Whetstone

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by Lorna Crozier




  BOOKS BY LORNA CROZIER

  POETRY

  Inside Is the Sky (1976)

  Crow’s Black Joy (1979)

  Humans and Other Beasts (1980)

  No Longer Two People (with Patrick Lane) (1981)

  The Weather (1983)

  The Garden Going On Without Us (1985)

  Angels of Flesh, Angels of Silence (1988)

  Inventing the Hawk (1992)

  Everything Arrives at the Light (1995)

  A Saving Grace (1996)

  What the Living Won’t Let Go (1999)

  Apocrypha of Light (2002)

  Bones in Their Wings: Ghazals (2003)

  Whetstone (2005)

  ANTHOLOGIES

  A Sudden Radiance (with Gary Hyland) (1987)

  Breathing Fire (with Patrick Lane) (1995)

  Desire in Seven Voices (2000)

  Addicted: Notes from the Belly of the Beast (with Patrick Lane) (2001)

  Breathing Fire 2 (with Patrick Lane) (2004)

  Copyright © 2005 by Lorna Crozier

  All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the publisher – or, in case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency – is an infringement of the copyright law.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Crozier, Lorna, 1948-

  Whetstone / Lorna Crozier.

  Poems.

  ISBN 0-7710-2467-3

  eBook ISBN 978-1-55199-655-4

  I. Title.

  PS8555.R72W47 2005 C811′.54 C2004-905954-8

  We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program and that of the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Media Development Corporation’s Ontario Book Initiative. We further acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program.

  The epigraph on this page is an excerpt from The Great Fire by Shirley Hazzard. Copyright © 2003 by Shirley Hazzard. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.

  The epigraph to “The Physics of the Rose” on this page is from God’s Equation by Amir D. Aczel.

  McClelland & Stewart Ltd.

  75 Sherbourne Street

  Toronto, Ontario

  M5A 2P9

  www.mcclelland.com

  v3.1

  For my mother and for Patrick

  “I realise, too, that I now have a substantial past – which means that I am no longer young but have become more interesting to myself.”

  — Shirley Hazzard, The Great Fire

  This title contains long lines of poetry. The line of characters below indicates approximately the longest line in the text:

  Leaving home like Louis Armstrong – though there’s no one like him –

  To most accurately reproduce the layout of the text on the printed page, you may choose to decrease the size of the text on your viewer and/or change the orientation of your screen until the above line of characters fits on a single line. This may not be possible on all e-reading devices. Viewing this title at a higher than optimal text size or on a screen too small to accommodate the longest lines in the text will alter the reading experience and may cause single lines of some poems to display as multiple lines of text. If this occurs, the turn of the line will be marked with a shallow indent.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Disclaimer

  Autobiography: Birth

  This Sky Demands a Certain Patience

  Beauty

  Sand from the Gobi Desert

  Calm

  When My Father Lived on Earth

  Leaving Home

  Something Else

  Winter Birches

  Prayers of Snow

  The Simplest of Movements

  Whetstone

  Three Movements for the Wind

  What Comes After

  Drought

  The Light in My Mother’s Kitchen

  To See Clearly

  Ice-Fog

  Drought

  Form

  Shadow

  The Silence of Creation

  The Physics of the Rose

  Lazarus

  It Is Night

  Anonymity

  Rapture

  Brushes Made from Animal Hair

  Four Cows in Moonlight

  Melanoma

  Letter Home: Too Much, Too Little

  Poem for a Hard Time

  What Refuses Form

  Setting

  Solitude

  Past the Middle of My Life

  Rebuttal to the Higher Power

  Drought

  Hoping to Fix Up, a Little, This World

  Drinking in Moonlight

  Tu Fu Warns Li Po When Li Po Departs after a Night of Carousing

  What Can’t Be Seen

  At Anny’s Stable

  Winter Day

  Leaving the Garden

  Family Custom

  Divining

  All Things Passing

  Counting the Magpie

  Summer Small Talk

  Late July

  The Weight of August

  No Music in It

  Birthday with My Mother

  Measure

  Below Zero

  Late August Threnody

  Wind/Mind

  Small Gesture

  Blizzard

  The End of the Century

  Acknowledgements

  AUTOBIOGRAPHY: BIRTH

  In my old bones I make the journey back.

  My mother’s mother has come in from the farm,

  my brother waits at the table for our father

  who didn’t believe I’d arrive today;

  he’s betting on the horses – Tony, Prophet,

  Sweet Forgetting – at the Gull Lake Fair.

  At seven, my brother knows what he can do,

  his new knife cutting through caragana,

  how he can strip the fibre to the wood’s white heart

  and leave us all behind, that glint in his pocket.

  I drop my bones in the kindling box

  and then I’m out the window, high and fast

  to where breath flutters in the lilac leaves

  and all the deaths I’m heir to

  turn a little from their tasks and look at me.

  There’s so much light beneath the moon,

  my shadow’s there below

  as if some part of me has fallen:

  a stain where a hand has rested

  on skin that holds a bruise.

  THIS SKY DEMANDS A CERTAIN PATIENCE

  With all this sky to cross

  how can Jesus find you? Surely

  there’s too much of it, even for one

  who’s called the Lord of Light. You try to find

  the stone that speaks in tongues. The rooster

  who’s an angel with a useful job.

  Sometimes wind leaves its footprints

  on the water. Sometimes the dust’s

  a voice that rises when a car goes past.

  A god is walking through the wheat fields,

  you’re sure of that. But it’s not you he’s come for.

  There are coyotes to save, the wheat itself, short

  and shriven, and the skunk who’s about to eat

  the poisoned egg. Let alone the egg, the song inside it.

  The devil s
eems to have more focus; he believes

  you deserve his full attention. If you hang your soul

  on the line he’s right there, especially if it’s pinned

  beside a good woman’s laundry,

  her cotton underwear so thin from all the washings,

  light passes through it and is changed.

  BEAUTY

  It’s not the antelope’s

  golden leaps across the grasslands

  but how she stops

  drops to her knees at the barbed-wire fence

  and crawls under

  then springs when she’s on her feet again

  So too with you. The beauty’s in

  your fall, your startled

  grace –

  everything

  turning on

  the hinges of your neck, waist, and knees

  how you bend –

  SAND FROM THE GOBI DESERT

  Sand from the Gobi Desert blows across Saskatchewan,

  becomes the irritation in an eye. So say the scientists who

  separate the smallest pollen from its wings of grit,

  identify the origin and name. You have to wonder where

  the dust from these fields ends up: Zimbabwe, Fiji,

  on the row of shoes outside a mosque in Istanbul,

  on the green rise of a belly in the Jade Museum in Angkor Wat?

  And what of our breath, grey hair freed from a comb, the torn

  threads of shadows?

  Just now the salt from a woman’s tears settles finely its invisible kiss

  on my upper lip. She’s been crying in Paris on the street that means

  Middle of the Day though it’s night there, and she doesn’t want

  the day to come.

  Would it comfort her to know another, halfway round the world,

  can taste her grief?

  Another would send her, if she could, the rare flakes of snow

  falling here before the sunrise, snow that barely fleeces the brown

  back of what’s

  too dry to be a field of wheat, and winter’s almost passed. Snow

  on her lashes.

  What of apple blossoms, my father’s ashes, small scraps of sadness

  that slip out of reach? Is it comforting to know the wind

  never travels empty? A sparrow in the Alhambra’s arabesques

  rides the laughter spilling from our kitchen, the smell of garlic

  makes the dust delicious where and where it falls.

  CALM

  The lake has gone beyond reason. It drifts out of itself,

  casts shadows and reflections across the skirts of fir

  greening the shore, making of their wind-still study

  a flicker and slide, the way souls must move, ichorous, transparent,

  hovering near the flesh before they go. I want the green under

  green,

  the thought below the thought, the one deep down and cold,

  ravelling its divination in the dark. Are there gods who need

  no slaking? Ungathered, the water’s blank and beautiful,

  intricately wrought. No one knows where mind and body

  come together, that clean join fingerlings slip through.

  WHEN MY FATHER LIVED ON EARTH

  The second time my father lived on earth

  he was my father. There were many things

  he did and didn’t do. Out of them he made

  a storm and salt. Hands that held my head

  when it was small and wet.

  The first time? I want him to have been

  something I could’ve seen or touched,

  red osier in the coulee’s cleft,

  a hare halfway to being winter.

  I want him to have been fresh snow

  scooped into a basin and set

  on the south side of the house to melt

  so a man could wash the shirt he’d wear

  to meet his lover. Once he was thin air,

  an iron hasp, an opening. Storm and salt

  were what my father left me.

  The many things he did and didn’t do.

  LEAVING HOME

  When Louis Armstrong left New Orleans for Chicago

  at King Oliver’s request, his mother

  packed him a trout sandwich and no one met him

  at the train, though he could blow his trumpet

  and be heard across state lines. I don’t know why,

  but I love to think of that trout sandwich he carried

  in his pocket and later ate, the wheels spinning him

  into fame, though it took some years and at least

  two women. When my dad and I went fishing

  Mom laid roast chicken from the day before

  between slices of store-bought white. Was there mayonnaise?

  I don’t remember, but in the boat, a few fish biting,

  our fingers shone with butter as if we’d dipped our hands in fire

  then treated them for burns. The sun was bright but weaker,

  the afternoons so long I watched the hairs on my father’s arms

  turn gold. If I’d been called away by someone other than myself,

  years later, that’s what I’d have wanted, chicken on white bread,

  and the thing that turned my breath and body into music.

  Leaving home like Louis Armstrong – though there’s no one like

  him –

  and his trumpet. And the sandwich he saved until he reached

  the outskirts of Chicago, savouring the Southern taste of what

  his mother made him. Imagine those fingers, that mouth.

  SOMETHING ELSE

  Belly-snug on the floor, linoleum

  warmed by the woodstove, I watched

  the tongue of our new pup lapping milk.

  Red as a fox, she fit into my mother’s hand.

  I told my friends she’d come from far away

  by train, told them my father claimed her

  at the station in a wooden box like the ones

  full of oranges from Japan. Just last year

  Mom said I’d got it wrong. She came from

  Mrs. Rittinger on Sixth, we lived on Fourth.

  Those days, Dad drove an oil-delivery truck.

  Behind his boss’s back, he’d swapped a good month’s

  worth of heat for a purebred Pomeranian.

  Though she became my brother’s dog

  she slept with me because he tossed

  too much in sleep. When she was older

  if I moved at all, she’d growl and nip.

  I learned to lie like a statue on a tomb,

  carnelian dog on a marble cushion at my feet.

  One morning from the neighbour’s porch

  I saw her skulk past our kindling stack

  and with her teeth turn the wooden latch

  on the cage Dad had built to hold two ducklings

  he’d won tossing coins at the summer fair.

  He was always winning things like that –

  a guinea pig named Elvis, a one-winged turkey,

  those golden ducks I loved.

  From a distance I couldn’t cross,

  I watched her disappear into the cage

  then back right out, her muzzle bloody.

  She made no sound, just closed the latch –

  she was that smart – then trotted off between the lilacs.

  Mom said later the dog was jealous;

  the ducks had trailed my brother everywhere

  as I did if he’d let me.

  When my brother left for good, she was mine

  as much as anyone’s. For a time she followed me

  as if I’d take her to him. I didn’t know where

  he’d gone, just far away, too far for him

  to write or visit. Things changed

  then. Everything got older fast.

  The day my father put that small red pup

  beside the kitchen stove,r />
  my mother named her Tiny.

  I would have called her something else.

  WINTER BIRCHES

  Even the ground needs rest.

  Frozen eight feet down, it won’t

  take the dead any more. The few

  who will not wait till spring

  are pulled on sleds across the snow

  to the birch grove north of town.

  There, they turn that white, that

  ghostly. They’ll sometimes step

  toward you in the moonlight,

  arms outstretched or reaching up,

  mouths stuffed with snow.

  When that happens it’s best

  to keep on walking. Pretend

  you never knew them,

  your own face cold.

  It’s winter, after all. It’s night.

  If you hear your name

  don’t look back. Think of water

  running under ice, a green bud opening.

  Say they’re only birch trees,

  they’re only trees. Don’t

  think of what that means.

  PRAYERS OF SNOW

  Snow is a lesson in forgetting, a lesson in gravity,

  a long loose sentence spiralling to the end of thought.

  It prays to the young god robed in white, his ascent

  a blizzard returning to the sky. It prays to the white-footed

  mouse, the snowy owl, the varying hare and vole,

  the cat with fur between his toes. It closes the gap

  between drought and plenty, belief and blasphemy,

  the ear and silence. It is a migration of birds

  without eyes, without feet, who settle white in branches

  on breasts and wings. When you stride through snow

  in dreams or waking, you are a star-walker.

  It prays to the soft fall of your boots.

  THE SIMPLEST OF MOVEMENTS

  The Noh actor, rehearsing for a play in London,

  couldn’t make the simplest of movements.

  Such as, sitting in a chair and lighting a cigarette.

  Such as, cutting a loaf of bread while talking

  over his shoulder to an imaginary wife.

 

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