One must keep one's eyes and ears open, one must know how to match up the facts, see similarity where others see total difference, remember that certain events occur at various levels or, to put it another way, many incidents are aspects of the same, single occurrence. And that the world is a great big net, it is a whole, where no single thing exists separately; every scrap of the world, every last tiny piece, is bound up with the rest by a complex Cosmos of correspondences, hard for the ordinary mind to penetrate. That is how it works. Like a Japanese car.--Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead, translation Antonia Lloyd-Jones
Sunday, November 24, 2019
Olga Tokarczuk
Monday, November 18, 2019
INVADER
Got nothing against
them, they have a
right
to exist, I just can't
tolerate their ilk
taking shelter here.
This
is where I
live—my
home. They're dirty;
I have a duty
to defend my family.
After I flooded
a burrow in the yard
one turned up
in the house. We packed
all the dry food
in the kitchen
into plastic
containers, woke
to find them
shredded and scattered.
That's when we knew
no harmless wee
mouse was this. Our kid
just a baby,
we were scared
it might visit
his crib at night.
It bored a hole
through the baseboard
back of the fridge,
clearly had a track
between there and
the plumbing under
the sink. We bought
warfarin, snap traps,
we went on alert.
Third night of its
occupation, I heard
a rustle from
the cupboards. I
slipped
on my loafers
and crept into
the kitchen. I swung
the door below the sink
open and the crinkling
stopped. Behind cartons
of bin bags, rags
and cleaning supplies,
I sensed it was there.
I kicked a box,
out it flew, I brought
my foot down
and trapped it,
belly-up, struggling.
Her teats were bulging—
she must have been
gravid. My heart
beat hard, I pressed
down harder, her body
as large as my size-ten
loafer, repulsive
skinny tail a good
six inches extra.
I bore down on her
until damn sure
she was no longer
breathing, then dumped
the dam and her unborn
pups in the green bin.
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
A PRIMER ON ACTING
i.m. Ker Wells
Just say what you see,
damn it, say it plain,
clear, show nothing,
and forget expressing
emotion, you'll have
better luck squeezing
a turd through your
tympanum. Blue heron
on her stilts in the
silt-scummed shallows
of the Clyde never
concentrates, but she's
paying attention and
knows what to do
at her wait's end,
executed with bloodless
aplomb. You on your
stilts in the tall grass
of the riverbank,
cousin, you too knew
a thing or two about
killing your darlings
and the world's aloof
procession. The moon,
waxing full, casts a
wake on the ripples
of the river. I can see
you stilting
across it, wings
akimbo, bound for the far shore.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Literary Power Couple in Print
The Dalhousie Review has just published a lengthy interview, conducted and introduced by Shane Neilson, of myself and Rachel, followed by reprints of a prose poem of Rachel's from Cottonopolis and a poem of mine from Track & Trace (which I realized the other day is now ten years old!). Only available in print, so get ye to the library if you feel the burning need to consume this content.
Thursday, April 11, 2019
TWO-STRIKE APPROACH
I am evermore anxious
that the future
is pure fiction, and
yet I persist
in planning for it.
When my son tells me
about the children he
will have, I want
to shake him for
thinking this hell is fit
for hopes and dreams. I
don't. Instead, I smile
and stroke his head.
His education
savings plan is growing
nicely; it should
mature to six figures.
He'll need it. Or won't.
The mortgages are
getting paid ahead
of schedule. I'm
installing a fifty-year
roof. By my
calculations, the houses
should remain above
water. They're building
a levee near the
lowest-lying one.
All of this is likely
crazy, but maybe
it beats doing nothing?
I could always swerve.
Look for the fastball.
Adjust to the curve.