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The Certainty Dream

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by Kate Hall




  The Certainty Dream

  Kate Hall

  Coach House Books | Toronto

  copyright © Kate Hall, 2009

  first edition

  This epub edition published in 2010. Electronic ISBN 978 77056 257 8.

  Published with the generous assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council. Coach House Books also appreciates the financial support of the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit program and the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program.

  LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION

  Hall, Kate, 1977-

  The certainty dream/ Kate Hall.

  Poems.

  ISBN 978-1-55245-223-3

  I. Title.

  PS8565.A44847C47 2009 C811'.54 C2009-904274-6

  for Sarah Partridge

  ‘I have even lost the precise comprehension of what

  I seek and yet I am engaged in the search.’

  – Jean-Paul Sartre

  CONTENTS

  A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE SEA

  DREAM IN WHICH THE DREAM IS SCALED TO SIZE

  WE ARE BUSY WRITING ANIMALS

  DREAM IN WHICH I APOLOGIZE TO THE BIRDS

  VARIATION ON A THEME BY LYN HEJINIAN

  QUICK TOUR OF THE CATHEDRAL

  LITTLE ESSAY ON GENETICS

  SURVIVAL MACHINE

  THE SHIPPING CONTAINER

  WATCHING A LEAF FALL I CANNOT SEE

  MYNAH SPEAKS

  AS THOUGH SEALED IN A GLASS JAR

  HANDS

  WATER TOWER, 1998–2000

  MYSELF-IN-ITS-FORM

  I. Soft Bathtub (Model) - Ghost Version, 1966

  II. Clothespin, 1976

  III. Bicyclette Ensevelie (Buried Bicycle), 1990

  SPEAKING OF ORANGE TREES

  THE LOST-AND-FOUND BOX

  LETTER TO MY FATHER

  I INVENTED THE BIRDCALL

  REMIND ME WHAT THE LIGHT IS FOR

  SUSPENDED IN THE SPACE OF REASON: A SHORT THESIS

  I. Abstract

  II. Introduction

  III. Literature Review

  IV.Methodology

  V. Results

  VI. Discussion

  VII. Conclusion

  INSOMNIA

  STORY TO CRANBERRIES

  SCHRöDINGER’S CAT

  THIS IS A DREAM LETTER

  PASCAL’S WAGER

  POEM TO RENOUNCE MY RENOUNCING

  ONLY IN SHORT SENTENCES

  HYDRAULICALLY OPERATED

  VITRINE

  HEARING MYNAH I HEAR MYSELF

  TIME

  THE FACTORY FACTORY

  DREAM IN WHICH I AM ALLOWED TWELVE ITEMS

  MYNAH FLIES OFF

  THE BIRDS ENJOY THEIR MORNING CUP

  THE SUN LIBRARY

  LOVE, MYNAH

  THE CERTAINTY DREAM

  DRESS-UP DREAM

  ANTELOPE DREAM

  DREAM IN WHICH I AM TOO BIG FOR MY MIND

  ONE POINT OF REFERENCE

  OVERNIGHT A HORSE APPEARED

  MYNAH – LAST TIME

  DREAM IN WHICH I AM SEPARATED FROM MYSELF

  MYNAH DREAMS HIMSELF INTO A STATUE

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE SEA

  The vastness of the sea is missing. It is called blackbird.

  Blackbird recollects mast, rigging and hull floating out there intact.

  Blackbird until a swarm of dragonfly-looking things.

  Blackbird in the well.

  Blackbird in a circle closes around and eyes a sandwich.

  Blackbird, then the throat.

  Blackbird loves the dog and hates the baby.

  Blackbird misses the throat.

  Blackbird sprays the eye and screams.

  Blackbird appliquéd overtop and peeling back.

  Blackbird gives way and the inside of the earth.

  Blackbird like an unfinished basement.

  Blackbird lives among the Vikings.

  Blackbird holds up a bulldozer like a trophy.

  Blackbird sums up the ending except for the guilt.

  Blackbird is what blackbird wants.

  DREAM IN WHICH THE DREAM IS SCALED TO SIZE

  you have felt the world shrinking

  all this time you

  feel yourself growing into it you

  let yourself be the shape of it yes

  you are in the graveyard yes

  it has gone too far the sky

  has turned

  into a replica of your mouth

  and you are about to swallow

  the whole world with you

  in it you know

  it was meant for you

  when you dance with it

  in the street you let it

  lead and it takes your wrist

  your hip ever so delicately your hip

  you gather your small things

  you have felt it coming

  all this time you

  have nothing to call it yes

  you are in the bus station with

  everything spread against the cold floor

  yes you are scratching against the place

  where no thing is yes you are

  WE ARE BUSY WRITING ANIMALS

  I looked at you looking at your miniature horses,

  your model boat with its small captain’s wheel.

  You must have gotten smaller to fit yourself

  into that space. I must have. At some point

  I was at the stern and you were alone

  at the bow with your kaleidoscope.

  We paraded too many living things

  into that tiny vessel. Entirely new species could be made

  through overcrowding. We were busy on deck,

  afraid to lift that wooden door. The lions

  could be the same old lions that populate every plain

  and we were ready for something new.

  We thought we saw land. We wanted land.

  DREAM IN WHICH I APOLOGIZE TO THE BIRDS

  who have been denied a tree semantics

  who have been denied a sentence stop

  who could just as well have been buffalo or ants

  whose existence is insignificant in that sense

  who must make something more of themselves also not birds

  for whom there is weakness, exhaustion and disease

  who are thus starting to understand the contextual use of despite

  who are not conscious really

  who are merely display just now are displaying

  who are continuous but will not continue

  those whom I collected objects are simple

  whom I used for research pictures of facts

  whom I forced into a small fragmented area the complex name

  those whom I made

  strings of words

  featherless

  VARIATION ON A THEME BY LYN HEJINIAN

  ‘In the gap between what one wants to say (or what one perceives there is to say) and what one can say (what is sayable), words provide for a collaboration and desertion.’

  – Lyn Hejinian

  Many blocks

  of sentences

  make a nice

  castle

  You can go on saying but you can never recover the pattern of small roses not even in the pattern of small roses. That’s the crack in the sidewalk you turned into a shape. So drop it. The window needs to be fixed; it’s gaping. Neurath decided the body of knowledge is a raft that floats free of any anchor. We have to stand somewhere. Repairs must be made afloat. Feeling of impending disaster: he liked detective novels and puzzles to
o. I scrabbled my name into your book. It became my life. That’s the beauty of it. Riddles are much heavier than tea leaves because they make points of intersection: ask and answer. We are not forgetting the patience of the mad, their love of detail. When you say it like that I cannot know if I’m really knowing. There are socks in the underwear drawer. Who can argue with that? Our mothers were both in the kitchen clanging pots, standing back to back so I could measure who was taller. Astigmatism makes me see double. Disaster in the bathtub: contained waves, small splinters of wood drift around you as you move. My life doesn’t make sense. There are always elaborate coffee grounds at the bottom. I thought of liver, kidneys and lungs as drying fruit. My autobiography unravels there. Only forty-five years. What happens at the end of the book? Tomorrow I won’t speak. I’ll walk everywhere and barefoot. If I can’t walk, I’ll swim. If I can’t swim, I’ll crouch pressing one hand into the dirt to steady myself. With the other, I’ll gather twigs.

  QUICK TOUR OF THE CATHEDRAL

  In dark churches, certain boxes

  are locked. I’m one of those tourists,

  when held back from the incorruptible

  by an iron railing, jostles

  for a peek at the small window

  you can’t really see through.

  There’s no one at the prayer candles.

  We’ve lit all our wishes on fire

  and they give off too much light.

  On a commercial break I start wishing

  the blue volleyball team will win.

  When they do, the final point

  is scored like this: the ball is a white streak

  right down the line and no one

  moves to receive it.

  If they play again, it will not be today.

  Today I have a lot to answer for.

  Fifteen people are jumping but fifteen other people are crying

  and only a fine webbing separates them.

  I hope that something in the locked box

  will make up for this. Is it a real heart?

  A real heart would stink

  and rot and fall apart. Behind us, fire

  is sucking up wishes. It’s melting

  the pillars they’re standing on.

  LITTLE ESSAY ON GENETICS

  It’s possible to love your mother

  even though you’re genetically deficient

  and she’s genetically deficient

  and our deficiencies make a big hole

  in the ground. Eventually each of us will have to decide

  whether to get cremated or buried in a fancy casket.

  Evolution is about the genes

  manipulating the bodies they ride in.

  Little girls wish for ponies

  without realizing their parents

  have already turned them into genetic horses.

  We are encoded but we have not yet

  completely broken ourselves.

  Genes can turn on suddenly

  like a light bulb. This is a cause of

  cancer. God we are amazing

  biological gadgets. They cross-bred

  two strains of mice. The genes

  are an instruction manual, an identity

  machine. The rats are right; I am frighteningly

  like my mother. We are hardly here.

  SURVIVAL MACHINE

  The container for water

  and information. We drew on

  rocks. We figured out the word

  sea. We figured out the words

  basin and submarine. I shattered

  a glass washing the dishes. I banged it

  against another and underwater

  one of them had to give.

  I used to be a great birdwatcher

  until the kingfishers flew

  away, and I missed them

  and still understood nothing about flight

  after examining the wing structure.

  It’s a beautifully invented design.

  It’s a consequence.

  Extinction. Sea basin.

  The kingfishers. Submarine.

  In a dream disposable straws are used

  to download and upload information –

  a process involving invisible marine organisms,

  soggy computer chips

  and resurrected kingfishers which remain a mystery to me.

  Evolution. You took off your black sweater

  and went to bed naked.

  It has never changed.

  Right from the beginning

  it has been what it is.

  For water. The container.

  THE SHIPPING CONTAINER

  There must be a method of transport

  because there are regulations about the movement

  of dangerous goods. You made me

  a photocopy. I’ve started worrying about getting

  the proper transportation certificate

  which requires the inspector’s signature,

  which in turn requires believing there is

  an inspector with the authority to okay me.

  There are moments when a dog will hear

  what you cannot. The bark is a warning

  at ninety-two decibels. Because you hear nothing

  moving out there, fear is vague and constant.

  Quiet is a command that registers only seven decibels when

  spoken aloud. I read your note about the beauty

  of the immune system and the mathematics of the brain.

  How would you like me to interpret

  this love letter? It weighs next to nothing

  and ends abruptly. It’s true, the container

  has great aesthetic value but I was really hoping

  for a free watch with a rechargeable battery or

  at least a better kind of nothingness.

  WATCHING A LEAF FALL I CANNOT SEE

  At the market, the man with his hand

  in the boy’s mouth is missing.

  ‘Where is my house

  when I am here?’ I ask my friend.

  All this is spoken in gestures

  I am too tired to perform.

  The boy will be mute

  in a case this morning or left as fabric

  strung over a kitchen chair.

  I unfold the bed and lay myself across it.

  I cannot find it in me to rise.

  A bath towel I hung in the window

  serves to block out light. Outside, there

  is a crossing sign with a lever that rises

  and falls in front of the metal rails.

  If I could see the sign through the window,

  I would go and stand under it. The metal contraption

  that blows by would be out of date

  and I would still watch it pass. While the rattling exists,

  we are held back and saved. I am waiting

  for the leaf to let go. The towel is left

  in the window. The leaf is a gesture I cannot see.

  I will not know when it falls or

  what this might mean. The sound will not

  be loud enough to hear. My friend wants to drop

  coins into the case where the boy used to be.

  She wants to drop coins when there is a hollow

  where the boy is missing and the man

  is moving the boy’s mouth. She believes

  the boy can speak for himself or

  the man can speak for him and she imagines

  it is enough.

  MYNAH SPEAKS

  this conversation holds one bird

  the bird sets off no alarm

  only moves as his shadow might

  flap across the snow

  I tucked my tongue into him

  I wound him with a handle

  now say you hear the gears turning

  now say you hear the sound of arrest

  I set a bird in front of me

  and a book in front of him

  on the book, two hands performed


  a gesture of continual separation

  over the bird I threw a jacket

  I wasn’t gentle enough

  to save him I cannot

  find the cavity where I left him

  a crow-bird held another bird

  I dropped them both

  thirty feet onto stone

  no gashes visible here – nothing

  between the release and the impact

  time sounds like a bird strung over an abyss

  I tucked my tongue into him

  he was flat, he was a tapestry

  AS THOUGH SEALED IN A GLASS JAR

  On a field in the mud something gives.

  Bruce blew out his knee. He slipped and bent.

  Lifeguards can identify

  the injured because they’re holding themselves

  instead of swimming. The surface seals over injury

  and injured. It’s the water that kills.

  During bathtub races, we’re never sure we’ll stay

  afloat. Seawater comes in over the rim.

  Sometimes it messes up our plans.

  In my bathtub boat, I’m giving myself first aid.

  If I reach the dock

  I’ll puke seawater.

  What comes out will look nothing like what went in.

  I’ve thrown up in a lot of different places

  in my life and I hate to think

  I just had to leave it there. Because briefly

  that part of the world was mine.

  At the restaurant there’s a liqueur with a real pear

  in the bottle. Bruce says they grow the pears within the glass.

  When the doctor looked at Bruce he said

  I’m going to give you a knee

  better than the one God gave you.

  There’s some kind of metal –

  that metal was underground

 

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