying
you have to
love what
you do
In this life,
but it isn’t
nice to practice
The silent
treatment
on strangers
in the desert,
Strangers
who would
have to be
wondering
Where the
other 44,990
people were,
since
Other than
the one drowning
potatoes in
burning oil
Beside the
grill in the
luncheonette
And the one
behind the
register,
And the three
grim-faced,
parchment-skinned
Jack Mormons
hunkered over
cups,
And the handful
of impassive
faces
Placed against
the windows
Of one-story
cinder-block
houses,
There was
no one in
Provo beyond
the jackrabbits--
Glimpsed in
abundance
en route--
Who vanished
as we crossed
the town line,
And drove
past the population
sign.
Or was it
a warning
in disguise?
~
There was
something
eerie in the
air,
An absence
I could not
identify.
~
An immense
single-pump
gas station,
Shimmering
like a mirage
in the heat,
Took up a
good part
of the main
drag.
I pull in. Step
into the heat
stunned.
The car is
too hot to
touch.
I needed gas
but didn’t
want to get
it there.
It meant digging
up the attendant.
You know
the lights
in hospital
corridors.
Those are
the lights
in the gas
station in
Provo.
They’re
the kind of
lights that
show up whatever’s
wrong with
a
face;
The kind of
lights that
make something
wrong when
there’s
nothing
wrong.
~
When I got
there, I was
afraid. It’s
hard
To put my
finger on
the precise
reason why.
It’s
not as though
something
ominous rose
From the sidewalks
or Hell’s
Angels cycles
Were parked
outside the
luncheonette.
Nothing like
that.
Nor can I
say why, even
though there
was almost
No one on
the street,
I felt watched.
While I slept
fitfully in
the tilt-back
bucket seats,
Someone scribbled
obscenities
on the headlights.
I felt drawn
by destiny
to this nadir.
~
You don’t
want to provoke
anyone in
Provo.
It’s
that kind
of place,
that kind
of absence--
The desert
flattens out,
the plants
Draw in their
antennae.
Provo is
not where
you can hope
to find
Boon companions. It’s
against the
law
To serve liquor
in the bar
And no one
in the luncheonette
looks up
When you walk
in.
These are
the fallen,
Sunk in ashes,
adrift
In the smoke
of unreason.
They have
masturbated
without shame.
They have
coveted, envied.
They have
pocketed the
tithe.
It’s
hard to put
it into words:
Provo.
It’s
more like
a place without
a name,
A desert stopover
with the semblance
of a town.
Provo is
a place where
there is no
reason to
be.
A province
that would
never grow
up to be a
suburb,
Like the backwaters
where they
exiled
Ovid and Pascal.
Only there
is no water--
Just landscape
shorn of green
and tawny
desert colors.
Burned skyline.
Hills like
craggy impenetrable
fortresses.
The rain gutters
hiss in the
dryness.
There’s
a menacing
blue tint
on the rims
Of impinging
mountains.
From The Couple
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