Read The Cinnamon Peeler Online
Authors: Michael Ondaatje
This is the hour for sudden journeying.
Cervantes accepts
a 17th Century invitation
from the Chinese Emperor.
Schools of Chinese-Spanish Linguistics!
Rivers of the world meet!
And here
ducks dressed in Asia
pivot on foreign waters.
At 4 a.m. he wakes in the sheet
that earlier held tropics in its whiteness.
The invited river flows through the house
into the kitchen up
stairs, he awakens and moves within it.
In the dim light
he sees the turkish carpet under water,
low stools, glint
of piano pedals, even a sleeping dog
whose dreams may be of rain.
It is a river he has walked elsewhere
now visiting moving with him at the hip
to kitchen where a friend sleeps in a chair
head on the table his grip
still round a glass, legs underwater.
He wants to relax
and give in to the night
fall horizontal and swim
to the back kitchen where his daughter sleeps.
He wishes to swim
to each of his family and gaze
at their underwater dreaming
this magic chain of bubbles.
Wife, son, household guests, all
comfortable in clean river water.
He is aware that for hours
there has been no conversation,
tongues have slid to stupidity on alcohol
sleeping mouths are photographs of yells.
He stands waiting, the sentinel,
shambling back and forth, his anger
and desire against the dark
which, if he closes his eyes,
will lose them all.
The oven light
shines up through water at him
a bathysphere a ghost ship
and in the half drowned room
the crickets like small pins
begin to tack down
the black canvas of this night,
begin to talk their hesitant
gnarled epigrams to each other
across the room.
Creak and echo.
Creak and echo. With absolute clarity
he knows where he is.
She hesitated. ‘Are you being romantic now?
’
‘
I’m trying to tell you how I feel without exposing myself. You know what I mean?
’
ELMORE LEONARD
*
You stand still for three days
for a piece of wisdom
and everything falls to the right place
or wrong place
You speak
don’t know whether
seraph or bitch
flutters at your heart
and look through windows
for cue cards
blazing in the sky.
The solution.
This last year I was sure
I was going to die
*
The geography of this room I know so well
tonight I could rise in the dark
sit at the table and write without light.
I am here in the country of warm rains.
A small cabin – a glass, wood,
tin bucket on the Pacific Rim.
Geckoes climb
the window to peer in,
and all day the tirade pale blue waves
touch the black shore of volcanic rock
and fall to pieces here
*
How to arrive at this
drowning
on the edge of sea
(How to drive
the Hana Road, he said—
one hand on the beer
one hand on your thigh
and one eye for the road)
Waves leap to this cliff all day
and in the evening lose
their pale blue
he rises from the bed
as wind from three directions
falls, takes his place
on the peninsula of sheets
which also loses colour
stands in the loose green kimono
by a large window and gazes
through gecko
past the deadfall
into sea,
the unknown magic he loves
throws himself into
the blue heart
*
Tell me
all you know
about bamboo
growing wild, green
growing up into soft arches
in the temple ground
the traditions
driven through hands
through the heart
during torture
and most of all
this
small bamboo pipe
not quite horizontal
that drips
every ten seconds
to a shallow bowl
I love this
being here
not a word
just the faint
fall of liquid
the boom of an iron buddhist bell
in the heart rapid
as ceremonial bamboo
*
A man buying wine
Rainier beer at the store
would he be satisfied with this?
Cold showers, electric skillet,
Red River
on tv
Oh he could be
(Do you want
to be happy and write?)
He happens to love the stark
luxury of this place
– no armchairs, a fridge of beer and mangoes
Precipitation.
To avoid a story The refusal to move
All our narratives of sleep
a mild rumble to those inland
Illicit pockets of
the kimono
Heart like a sleeve
*
The cabin
its tin roof
a wind run radio
catches the noise of the world.
He focuses on the gecko
almost transparent body
how he feels now
everything passing through him like light.
In certain mirrors
he cannot see himself at all.
He is joyous and breaking down.
The tug over the cliff.
What protects him
is the warmth in the sleeve
that is all, really
*
We go to the stark places of the earth
and find moral questions everywhere
Will John Wayne and Montgomery Clift
take their cattle to Missouri or Kansas?
Tonight I lean over the Pacific
and its blue wild silk
ringed by creatures
who
tchick tchick tchick
my sudden movement
who say nothing else.
There are those who are in
and there are those who look in
Tiny leather toes
hug the glass
*
On the porch
thin ceramic
chimes
ride wind
off the Pacific
bells of the sea
I do not know
the name of large orange flowers
which thrive on salt air
lean half drunk
against the steps
Untidy banana trees
thick moss on the cliff
and then the plunge
to black volcanic shore
It is impossible to enter the sea here
except in a violent way
How we have moved
from thin ceramic
to such destruction
*
All night
the touch
of wave on volcano.
There was the woman
who clutched my hair
like a shaken child.
The radio whistles
round a lost wave length.
All night slack-key music
and the bird whistling
duino
duino, words and music
entangled in pebble
ocean static.
The wild sea and her civilization
the League of the Divine Wind
and traditions of death.
Remember
those women in movies
who wept into the hair
of their dead men?
*
Going up stairs
I hang my shirt
on the stiff
ear of an antelope
Above the bed
memory
restless green bamboo
the distant army
assembles wooden spears
her feet braced
on the ceiling
sea in the eye
Reading the article
an 1825 report
Physiologie du Gout
on the artificial growing of truffles
speaks
of ‘vain efforts
and deceitful promises,’
commandments of culinary art
Good
morning to your body
hello nipple
and appendix scar like a letter
of too much passion
from a mad Mexican doctor
All this noise at your neck!
heart clapping
like green bamboo
this earring
which
has flipped over
and falls
into the pool of your ear
The waves against black stone
that was a thousand year old
burning red river
could not reach us
*
Cabin
‘hana’
this
flower
of wood
in which we rose
out of the blue sheets
you thin as horizon
reaching for lamp or book
my shirt
hungry
for everything about the other
here we steal places to stay
as we steal time
never too proud to beg,
even if we never
see the other’s grin and star again
there is nothing resigned
in this briefness
we swallow complete
I will know everything here
this cup
balanced on my chest
my eye witnessing the petal
drop away from its order,
your arm
for ever
precarious in all our fury
*
Every place has its own wisdom. Come.
Time we talked about the sea,
the long waves
‘trapped around islands’
*
There are maps now whose portraits
have nothing to do with surface
Remember the angels, floating compasses
– Portolan atlases so complex
we looked down and never knew
which was earth which was sea?
The way birds the colour of prairie
confused by the sky
flew into the earth
(Remember those women
who claimed dead miners
the colour of the coal they drowned in)
The bathymetric maps startle.
Visions of the ocean floor
troughs, naked blue deserts,
Ganges Cone, the Mascarene Basin
so one is able now
in ideal situations
to plot a stroll
to new continents
‘doing the Berryman walk’
And beneath the sea
there are
these giant scratches
of pain
the markings of
some perfect animal
who has descended
burying itself
under the glossy
ballroom
or they have to do with ascending,
what we were, the earth creatures
longing for horizon.
I know one thing
our sure non-sliding
civilized feet
our small leather shoes
did not make them
(Ah you should be happy and write)
I want the passion
which puts your feet on the ceiling
this fist
to smash forward
take this silk
somehow
Ah
out of the rooms of poetry
(Listen, solitude, X wrote,
is not an absolute,
it is just a resting place)
listen in the end
the pivot from angel to witch
depends on small things
this animal, the question
are you happy?
No I am not happy
lucky though
*
Rainy Night Talk
Here’s to
the overlooked
nipples of Spain
brown Madrid aureoles
kneecaps of Ohio girls
kneeling in the palms of men
waiting to be thrown high
into the clouds
of a football stadium
Here’s to
the long legged
woman from Kansas
whispering good morning at 5,
dazed
in balcony moonlight
All that drizzle the night before
walking walking through the rain
slam her car door
and wrote my hunger out, the balcony
like an entrance
to a city of suicides.
Here’s to the long legs
driving home
in more and more rain
weaving like a one-sided
lonely conversation
over the mountains