The Road In Is Not the Same Road Out (6 page)

BOOK: The Road In Is Not the Same Road Out
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to an infinity of abstraction. A physical symptom assails

our vocabulary and things acquire a literal feeling from which

one does not recover. Mineral dissolution, complete. Accommodation space,

low. Confinement, relatively broad, extremely complex stratigraphy,

reservoirs stacked and composite. An area roughly the size

of England stripped of boreal forest and muskeg, unburdened

by hydraulic rope shovels of its overburden. Humiliated,

blinded, walking in circles. Cycle of soak and dry and residue.

The will creates effects no will can overturn, and that seem,

with the passage of time, necessary, as the past assumes

a pattern. Thought approaches the future and the future,

like a heavy unconventional oil, advances. Hello infrastructure,

Dodge Ram 1500, no one else wants to get killed on Highway 63,

the all-weather road by the Wandering River where earthmovers remain

unmoved by our schedules. White crosses in the ditches,

white crosses in the glove box. The west stands for relocation, the east

for lost causes. Would you conspire to serve tourists in a fish restaurant

the rest of your life? I thought not. Drinks are on us bushpigs now,

though this camp is no place for a tradesman. Devon's Jackfish is five-star,

an obvious exception. But McKenzie, Voyageur, Millennium, Borealis—

years ago we would have burned them to the ground. Suncor Firebag

has WiFi, but will track usage. Guard towers and turnstiles at Wapasu—

we're guests, after all, not prisoners, right?

Efficiently squalid, briskly producing raw sewage, black mould,

botulism, fleas, remorse, madness, lethargy, mud, it's not

a spiritual home, this bleach taste in the waterglass, layered garments,

fried food, bitter complaint in plywood drop-ceiling bedrooms strung out

on whatever and general offence and why doesn't anyone smoke

anymore. Dealers and prostitutes cultivate their terms

organically, as demand matures. The Athabasca River's colour isn't good.

Should we not encourage a healthy dread of the wild places?

Consider the operator crushed by a slab of ice, our electrician mauled

by a bear at the frontlines of project expansion

into the inhumane forest. Fear not, we are worth more than many sparrows.

They pay for insignificance with their lives. It's the structure.

Jackpine Mine photographs beautifully on the shoulders of the day,

in the minutes before sunset it's still legal to hunt. One might,

like Caspar David Friedrich's
Wanderer,
at a certain remove

from principal events, cut a sensitive figure in the presence

of the sublime. Except you can smell it down here. Corrosive

vapours unexpectedly distributed, caustic particulate infiltrates

your mood. As does the tar sands beetle whose bite scars, from whom

grown men run. Attracted by the same sorrowful chemical compound

emitted by damaged trees on which it feeds, its aural signature

approximates the rasp of causatum rubbing its parts together.

The only other living thing in situ, in the open pit where swims

the bitumen, extra brilliant, dense, massive, in the Greek
asphaltos,

“to make stable,” “to secure.” Pharmacist's earth that resists decay,

resolves and attenuates, cleanses wounds. Once used to burn

the houses of our enemies, upgraded now to refinery-ready feedstock,

raw crude flowing through channels of production and distribution.

Combustion is our style. It steers all things from the black grave

of Athabasca Wabiskaw. Cold Lake. Rail lines of

Lac-Mégantic. The optics are bad. We're all downstream now.

Action resembles waiting for a decision made

on our behalf, then despair after the fact. Despair which,

like bitumen itself, applied to render darker tones or an emphatic

tenebrism, imparts a velvety lustrous disposition,

but eventually discolours to a black treacle that degrades

any pigment it contacts. Details in sections of
Raft of the Medusa

can no longer be discerned. In 1816, the
Medusa
's captain,

in a spasm of flamboyant incompetence, ran aground

on the African coast, and fearing the ire of his constituents,

refused to sacrifice the cannons. They turned on each other,

the 147 low souls herded onto a makeshift raft cut loose from lifeboats

of the wealthy and well-connected. The signs were there,

risk/reward coefficient alive in the wind, the locomotive,

small tragic towns left for work, where the only thing manufactured

is the need for work. Foreshortening and a receding horizon

include the viewer in the scene, should the viewer wish

to be included in the scene. One can't be sure if the brig,
Argus,

is racing to the rescue or departing. It hesitates in the distance,

in its nimbus of fairer weather, the courage and compassion

of a new age onboard. Géricault's pyramidical composition—

dead and dying in the foreground from which the strong succeed upward

toward an emotional peak—

an influence for Turner's
Disaster at Sea,
the vortex structure of

The Slave Ship:
all those abandoned, where is thy market now?

It's difficult to imagine everyone saved, it's unaffordable. Waves

disproportionate, organized in depth, panic modulating

the speaking voice. The situation so harshly primary and not beautiful

when you don't go to visit the seaside, but the seaside visits you,

rudely, breaks in through the basement, ascends stairs

to your bedroom, you can't think of it generally then. The constitution

of things is accustomed to hiding. Rearrangement will not suit us.

Certain low-lying river deltas. Island states, coastal regions—

floodwaters receding in measures like all we haven't seen the last of

reveal in stagnancies and bloat what's altered, as avernal exhalations

of mines and flares are altered but don't disappear. Still,

iceberg season is spectacular this year, worth the trip

to photograph in evening ourselves before the abundance when, aflame

in light that dissolves what it illuminates, water climbs

its own red walls, vermilion in the furnaces.

PROSPECT

Connected by disposable needle

and tube to a little of this life, a little

of the next, the IVAC complains when its delivery

is interrupted, drags me through an inland sea

up to the human purview: inconsolable

parking lot, aircraft on final approach

above embers of the city that expire

with the dawn as though oxygen's run out.

Workers once banked coals in ashes

leaving for the fields,

the wars, a comfort for those able to return

if they could not. Grief isn't columnar.

It spreads and soaks into the land,

becomes the land. My experience

will prove pointless as any tool used poorly,

the river in its doorway smoking

into cold white air, into the opportunity

of a level place in which to change its state.

MUSEUM OF THE THING II

And now the objects recur. Chief interests

of their divine secular lives no longer

idle. Thought anticipates them, but they aren't

hindered by it. We have them

in common. They don't aspire.

Appearing in priority, category, scale,

they make possible a world

that does not appear. Arguments favour

their existence. In the rosary of a city block

I find my childhood. I give it away and I keep it.

We were destined for each other, I could learn

from their experience of time

if I could learn. The objects do not defer,

but express themselves as constancy

inside which a seeming shines, surprising

our judgement with affect. We who arrive

from nowhere in our monotony

of psychic instability, our fragility

and immaterial intuition, contrast sharply

with their variety and richness, plurality

which is the world's first law. Antecedents

and survivors, they are faithful

to our purpose. In them, pretense does not inhere.

If we are deceived, the error is our own.

RURAL CONFLATION SONNET

Pea weevil as eye-headache.

Barbed wire, smart casual.

Four-stroke my electronica.

Clay mud my hospital.

Rattlesnake as concierge,

Lanius, campaign of enemies.

Axe to kerf in contemplation.

East wind my ibuprofen.

Distemper. Disambiguation.

Red oxide as verdigris.

Monsanto our atelier—

From the inside, it dresses me

In esters of phosphoric acid.

The Psalms, a field of grasses.

FOR THE SKI JUMP AT CANADA OLYMPIC PARK, CALGARY

You grew into your destiny

in the city's northwest, overlooking

a gas station, the KOA, a few acreages maybe

on the earliest suggestions of foothills,

we hardly remember what that was like.

It was before I was born into

what I think of as my life.

Development has flooded the scene—

Victory Christian Fellowship expelling

exhaust, a warehouse vaguely Bauhaus,

reservoir of modern open homeplans

risen nearly to your base.

Each time I encounter the same place

it's different. The adjacent new

community of Crestmont tries to act natural

leaning on the hill, rife with claims, wearing

last year's colours in its awkward

final construction phase. In 1988

some people who've bought its houses

weren't yet alive. For them

you might as well be a product

of erosion. A natural event, without promise,

defined according to what is most durable

about you. Does it matter to us

if we're outlived by a minute

or a thousand years? I'm not saying it should.

You strayed from insignia,

from the party of the symbolic imagination,

and no one noticed. Hung with ads now,

the odd corporate zipline. Tourists

on the observation platform observe

the accelerating ritual of supply

and demand. A view makes us feel young.

Ideal conditions are a memory that pains

even a Finn. Competitors and their equipment

have evolved, old ratios are untenable.

You've outlived your design.

Would need to be retrofitted for safety

and who has that kind of time.

AGAINST LYRIC

Asked for the eight hundredth time that day

if one has remembered to lock the door.

At least, it's not unlike that.

Something contrived from lime Jell-O and Sprite—

coloured marshmallows

suspended like pronouns—

and called salad. Odd, that an excess

should produce such hollowness, tin bucket

racketing down the endless metal staircase within.

Odd my irritability in its fullness should arise

from a poverty of spirit. I could not enjoy

marzipan, either. Half sugar, half

ground sweet almonds, or the cheaper substitute

potato flour, it inhabits as poems do

shapes of pigs, houses, geometric figures,

fruits whose seeds in nature house

the toxic compound also present

in the bitter almond that flavours it—

your apples, plums, and peaches, stones

and wilting leaves of native cherries—

who count among their symptoms

gasping, the staggers, depression, and death.

Wheeled out on special occasions under

gold-plated anniversary clocks, gilt-

frame mirrors of the commemorative industry,

heirloom burnt-matchstick crucifixes. Faces

around the holiday table chronically etched

in memory's iron ferrocyanide. Churchill

Chelsea Blue Willow dinnerware. Reflection—

there's no solace in it. Because

some of those faces have ceased to change.

Because, now, they will never change.

SPIRAL

You said a storm makes a mansion of a poor man's house.

I wonder if you did so to make the best of living where

it always blew, the maddening wind that messed up our ions

and made men want to fight. Now you have no house.

There's no need. The cure took the good with the bad.

Who cannot escape his prison but must each day rebuild it?

For a year rather than drink we smoked and went to bingo.

It was like working in a mine, the air quality and incessant

coughing, bag lunches, good luck charms, the intergenerational

drama. It's not my place to say what changed.

You hadn't developed around a midpoint, and fell to the side.

A part remained exposed. Still, you were kind—

unusually so, it seems to me now, for someone with talent.

But loneliness expands to fill the void it creates. To plot against it

was to plot against yourself. You felt the effect of the whole.

When the mind is so altered this resembles death, but it is

not death. Then the faint trail ran out and you continued on.

The night you've entered now has no lost wife in it, no daughter,

no friends, betrayal, or fear; it is impartial, without status.

I would like to think it peace, but suspect it isn't anything.

When our friend wrote you'd died I was on Skye,

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