The Lowell Review 2021

Page 127

Reflections (II)

2021

Sweetland Gardens 1969 m a r i e l o u i s e s t. o n g e

“I had nothing to offer anybody except my own confusion.” —Jack Kerouac (1922–1969) Inside the rows of ancient brick, shuttles flew back and forth, a rapid measure followed by the dull thunk of beaters on looms the size of rooms. Canals spooled through the city inky and restless, reaching for the wider waters of the Merrimack and a salty mouth to set them free. Each day I crossed the town common and went to a job that freed me from a ceaseless summer, the ache of the news, and the vapors of a worrisome home. Walking, I’d take time to wish myself up into the giant arms of oak trees older than the smoking men on benches leaning on canes, and I’d fly away the way a dream does in morning. At work, I’d take orders—same thing every day: English muffin with butter and tomato for a woman who arrived daily at 11 and sat in the same booth, coffee for the debauched insurance man who knew where to prey, Cokes for kids my same age who never left a tip, and frappes for the older girls with blonde beehives who told me I should shave my legs and put on lipstick. The days curled aimlessly through the long summer heat in the same way smoke eased out of mill workers’ mouths and dark waters stretched toward some imagined relief. Next door, the tailor repaired things eleven hours a day six days a week, sitting with his head down at a tiny table, as suit coats and shirts wearing paper tags breezed by overhead on a trolley that went nowhere. On a shadowy October day, Kerouac was buried in Edson Cemetery in Lowell wearing too much makeup and holding rosary beads. A nun who taught English at my school snuck out to attend his funeral. She crossed the street (and the principal) but didn’t take her students. All this played out on one of the grandest boulevards, upper Merrimack Street, p’tit Canada, Lowell, Sweetland, Kerouac and white roses. The summer after they buried Jack, I was restless. Sweetland Gardens wasn’t so sweet anymore. I went to work in the Wannalancit Mill. My tasks were simple The Lowell Review

117


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Contributors

14min
pages 189-198

Joe Whelan The Sheep Shearers

1min
pages 184-185

Billy Fenton Droichead na nDeoir

1min
pages 186-188

Jean O’Brien Rupture

1min
page 183

Clare Mulvany Towards a Wild Ecology of Being

6min
pages 180-182

Nessa O’Mahony The Belated Discovery of a Role Model

7min
pages 174-176

Geoffrey Douglas The ’69 Mets: A Time and Season to Remember

9min
pages 160-163

Prudence Brighton Suzanne Dion: She Loved the Game

3min
pages 164-165

Julie Ward Large Bottles and Sweet Butter Pastry

7min
pages 177-179

Dave Perry Football in Chelmsford

4min
pages 166-170

Margaret O’Brien Pasteur and Uncle Paddy

8min
pages 171-173

Girls Softball Team

7min
pages 157-159

Charles Gargiulo Farewell, Little Canada: An Excerpt

14min
pages 149-156

Fred Woods Pecos Mission, New Mexico 1621, 1680

1min
pages 147-148

William Reed Huntington The Cold Meteorite

1min
page 146

David Daniel Rikki, Don’t Lose That Number

10min
pages 142-145

Dave Robinson The New Old New England Halloween Blues

1min
pages 140-141

George Chigas Christos Anesti

21min
pages 132-138

Kathleen Aponick Postcards from Haggett’s Pond

1min
page 139

Joe Blair Catamount

8min
pages 129-131

Marie Louise St. Onge Sweetland Gardens 1969

2min
pages 127-128

Frank Wagner Meeting Patti Smith in Texas, c. 1978

13min
pages 108-112

Nancye Tuttle Bon Appetit!, Julia

7min
pages 105-107

Louise Peloquin Bébé and Me

13min
pages 100-104

Stephen O’Connor Jay Pendergast: A Singular Man

15min
pages 85-89

Michael Casey For John Dolan

1min
page 99

James Provencher Dancing with Bette Davis’s Daughter

17min
pages 92-98

Dana White For Louise Glück, Poetry Was Survival

2min
pages 90-91

Henri Marchand Home for the Holidays: Cowboy Christmas

9min
pages 78-84

Tom Sexton Glacier

1min
page 77

Susan April Foliage

14min
pages 71-76

Linda Hoffman Spring Nettles: Gifts from the Great Mother

4min
pages 69-70

David Daniel The Waitresses of America

6min
pages 63-65

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Germany: Reconciling with the Past

7min
pages 58-62

Jack McDonough Did Someone Say ‘Coffee’?

2min
pages 66-67

Charles Nikitopoulos Tomatoes, Tea, and Beer

1min
page 68

Chath pierSath Trees of Bolton

1min
pages 56-57

Tooch Van Revenge or Really?

1min
page 55

Juliet Haines Mofford When the Most Famous Woman in America Lived in the Merrimack Valley

7min
pages 52-54

Anthony Nganga Equality and Justice: What Can We Do?

1min
pages 50-51

Jacquelyn Malone How I Came to Have an Autographed Photo of John Lewis

4min
pages 43-44

Jacquelyn Malone Holes in the River

1min
pages 45-46

Lianna Kushi When I Heard John Lewis Speak

5min
pages 47-48

Chris Wilkinson Shout Out to All the Dads

2min
page 49

Richard P. Howe, Jr. Pandemic Journal

6min
pages 38-42

John Wooding The Ladies of Central Sterile Supply

9min
pages 33-35

Introduction

10min
pages 13-18

Paul Hudon Diary in the Time of Coronavirus

19min
pages 20-27

Marie Sweeney Remembering my Illness-Caused Separation, a Semi-Social Distancing

8min
pages 28-30

Emily Ferrara ‘We Are Really in This Now’

1min
page 19

Fred Faust The Coronavirus Wedding

2min
pages 31-32

Mission

1min
pages 11-12

Doug Sparks Isolation Scenes

2min
pages 36-37
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