Authors: David Donnell
around the elbow, some surreal flaw to defeat.
What’s
the difference to us if the person on a stamp
is occasionally Belgian,
or the landmark might be Dutch, for that matter,
as long as it’s significant. I would like to see Grand Canyon
& Smashed Head Buffalo Jump on some of the 2¢ or 5¢ stamps,
make them large, okay
buddy, with good colours, bright dusty roses & hot yellows,
they cost enough, go ahead. We need indigenous images also,
so now, in 1992, this is a good time to put Tomson Highway
on a stamp. Or it’s not too late for Pierre Trudeau
on the 10¢ stamp in a black G-string trying to look sexy
& articulate. Or how about a real honest-to-god working girl
from Detroit, brown-skinned, short black skirt,
no fist in the air, just staring right out at you.
Those
eyes. Level.
If you’re going to put a stamp on an envelope –
why not put something on it with guts?
When you walk into The Liberty
one of the waitresses gives you a big hug & finds you a table
where you can sit & order the Cab Sauvignon
which costs about 16 or 17 a bottle
& you can relax
with your elbows on the table & lower your head
into a pool of interesting tidbits of gossip –
a story about a new arts group, a juicy bit about a
well-known columnist who has left for Mexico. And
you can tell
your
stories – go ahead
it’s all here like a chic Kingdom Hall. But
I think I usually like the bar scene itself
better than the specific stories.
The clear dark
light & the voices rising & falling & the smells
of Japanese chicken & cinnamon & Thai noodles
are pleasantly interrupted by a variety
of interesting faces, a girl with wonderful breasts,
a fey young kid he looks suburban apparently has
something to do with money & he looks hot
he keeps snapping his galluses wide yellow ones.
Everyone has a different kind of sugar
or coke. I don’t
need anything more than this to get back up.
The summer weather up here is terrific.
There are green peas & snap beans to pick over at
Panharget Farms sometimes in the afternoon,
the students
in my workshop group are really bright as clean shiny
new nails,
the after-supper summer light is lovely,
but, I admit, there isn’t very much to do
in the evenings.
I was watching a
PBS
science program
½ an hour ago, but
you know, I don’t really give a
flying copulative verb about quasars. I think
the meaning of meaning
is what you have
before you begin to think about – What It is.
Pagliarullo
hit a brilliant slow inside pitch for a quick single
& this
monzer
the size of a tank came down the base
line & gloved it just in time. Tough.
But
Pagliarullo hits some nice balls out of the park.
I’m still hungry; it’s amazing how a dumb white male
like myself with several published books
& an exhaustive knowledge of contemporary history
can make a sandwich in the dark without any problems.
I think it’s something I inherit from one of my aunts.
I buttered the whole wheat bread & put a little salt
on the rare roast beef Lilly
brought me from Schomberg.
While I was making
the sandwich I watched the darkness out
in the backyard.
There is something very comfortable
about rural darkness at the end of a long day –
up at 6 a.m., lots of bright sunshine, 78–82°,
4 meetings with students, 2 new poems,
lunch at the German Delicatessen
across from the library. I think it’s
the completeness; darkness in the city
doesn’t have that completeness
& of course it doesn’t have the late-night hawks
& Toronto full moons don’t seem to be even
½ as large.
So after the sandwich & a piece
of homemade pie I picked up my jacket
just in case it gets cool
& went for a walk down the hill over the Boyne
River bridge for a late-night drink at Oliver’s.
And again it was this comfortable, like a favourite
blanket from childhood my old buffalo robe perhaps,
quality of the darkness – not disturbed or diluted
with city sounds or traffic, & full of odd nudges
from the past – walking over Trout Creek Bridge
in St. Mary’s for after-supper ice cream with my parents,
or that night in Galt when my crazy stepfather
tried to jump off the Grand River Bridge
at Victoria & Water Street.
Peaceful,
just the darkness, a few late-night hawks.
2 or 3 passing cars, bridges as calm as sculpture,
& the shimmer of dark wet rural grass.
for Jan Conn
I have been thinking about Philadelphia
all afternoon, about trains and newspapers,
about gas stations,
about a job I used to have in a mill on River Street.
I sit around with my friends in the evening
and we talk about the same things, literature, politics,
sex, the Van Gogh exhibit at the
AGO
,
but why is it
that I am the only one who thinks there should be
a train to Philadelphia every morning,
O say,
around 7:45 a.m. would be good?
Or who misses
the sense of Philadelphia in the autumn,
and how it stands for something even in the middle
of a cold dark January afternoon?
This is unfair, especially when you
consider that a year ago the central part of the city
was a sea of flames.
There is a myth that encloses
all these things and I am susceptible to that myth. I
phone Sam, and we go out for coffee & chocolate cake,
and then we take a cab out to the Danforth,
go to Esperides and have squid fried in a light batter
and sweet roast lamb with large golden brown potatoes.
The food is good
and Esperides is a warm room. Even the darkness
of the Danforth late at night
by itself fulfills something deep and important in me.
Still, even out on the warm dusky street,
hanging loose after supper,
our cheap dress shirts pulled loose out of our pants
because of the heat,
it is my perception
that something is not quite right. Even the marvellous
new Hydro building by Raymond Moriyama
at University & College is not as appreciable
– unless you put it into a frame:
Sherbourne Street, for example, and Philadelphia,
and that building we saw by Philip Johnson in Chicago.
How will
I describe the darkness of Wrigley Field at night
& how people turn to each other
after a great hit & say, Did you see that?
Or the popular song
that keeps running through my head, “Your daddy’s rich
& your momma is so good-looking.”
The darkness
is a soft ½darkness,
The light falls on his blond moustache
& makes his eyes bluer, midwestern, cornflower
blue. He is with his wife
& one child, a boy; his wife’s name is Serena,
Lebanese descent, beautiful, the other child, 4,
also a boy, is at home.
I am
by myself for a week; Mitch Williams –
not the
Bad Boy of postmodern baseball, I have seen him
in bars once or twice, tall, slim, good-looking,
laughing a lot; I would be more inclined
to call him the Iconic Hot-dog, in the Barthian sense,
of postmodern Chi City –
is pitching, it’s the 8th
& he’s holding a slender 3–2 lead & keeping them
hitless & witless. I am never lonely
when I meet people like this. His wife’s eyes
& the quick way she has of laughing nervously
but with pleasure at an unexpected play
make our small pool of order a warm place
& the beer tastes that much better. “Throw the
fast ball throw the fast ball Mitch,”
chants his 9-year-old son. I say, “He’s going
to hit him with the sinker,”
& he does, he throws
the heavy ball with a lot of thumb behind it –
drops it in under the amazed batter’s knees
to get the last out;
& he himself, always the clown,
a tall slim good-looking guy who laughs a lot
in the bars,
is bent so far over after the pitch
that he’s almost like a crab –
legs stretched out
glove in the air, right hand fingertips touching
the dust in front of him, eyes locked
at that exact point where he placed the ball. They
are all on their feet yelling for him
& I am glad. I like this field better in some
ways than the huge cement skydome with its giant
retractable clamshell helicopter-focused roof. But
it is also those blue midwestern eyes
that say, “Comeon, relax, forget it, you’re at home.”
& Williams, of course, because he’s such a fabulary
extrovert. What else can I say?
I am sitting
right in front of you. My hands are folded
on the formica table, relaxed, at ease. Every thing
in the world should be this simple.
What
can I tell you that you don’t already know?
Amy Tan is one of the most gorgeous new
American writers presently at work. What I like
best about her work is its effortlessness, the way one detail
leads with a completely natural grace to
another detail about a young girl’s choice of wardrobe
for travel. She has stories, in other words,
a number of stories contained
within a single box perhaps a white cardboard shoebox
sitting beside another shoebox that still contains
wrapped in white tissue paper of the kind you get in stores,
a pair of glossy red shoes. The stories are on loose
sheets, they are not bound together by an obtuse plotline;
rather, they have so much in common
that they simply touch on each other & develop their own
persuasion.
The work I am up to my elbows in at present is more
centred. Tom’s story, with Tom, even indirectly,
as the constant centre of reference; and the world,
like innumerable photographs, swirls at one or another
speed or F-stop in Tom’s camera.
So Tan’s work,
listening to her read from
The Kitchen God’s Wife
, is more
than good art or refreshing. I am actually liberated
by watching her concentrate on the good stuff, the fresh peas,
yellow corn, soft petalled artichokes,
& she casually throws the husks over her shoulder. The
beans & the corn are as fresh as if it had just rained.
Ontario is gorgeous in the summer. Northern lake fish like sturgeon are flown directly to the coast. With daisies in their mouths. We have a lot of manufacturing lay-offs, and more unemployed Phds than you can count. > Caribbean shrimps are supposed to be better than the ones from Louisiana, tastier, the man says, eat them in 2 big bites and suck the last sweet bit right out of its shell. > A pink elephant by Tom Thomson floats past on a street parade, Kate talks about some Steiglitz photographs of Georgia O’Keeffe. > We are sitting around a long table against the morning glory yellow wall at Britoli’s, Frank and Paulo have their arms around each other’s shoulders reviewing baseball, the bread is good, Carol is reading a letter to someone from her friend in Amsterdam. > Red Hot Chili Peppers are still a zany and classy group, this thing they have about playing with their dicks hanging out of their pants is wild. O’Keeffe’s desert flowers are great. Innovative musicians, sure; but maybe a tad too aggressive. > We’re splashing wine and eating soup. There are about 9 films out of 75 in Toronto at the moment that are worth seeing. > There are 100s of problems in the world. More. There are millions. People don’t solve problems so much as they respond to challenges. > Paulo turns down a piece of chocolate raspberry mousse cake. We have all the elements we need. We are in the process of discovering a package. > Well, something more radical than warehouse sound or wide lapel suits. Caribbean shrimps are supposed to be better than the ones from Louisiana, tastier, the man says, eat them in 2 big bites.