13 friends / my dears 1st

  35 again / then 1st

  19 MEDICINE: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 14.

  20 WENAS RIDGE: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 412—13; in TW 14—15, IAML 88—9.

  7 golden / gold 1st, TW, AUP

  11—12 To the top of Wenas Ridge.

  Where we walked out of pine trees and could see 1st, TW

  30—1 pushing into undergrowth. Shadows falling from trees now.

  But flat rocks that held the day’s heat. And snakes. 1st, TW

  43 The / And 1st, TW, AUP

  49 I’ve / have 1st, TW

  21 READING: in IAML 138—9.

  22 RAIN

  9 Yes, if I had even half a chance. AUP

  23 MONEY: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 145.5 (Feb. 1985): 252—3; in IAML 24—5.

  4 To go / Go 1st

  8 money / of it 1st

  27 love / love it, 1st, AUP

  28—9 who’d flip out to see him

  in his own boat, sails full, 1st

  24 AT LEAST

  19 the / that AUP

  25 MY BOAT: 1st in Fiction Magazine [London] 4.3 (June-July 1985): 17; in IAML 106—7. Based on RC’s revisions in the first and all subsequent printings of the paperback edition of WWCT (1st pbk.), the following emendation has been made to the copy-text (1st ed.):

  8 Annie, Jane 1st pbk. / Cindy, Jean 1st ed., IAML

  Other variants:

  4 Hayden / Dan 1st, AUP

  5 George, Harold, Don / George, Bob, Michael, Don 1st,

  AUP

  8 And Kristina, Merry, Catherine, Diane, Sally, Annick, Pat, Judith, Susie.

  1st, AUP

  26 WORK: first five lines quoted in the article “In the Works” by Tom Jenks in Esquire 102.2 (Aug. 1984): 114. 1st complete in New Letters 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 16; in Sunday Times [London] 7 June 1987: 57, IAML 113.

  27 IN THE YEAR 2020: separately published as a broadside “on the occasion of an event honoring the life and work of RC” (Berkeley: Okeanos Press, 1993). The event was a public reading held at Black Oak Books in Berkeley, Calif., on 9 Oct. 1993.

  28 THE JUGGLER AT HEAVEN’S GATE: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 414.

  Title: “The Juggler” 1st

  Subtitle: “(Or, The Scene to Remember from Heaven’s Gate)” 1st

  17 emigrants / landed emigrants 1st

  24 Juggling / A juggler 1st

  29 THE FISHING POLE OF THE DROWNED MAN: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 429; in IAML 105.

  Also published in this issue of Tendril is a version of “The Garden” that includes the following stanza:

  Redoubtable. There’s a word!

  It suited him down to the ground.

  He’d fished with the rod that belonged to the deceased.

  It seemed like a good idea at the time.

  But later, he had his doubts. Tendril 411

  The stanza is not preserved in the collected version of “The Garden”.

  30 MY DAD’S WALLET: 1st in New York Times Magazine 24 June 1984: 38, accompanying the article “Raymond Carver: A Chronicler of Blue-Collar Despair” by Bruce Weber (36+); in TW 17—18, IAML 30—1.

  30 of / charges of 1st

  39—40 each of his cheeks as he looked

  up from his figures. The same poor light 1st, AUP

  31 ASK HIM: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 407—8; in IAML 189—91. Based on RC’s revision in the first and all subsequent printings of the paperback edition of WWCT (1st pbk.), one emendation has been made to the copy-text (1st ed.). A further revision, present only in IAML, is treated as a variant:

  24 untroubled 1st pbk. / ordered 1st, AUP, 1st ed.

  regulated IAML

  Other variants:

  2—3 through the iron gates of

  the cemetery in Montparnasse. 1st, AUP

  24 son and / son, or 1st

  son or AUP

  42 would / had 1st, AUP

  32 NEXT DOOR: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 421.

  8 A / Is a 1st

  33 THE CAUCASUS: A ROMANCE: in IAML 171—3.

  9 forests / forest AUP

  44 Thursday / Thursdays AUP

  34 A FORGE, AND A SCYTHE: in IAML 41.

  35 THE PIPE: in IAML 124.

  18 I’ll / Instead, I’ll AUP

  36 LISTENING: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 17; in IAML 168.

  37 IN SWITZERLAND: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 425—6; in IAML 186—8.

  38 A SQUALL: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5), 14—15; in IAML 127.

  24 in / of 1st, AUP

  In the setting typescript of WWCT the poem includes a hand-canceled final stanza:

  Now, there’s the bell! That’s all.

  Go home and write something

  before you die.

  39 MY CROW: 1st as a holiday greeting card (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1984); in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 145.5 (Feb. 1985): 253, IAML 133.

  8 there / here AUP

  40 AFTER RAINY DAYS: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 18; in IAML 149.

  11 breaking / and break 1st

  41 INTERVIEW: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985):405.

  1—4 Talking about myself all day.

  It brought back

  something I thought over

  and done with. What I’d felt 1st

  42 BLOOD: 1st in Grand Street [New York, NY] 4.2 (Winter 1985): 89; in IAML 90.

  43 TOMORROW: 1st in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 34 (1985): 12; in IAML 72.

  13—14 Nevertheless,

  I wish for tomorrow. In all its finery. 1st

  44 GRIEF: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 145.5 (Feb. 1985): 254; in IAML 134.

  45 HARLEY’S SWANS: in TW 9—10, IAML 75—6.

  20 after / later TW

  46 ELK CAMP: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 423—4; in IAML 101—2.

  3 ever were / ever 1st

  8 coming. / coming! 1st

  10 thrown up / put together 1st

  39—42 behind the shoulder where the heart

  and lungs are located. “They might

  run, but they won’t run far. Look

  at it this way,” my friend said. 1st

  47 THE WINDOWS OF THE SUMMER VACATION HOUSES: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 12—13.

  5 when / where 1st

  48 MEMORY [1]: st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 15. See “Memory” [2] in U.

  13 A little / Little 1st

  49 AWAY: in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 34 (1985): 11, Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 406.

  2 hillside / side of the hill Ohio Review, Tendril, AUP

  4 afterwards / then afterwards Tendril

  7—8 When I talked to you on the phone,

  I tried to joke. Don’t worry Ohio Review, Tendril

  I talked to you on the phone,

  tried to joke. Don’t worry AUP

  11 A week later / Been a week now Ohio Review, Tendril

  12 still haven’t / haven’t Ohio Review, Tendril

  50 MUSIC: separately published as a holiday greeting card (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1987).

  51 ALL HER LIFE: in IAML 53.

  5 dreamt / dreamed IAML

  52 THE HAT: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 418—19; in IAML 116—18.

  10 all the way / closed 1st

  11 and / but 1st

  17 a / which is a 1st

  53 LATE NIGHT WITH FOG AND HORSES: in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 34 (1985): 6—7, Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 422, IAML 47—8.

  4 another / it another Tendril

  5—6 there was someone else. Tears were fall
ing.

  When a horse stepped out of the fog Ohio Review, Tendril

  17 yard, where / yard. Where Tendril

  28 ended, / ended. Tendril

  29 something / Something Tendril

  36 a / like a Ohio Review, Tendril

  54 VENICE: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 415; in IAML 86.

  6 Sangallo / Rajione 1st

  9 total, or / total. Or 1st

  19 And history / History AUP

  55 THE EVE OF BATTLE: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 416; in IAML 169—70.

  24 anything. He’s dressed in a morning coat and tails,

  as if he’s on his way to some important function. 1st

  56 EXTIRPATION: 1st in Tendril [Green Harbor, Mass.] 19—20 (1985): 417.

  9 each other / one another 1st

  57 THE CATCH: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 18.

  58 MY DEATH: 1st in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 34 (1985): 13.

  35 believe / oh believe 1st

  O believe AUP

  59 TO BEGIN WITH: 1st in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 34 (1985): 8—10; in IAML 32—4.

  5 how every evening / every evening how 1st, AUP

  10 silent / sullen IAML

  60 THE CRANES: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.3 (Spring 1985): 63; in IAML 77.

  61 A HAIRCUT: in TW 20—1, IAML 82—3.

  7—8 as the library. There’s a window

  there that gives light. Snow’s coming TW

  23—4 Soon, light begins to pull away

  from the window. He stares down, lost and IAML

  62 HAPPINESS IN CORNWALL: in IAML 84—5.

  63 AFGHANISTAN: 1st in Paris Review [Flushing, NY] 26.93 (Fall 1984): 47; separately published as a broadside “to honor R C on his induction into the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters” on 18 May 1988 (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1988).

  64 IN A MARINE LIGHT NEAR SEQUIM, WASHINGTON: in IAML 28.

  65 EAGLES: in IAML 100.

  66 YESTERDAY, SNOW: 1st in Grand Street [New York, NY] 4.2 (Winter 1985): 87; in IAML 192—3.

  9 sweating / I was sweating 1st

  32 Goes on, Yes. 1st

  67 READING SOMETHING IN THE RESTAURANT

  9 going / thoughts going AUP

  68 A POEM NOT AGAINST SONGBIRDS: 1st in New Letters [Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City] 51.2 (Winter 1984—5): 16.

  11 friends / sweet darlings 1st

  69 LATE AFTERNOON, APRIL 8, 1984

  1 sport-fishing / sports fishing AUP

  70 MY WORK: in IAML 129—30.

  71 THE TRESTLE: in TW 7—8, IAML 73—4.

  Title: “Water” AUP

  6 woke / woke up TW, AUP

  24 I wish my own life, and death, could be so simple.

  I think it could, if I had any character.

  What I want is to perfect my life someway. TW, AUP

  25 on / up on TW, AUP

  36 once stood / stood once TW

  43 and phone calls, its stupid concerns - is unbecoming, TW

  72 FOR TESS: 1st as a broadside (Concord, NH: William B. Ewert, 1984); in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 145.5 (Feb. 1985): 252, IAML 81; reprinted in Literary Cavalcade [Scholastic Inc., New York, NY] 39.7 (Apr. 1987): 9, accompanied by RC’s essay on the poem (NHP 120—2).

  3 out / out there 1st, Poetry

  Ultramarine

  First edition: New York, NY: Random House, 1986. Publication date: 7 Nov. 1986.

  First paperback edition: New York, NY: Vintage Books, 1987. Publication date: Oct. 1987.

  First selected and combined English edition: In a Marine Light: Selected Poems. London: Collins Harvill, 1987. Publication date: 1 June 1987.

  Dedication: Tess Gallagher

  Epigraph: From “Mt Gabriel” by Derek Mahon, Antarctica (Dublin: Gallery Press, 1985) 18.

  Copy-text: First edition, first printing, collated and corrected against later editions and printings overseen by RC.

  Small-press sources and separate publications: The Window (Ewert, 1985), EFTD (Ewert, 1986), The River (Ewert, 1987), The Best Time of the Day (privately printed, 1988), The Cobweb (Jungle Garden, 1988), Sweet Light (Jungle Garden, 1990).

  1 THIS MORNING: 1st in Ploughshares [Emerson College] 11.4 (1985): 81; in IAML 35—6. Title listed in AUP table of contents but text omitted from proof.

  6 walk - determined / walk. Determined 1st

  17—18 myself to see what I was seeing and

  nothing else. I had to tell myself this is what 1st

  19 mattered / matters 1st

  28 For a minute or two, though, I did forget 1st

  30—1 For when I turned back I didn’t

  know where I was. Until some birds rose up 1st

  2 WHAT YOU NEED FOR PAINTING: in IAML 125.

  3 AN AFTERNOON: 1st in Ploughshares [Emerson College] 11.4 (1985):79.

  4 CIRCULATION: in EFTD 19—20, IAML 199—200.

  1 pain / pain, EFTD

  8 you were / it was EFTD

  28 stinging / stinging pain EFTD

  36 that you / you EFTD

  40 climbed / got EFTD

  54 far more / more EFTD

  5 THE COBWEB: 1st in Caliban [Ann Arbor, Mich.] 1 (1986): 102; separately published as a broadside (Fairfax, Calif.: Jungle Garden Press, 1988).

  1—2 A few minutes ago, I stepped onto the deck of the house.

  From there I could see and hear the water, 1st

  11 Intricate / Intricate too 1st

  6 BALSA WOOD: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 146.6 (Sept. 1985): 346; in IAML 21. Reproduction of revised typescript accompanies the essay “Raymond Carver” by William L. Stull in Dictionary of Literary Biography Yearbook 1984 (Detroit: Gale Research, 1985): 236.

  8 deeper / no deeper 1st

  16 mound / mound of stuff 1st

  19 to / and 1st

  7 THE PROJECTILE: 1st in Ohio Review [Ohio Univ.] 37 (1986): 60—1; in IAML 16—17.

  5 reoccurring / recurring 1st

  11 careening / careering IAML

  17 going to / gonna 1st

  19 Only three / Three 1st

  46 got / get 1st

  52 down the stupid road, then turning the stupid corner 1st

  8 THE MAIL: 1st in TriQuarterly [Northwestern Univ.] 66 (Spring-Summer 1986): 145; in EFTD 17, IAML 156—7.

  18 for her a home of her own? 1st, EFTD

  9 THE AUTOPSY ROOM: 1st in Ontario Review [Princeton, NJ] 24 (Spring-Summer 1986): 45; in EFTD 18, IAML 65—6.

  4 was / had been 1st, EFTD

  5 or too late. / or late, 1st

  or late. EFTD

  6 for, so help me, they left things 1st

  12 running / still running 1st, EFTD

  26 strayed / strayed down EFTD, AUP

  10 WHERE THEY’D LIVED: in IAML 69.

  11 MEMORY [2]: see “Memory” [1] in WWCT.

  12 THE CAR: in IAML 44—5.

  11 [omitted in IAML]

  33 corroded / the corroded IAML

  49 Car / The car IAML

  13 STUPID: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 147.3 (Dec. 1985): 129.

  18 they’re / how they’re 1st

  14 UNION STREET: SAN FRANCISCO, SUMMER 1975: 1st in Ploughshares [Emerson College] 11.4 (1985): 82—3; in IAML 60—1.

  5 off in / in 1st

  14 company / company, as usual 1st

  20 you / you 1st

  22 how / what 1st

  29 little / little, 1st

  29—30 [no stanza break in 1st]

  33 you son / son 1st

  38 out from / from 1st

  42 afternoon / afternoon, 1st

  15 BONNARD’S NUDES: 1st in Crazyhorse [Univ. of Arkansas, Little Rock] 27 (Fall 1984): 9; in IAML 126.

  16 JEAN’S TV: in IAML 70—1.

  “Margo”: A version of this poem is printed between “Jean’s TV” and “Mesopotamia” in AUP but does not appear in the finished book. See this page and note.

&
nbsp; 17 MESOPOTAMIA: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 147.3 (Dec. 1985): 128; in IAML 181—2.

  21 can see / know 1st

  25—8 they’re going better than ever because they’re up

  early and talking about things of consequence

  such as death, and Mesopotamia. In any case, 1st

  18 HOPE: 1st in Paris Review [Flushing, NY] 28.100 (Summer-Fall 1986): 58—9; in IAML 67—8.

  17—18 [no stanza break in 1st]

  30 blasted / was blasted 1st

  19 THE HOUSE BEHIND THIS ONE: in IAML 137.

  20 LIMITS: 1st in Northwest Review [Univ. of Oregon, Eugene] 24.1 (1986): 59—60; in EFTD 7—8, IAML 91—2.

  24—5 with screen wire, rigged

  like a little cell inside. He’d broken 1st, EFTD

  28 the barrel. / a barrel 1st

  the barrel EFTD

  29 because he’d had a brainstorm: 1st, EFTD

  30 He’d / he’d 1st, EFTD

  32 damnedest / damndest 1st, EFTD

  21 THE SENSITIVE GIRL: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 146.6 (Sept. 1985): 344—7.

  3—4 on this pane of glass that’s

  been around even longer. It doesn’t 1st

  13 alders / sorrels 1st

  17 would’ve / would have 1st

  26 to / who would 1st

  28 fastened / broken 1st

  44 Then closes the gate, and fastens it. 1st

  46 that / there 1st

  22 EGRESS: 1st in Northwest Review [Univ. of Oregon, Eugene] 24.1 (1986): 57—8; in EFTD 15—16, IAML 158—9.

  3 but / that 1st, EFTD

  10 brother / brother, 1st

  11 to me - the ear, nose, and throat man, fell dead 1st

  to me - the ear-nose-and-throat man, fell dead EFTD

  14 his body / body 1st, EFTD

  22 Dead / Was dead 1st

  31 bracket / bracket than us 1st, EFTD

  33 in/then in 1st, EFTD

  at the time in AUP

  39 brother / brother, 1st, EFTD

  40 for the sake of / to allow egress to 1st, EFTD

  41 hell!/ hell? 1st, EFTD

  23 SPELL: in IAML 141—2.

  24 FROM THE EAST, LIGHT: 1st in Northwest Review [Univ. of Oregon, Eugene] 24.1 (1986): 56; in IAML 58.

  16 litter / cover 1st

  25 A TALL ORDER: 1st in Poetry [Chicago, Ill.] 148.3 (June 1986): 128.

  1—2 The old woman who kept house for them.

  She’d seen and heard the most amazing things. 1st

  22 the rusty swing set and Jungle-Gym bars. 1st

  26 THE AUTHOR OF HER MISFORTUNE: in IAML 51.

  27 POWDER-MONKEY: 1st in Northwest Review [Univ. of Oregon, Eugene] 24.1 (1986): 55; in EFTD 14, IAML 120—1.