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Authors: Michael Ondaatje

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A yard in its scrub snow, stacked wood

brindle in the moonlight, the red truck,

a bare tree at the foot of the driveway

waving to heaven.

                         A full moon the

                         colour of night kitchen.

Ten yards away a high bonfire

(remembered from summer) lifts

its redness above the farmhouse

and the lean figures of children circle

to throw in sticks and arms off a Christmas tree

as the woman in long black hair

her left foot on a stump

plays the red accordion.

And the others dance.

               Embracing or flinging

themselves away from each other.

They bow and they look up

to full moon and white cold sky

and they
move
, even in this stilled painting.

They talk a white breath at each other.

Some appear more than once

with different partners.

We are immune to wind.

Our boots pound down the frozen earth

our children leap from and into our arms.

All of us poised and inspired by music

friendship self-made heat and the knowledge

each has chosen to come here driven for hours

over iced highways, to be here bouncing and leaping

to a reel that carried itself generations ago

north of the border, through lost towns,

settled among the strange names,

and became eventually our own

all the way from Virginia.

IN A YELLOW ROOM

There was another reason for Fats Waller to record, on May 8th, 1935, ‘I’m gonna sit right down and write myself a letter.’ It is for this moment, driving from Goderich towards and past Blyth, avoiding Blyth by taking the gravel concessions, four adults and a child, who have just swum in a very cold Lake Huron. His piano drips from the cassette player and we all recognize the piece but are mute. We cannot sing before he does, before he eases himself into the lyrics as if into a chair, this large man who is to die in 1943 sitting in a train in Kansas City, finally still.

He was always moving, grand on the street or the midnight taxi rides with Andy Razaf during which it is rumoured he wrote most of his songs. I have always loved him but I love him most in the company of friends. Because his body was a crowd and we desire to imitate such community. His voice staggers or is gentle behind a whimsical piano, the melody ornamental and cool as vichyssoise in that hot studio in this hot car on a late June Ontario summer day. What else of importance happened on May 8th, 1935?

The only creature I’ve ever met who disliked him was a nervous foxhound I had for three years. As soon as I put on Mr Waller the dog would dart from the room and hide under a bed. The dog recognized the anarchy, the unfolding of musical order, the growls and muttering, the fact that Fats Waller was talking to someone over your shoulder as well as to you. What my dog did not notice was the serenity he should have learned from. The notes as fresh as creek washed clothes.

The windows are open as we drive under dark maples that sniff up a rumour of Lake Huron. The piano energizes the hay bound into wheels, a white field of turkeys, various tributaries of the Maitland River. Does he, drunk, and carrying his tin of tomatoes – ‘it feeds the body and cuts the hangover’ – does he, in the midnight taxi with Razaf, imagine where the music disappears?

Where it will recur? Music and lyrics they wrote then sold to false composers for ready cash and only later admitting they had written ‘Sunny side of the street’ and ‘I can’t give you anything but love’ and so many of the best songs of their time. The hidden authors on their two hour taxi ride out of Harlem to Brooklyn and back again to Harlem, the night heat and smells yells overheard from the streets they passed through which they incorporated into what they were making every texture entering this large man, a classical organist in his youth, who strode into most experiences, hid from his ex-wife Edith Hatchett, visiting two kinds of women, ‘ladies who had pianos and ladies who did not,’ and died of bronchial pneumonia on the Acheson-Topeka and Santa Fe, a song he did not write.

He and the orchestra of his voice have now entered the car with us. This is his first visit to the country, though he saw it from a train window the day before he died. Saw the heartland where the music could disappear, the diaspora of notes, a rewinding, a backward movement of the formation of the world, the invention of his waltz.

WHEN YOU DRIVE THE
QUEENSBOROUGH ROADS AT MIDNIGHT

do not look at a star

or full moon. Look out for frogs.

And not the venerable ones who recline

on gravel parallel to the highway

but the foolhardy, bored on a country night

dazzled by the adventure of passing beams.

We know their type of course, local heroes

who take off their bandanas and leap naked,

night green, seduced

by the whispers of michelin.

To them we are distinct death.

I am fond of these foolish things

more than the moon.

They welcome me after absence.

One of them is my youth

still jumping into rivers

take care and beware of him.

Knowing you love this landscape

there are few rules.

Do not gaze at moons.

Nuzzle the heat in granite.

Swim toward pictographs.

Touch only reflections.

PROUST IN THE WATERS

for Scott and Krystyne

Swimming along the bar of moon

the yellow scattered sleeping

arm of the moon

                         on Balsam Lake

releasing the air

                         out of your mouth

the moon under your arm

tick of the brain

submerged. Tick

of the loon’s heart

in the wet night thunder

                                        below us

knowing its shore is the air

We love things which disappear

and are found

creatures who plummet

and become

an arrow.

To know the syllables

in a loon sentence

                         intricate

shift of preposition

that signals meridian

                                        west    south west.

The mother tongue

a bubble caught in my beak

releasing the air

                         of a language

Seeing no human in this moon storm

being naked in black water

you approach the corridor

such jewellery! Queen Anne’s Lace!

and slide to fathoms.

The mouth swallows river morse

throws a sound

through the loom of liquid

against sky.

                                        
Where are you?

On the edge

of the moon bar

ESCARPMENT

He lies in bed, awake, holding her left forearm. It is 4 a.m. He turns, his eyes rough against the night. Through the window he can hear the creek – which has no name. Yesterday at noon he walked along its shallow body overhung with cedar, beside rushes, moss and watercress. A green and grey body whose intricate bones he is learning among which he stumbles and walks through in an old pair of Converse running shoes. She was further upriver investigating for herself and he exploring on his own now crawling under a tree that has uprooted and spilled. Its huge length across a section of the creek. With his left hand he holds onto the massive stump roots and slides beneath it within the white water heaving against him. Shirt wet, he follows the muscle in the water and travels fast under the tree. His dreaming earlier must have involved all this.

In the river he was looking for a wooden bridge which they had crossed the previous day. He walks confidently now, the white shoes stepping casually off logs into deep water, through gravel, and watercress which they eat later in a cheese sandwich. She chews much of it walking back to the cabin. He turns and she freezes, laughing, with watercress in her mouth. There are not many more ways he can tell her he loves her. He shows mock outrage and yells but she cannot hear him over the sound of the stumbling creek.

He loves too, as she knows, the body of rivers. Provide him with a river or a creek and he will walk along it. Will step off and sink to his waist, the sound of water and rock encasing him in solitude. The noise around them insists on silence if they are more than five feet apart. It is only later when they sit in a pool legs against each other that they can talk, their conversation roaming to include relatives, books, best friends, the history of Lewis and Clark, fragments of the past which they piece together. But otherwise this river’s noise encases them and now he walks alone with its spirits, the clack and splash, the twig break, hearing only an individual noise if it
occurs less than an arm’s length away. He is looking, now, for a name.

It is not a name for a map – he knows the arguments of imperialism. It is a name for them, something temporary for their vocabulary. A code. He slips under the fallen tree holding the cedar root the way he holds her forearm. He hangs a moment, his body being pulled by water going down river. He holds it the same way and for the same reasons. Heart Creek? Arm River? he writes, he mutters to her in the darkness. The body moves from side to side and he hangs with one arm, deliriously out of control, still holding on. Then he plunges down, touches gravel and flakes of wood with his back the water closing over his head like a clap of gloved hands. His eyes are open as the river itself pushes him to his feet and he is already three yards down stream and walking out of the shock and cold stepping into the sun. Sun lays its crossword, litters itself, along the whole turning length of this river so he can step into heat or shadow.

He thinks of where she is, what she is naming. Near her, in the grasses, are Bladder Campion, Devil’s Paintbrush, some unknown blue flowers. He stands very still and cold in the shadow of long trees. He has gone far enough to look for a bridge and has not found it. Turns upriver. He holds onto the cedar root the way he holds her forearm.

BIRCH BARK

for George Whalley

An hour after the storm on Birch Lake

the island bristles. Rock. Leaves still falling.

At this time, in the hour after lightning

we release the canoes.

Silence of water

purer than the silence of rock.

A paddle touches itself. We move

over blind mercury, feel the muscle

within the river, the blade

weave in dark water.

Now each casual word is precisely chosen

passed from bow to stern, as if

leaning back to pass a canteen.

There are echoes, repercussions of water.

We are in absolute landscape,

among names that fold in onto themselves.

To circle the island means witnessing

the blue grey dust of a heron

released out of the trees.

So the dialogue slides

nothing more than friendship

an old song we break into

not needing all the words.

We are past naming the country.

The reflections are never there

without us, without the exhaustion

of water and trees after storm.

BREEZE

for
BP
Nichol

Nowadays I listen only to duets.

Johnny Hodges and The Bean, a thin slip

of piano behind them

on this page on this stage

craft a breeze in a horn.

One friend sits back and listens

to the other. Nowadays

I want only the wild and tender

phrasing of “NightHawk,”

its air groaned out

like the breath of a lover.

Rashomon by Saxophone.

So brother and sister woke, miles apart,

in those 19th century novels you loved,

with the same wound or desire.

We sit down to clean and sharpen

the other’s most personal lines

—a proposal of more, a waving dismissal

of whole stanzas—in Lethbridge in Edmonton

you stood with the breeze

in an uncomfortable Chinese restaurant

in Camrose, getting a second cup

at The Second Cup near Spadina.

I almost called you this morning

for a phone number.

Records I haven’t yet returned.

Tapes you were supposed to make for me.

And across the country

tears about your death.

I always thought
, someone says,

he was very good for you
.

Though I still like, Barrie,

the friends who are not good for me.

Along the highway

only the duets and wind fill up my car.

I saw the scar of the jet that Sunday

trying to get you out of the sky.

Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins.

An A and an H, a bean and a breeze.

All these twin truths

There is bright sumac, once more,

this September, along the Bayview Extension

From now on

no more solos

I tie you to me

A note on the poems

The Cinnamon Peeler
contains poems that cover a twenty-five year period. They are poems that were written alongside and between other longer works such as
The Collected Works of Billy the Kid, Coming Through Slaughter, Running in the Family
, and
In the Skin of a Lion
. They cover the period from 1963, when I first started to write, to 1990.

Elimination Dance
, which turns up here as an intermission, is a sort of rogue-troubadour poem that seems continually to change—a few lines get dropped and a few get added every year. It is based on those horrendous dances where a caller decides, seemingly randomly, who should not be allowed to continue dancing. So the piece (I still hesitate to call it a poem) is in the voice of a mad, and totally beyond-the-pale, announcer.

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