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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
April 2007
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Sunday, 15. April 2007

Avril 15th



He looks out of a hotel window; his geographical dislocations are so great these days that his body has begun to live in a time zone of its own. There is work to do even though it is the weekend, work he had sought, work that is an effective anesthetic against... everything. From this height he sees clear out to the rim of the horizon, bracketed by a steel-gray foggy lake; a chimney bisecting the view, belching smoke into the April drizzle; three shore birds veering in circles against a building of green glass; even pure white of their wings is a color when seen on days like this.

And without his willing, memory goes back to another city viewed like this, though not through the rain. It must have been Paris; it must have been a church, the view of a much post-carded steel tower and a river; he remembers the gargoyles of Notre Dame; her laughter and her jokes at their appearance. She who was named after the rain, Varsha. But he shouldn't think of her.

Liquidation of first loves such as that one are always the hardest to bear, the hardest to erase. Concentrate instead on the red maple leaf on a flag fluttering desolate against the bronze green-patina of those old roofs and spires in the middle distance. He wonders, if this is how Sabina, his long term Australian lover, perceives him when he is naked in bed with her, when he sees her once a month?

An old stone building, stolid, safe, and filled with unreachable ghosts? A good refuge for herself and her teenage daughter; both refugees from other wars, other genocides, other Balkans, following sudden death of a husband and another daughter. Two bullets in the head, two seconds, right at the threshold of the apartment on a cobble stoned street, must set an example they said, must extract the precise pound of heart-flesh. Sabina's practical iciness he knew right from the start, no one was fooling any one else. He was after all one of her many clients, all high paying ones.

It was only months after this dumb charade - this pretend acting of being a couple about town, the standard payment plus a generous tip left discreetly in a white envelope by the bed followed by an trans-continental flight out of Sydney - months after this charade, when he saw her angrily get up and edge out a drunk pianist in a roof-bar and play, with great fury and great beauty, the Polonaise Waltz, he knew he had seen more than what Sabina wanted him to see. That slip was his point of leverage, his entry to take over her life albeit very discreetly.

Is it the pursuit, he wonders, that he enjoys more that the object of pursuit? A gull chasing another gull against the green expanse of glass? A person who wanted to own the rain?

Note: Avril 14th was playing in the background




A Novel In The Works

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Saturday, 14. April 2007

Bloody Good News Eh?



After a period of weeks when I picked up the newspaper to read in the loo, I was happy to be greeted by face of the brightest (imho) star of the Toronto's literary firmament, Michael Ondaatje, and the good news of a new novel by him, "Divisadero", being published here in Canada next week. Since the book won't be available in the US bookstores until next month, and in other countries months after that, I am secretly thrilled to be in Ondaatje's home city where I can lay my hands on his tasty writing way before anyone else I know. Meanwhile here is the interview, and an excerpt from the novel that I read with pleasure. And this is a juicy morsel for folks in hurry:

"I love the performance of a craft, whether it is modest or mean-spirited, yet I walk away when discussions of it begin — as if one should ask a gravedigger what brand of shovel he uses or whether he prefers to work at noon or in moonlight. I am interested only in the care taken, and those secret rehearsals behind it. Even if I do not understand fully what is taking place."



Book Posts

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Folding Laundry



The movement between your speech And my silence is just like folding laundry. Take this white cotton sheet, for example.

It gleams between us in the afternoon; An empty sheet of paper waiting for a poem Of your body to be written tonight when I Soak my fingers in the red ink of your hair.

We begin to move it back and forth like an accordion: The snap of cloth, fingers brushing each others', And folds laid down, the way morning will find Us folded into each other, like two memories.

Note: A poem occasioned on watching a man and a woman fold sheets in a coin laundry, and the intense longing for the muse brought about by the shock of glimpsing the first blooms of lilacs in the ice-free yards, here in Toronto.




My Poems

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