Monk at Midnight
They say he learned to play by ear and that by the time he
made it to Minton's he was shellacking the keys with his whole
body as though the fingers splayed in gigantic stretches were
extensions of the spirit he pushed across the room, over the
tables, up to the rafters and down again to explode in the
souls of the ones lucky enough to hear him then. He was a
bear of a man, a grizzled veteran of the road, so that when he
laid down a note it meant more than the timbre of it against
the night, the room, the crowd, it meant a thousand nights
walking alone through darkened streets with shards of sound
borne down from streetlamps, up from the desolate alleys and
sluiced down the gutters and out to the black current of the
river to the sea where jazz is born in the tempest of things
and the toss and tide of fate made manifest in cigar smoke
and whiskey and seven octaves alive in the hands of a genius
who brooked no falsehood in notes or life. Monk played with
his whole body. You could hear that. He played every note in
sheer amazement of the one he'd played before. So that the
cascade of runs made that keyboard sound eighteen feet long
and standing looking out from the window at the shadow of
the mountains in the darkness, Monk, dead as hell for almost
thirty years, reaches out behind you and fills the corners of
the room with sound. Awesome, you think to be touched this
way and jazz becomes an Ojibway thing by virtue of the blues
built into it and the feeling of the moan of a song caught in
the throat and begging release to the land where all things
are born and all things return in the end and the belief we
hold that it can save us, the song spilled out upon the land.
Jazz and soul and hope and harmony and all things Ojibway
becoming one at once, everything alternating a semitone
apart, until the last note fades and you stand there in your
lack, waiting . . .
Paul Lake Fog
Great beards of air
moving slow
stretching as if tugged
by a child's hands
introducing trees
limb by limb
and crows placed
neatly along the power line
like a string of beads
hung around the neck
of the mountain
nothing but the air moves
until the sun intrudes
from the east
to show the deer
watching you from the trees
at the end of the driveway
the smoke of her breath
joined to the fog
leaving
no one ever pulled up
to heaven with a U-Haul
someone told you that once
and if you laughed about it then
here you come to understand
the utter sense of it
that this mosaic of things
the bits and pieces
of this life that move
you so
are what you carry with you
when you go
spirit lives in everything
there are no departures
only another joining
West Arm Kootenay Lake
There's a wind from the southeast pushing
waves up to the edge of the beach
where you can see the full moon hanging
behind a bank of clouds set between
the humped shoulders of mountains
everything is indigo now
even the shadows have retreated to purple
as the silvered mercury of the moon
puts a sheen on the body of the lake
if you look long enough the motion
of the water makes it look as though
the moon were moving, drifting further
away across the depths of space
with the planet giving chase until
you come to feel yourself move
so you spread your arms and close
your eyes to feel the tractive tug of it
calling you forward outward beyond
all sense of where you are until
a part of you becomes moonbeam, star
dust, nebula and the tail of a comet maybe
and you laugh to feel that
it's not very Indian you say
to let yourself escape like this
to wander out across the universe
when all your issues are here on the planet
land claims, treaty rights, the clamour for a
place at the negotiating table on things
that affect us and dammit all Wagamese
there's people starving in Pikangikum
and eighteen people share a two-room house
without a proper toilet in Atawapiskat
and there's kids surrendering to gang life
glue and solvents and their parents
are drunk and can't give a damn
because the chief ran off with a few
hundred grand of the fiscal funding
in the new pickup truck he bought
his nephew's vote with who won't need
it until he gets out of jail anyway
and there's no one watching out
for shit like that even though it happens
everywhere and the people pay the price
as in the suicide rate that still hangs high
above the national average
(though why they even have a stat for that
boggles you at the best of times)
when you open your eyes there's
nothing before you but the land
and in its absolute stillness
there's the sound of wind on water
and as you push to hear it you discover
that you have to really want to
it doesn't just come to you
you have to crave it, yearn for it
ache for the luxuriant whisper that says
harmony happens on its own here
when you come to believe that it fills you
and you become beach and wave and lake
and mountains humped against the semi-dark
and a moon that sails across the sky like hope
another thing you have to really want
in order for it to happen
in the end it's as Indian as it gets
this reaching out to feel connected to imagine
becoming a part of things displaced
from you by issues and bothers and hurt
the Old Ones say that harmony and separation
cannot occur in the same time and place
and maybe that's it
this whole native issues thing
that you ultimately become
what you believe in most
even a planet chasing a moon
across time and space
September Breaks â Paul Lake
The lake exhales a jubilant mist that carries
within it the desperate calls of loons
making preparations to wing south
and there's a bear ambled down
to drink and eye the yards hewn
from mountainside lush with blackberry
late season saskatoons and the trashcan
someone left the lid ajar upon
as an eagle cuts a slice out of the sky
then gives way to the osprey clan
hungry for trout and the muskrat who
claimed a home beneath your friend's dock
noses an expanding vee into the water
placid with chill and the feel of the
mist rising slowly above it all
like silent applause and the eagle
flies into the sun rising in a blunt
cleft between the ribs of
mountains
for the longest time I didn't know
that such a place existed
couldn't believe really
that it could even be imagined
let alone allow me to stand here
at this window with a mug looking
over it all stunned into believing
suddenly that beauty exists somewhere
beyond the vague hope you carry
that you can change the world
with words
you can't really
in the end it's just you
that you adjust to fit the situation
and mornings like this remind you
that ugliness has a reservation
to sit all churlish and smug
waiting for you to disbelieve
but you can't, not now
not after finding the way
this all sits between your ribs beating
like a second heart
calling you from the window
to the desk where you'll sit
and peck away like a frantic rooster
for the words to lift the sun
back into the sky and call September forward
because it's not really fall
when it elevates you so
White Shit
Seventeen without a clue. Wandering like a tourist in my own
life, picking up whatever I thought might fit, might flesh me
out, give me meaning, when the old Indian across the table at
the Mission asked through a mouthful of thin stew and bread,
“What's with all the white shit?” Then in stir, six months for
stupidity, the native guy with braids and a “
today is a good day
to die
” tattoo above his heart leans on the bars of my cage,
studies my row of books and asks, “What's with all the white
shit?” Then, the girl I wanted so much to love, long flowing
black hair, angular face, obsidian eyes and a name like Rain
Cloud Woman in her Cree talk, wanders about my room
picking up the trinkets and the stuff, eyeing it like relics,
squints at the Beethoven records and the Judy Chicago print
on the wall, looks at me and laughs and asks, “What's with
all the white shit?” They cut me, those words. Sliced clean to
the bone, through the fat and gristle of the world to lay open
the glistening bone of fact and I studied my brown face in
the mirror in the hard yellow slant of the morning sun.
“What
is
with all this white shit?” I asked myself. And that's
when I turned Indian. That's when I became a born-again
pagan/heathen/savage, dancing, singing, turquoise-Â and
buckskin-wearing, chanting, drumming, guttural, stoic, hand-
sign talking, long haired, feather wearing, walking-talking
iconographic representation of the people, man. There was
no room in that for any white shit. But I was young then and
hadn't heard the voices and the teachings of my people and
hadn't turned my heart to truth. It would take some doing.
It would take some isolation and the loneliness that false
pride instills and it would take a desperate reaching out to
belong somewhere, anywhere, with anyone. Three decades
later I have seen some serious shit, man, and life is all
about the truth of things. So I sit drinking coffee on a deck
overlooking a mountain lake in a community of white folk,
surrounded by computers, a TV, music, books, a pickup
truck, a car, guitar, piano, appliances, conveniences and
responsibilities. But there's an Indian at the heart of me.
I feel him here where the crows speak Ojibway, where the
breeze carries hints of old songs sung around a fire in the
night, where a hint of sage in the air shows me the line where
ancient and contemporary meet, telling me that traditional
and cultural, in the end, becomes where you live, where you
set your soul to rest and I look around at fifty-five and see that
where I am is always where I wanted to be. Life has become
a ceremony and The Indian sans beads, sans feathers, sans
get-ups and trickery surrounded by white shit and glad of it.