Weather Report. Rhonda Batchelor. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Rhonda Batchelor
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Поэзия
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isbn: 9781770706835
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       Widow

       What You Left

       Good for You

       This Morning

       Kissing the Ghosts Away

       Troubadour

       True Romancing

       Blackberry

       Port of Angels

       Blue Leaving

       Sitting Alone

       Watcher

       Healing Game

       Remember

      Earlier versions of some of these poems first appeared in ARC, Convolvulus, The Malahat Review, Poetry Canada Review and Prism international. My thanks to the editors. A selection was also published in the chapbook Waiting Game (Reference West, Victoria, 1998). A Project Assistance Grant from the British Columbia Arts Council in 1997 was very much appreciated.

      For their help (literary and otherwise), I am grateful to many friends: Patricia Young, Linda Rogers, Anne Kelly, Kerry Slavens, Margaret Blackwood, Liza (E.) Harris, Cathryn Dimock, Ian Callan and the late Robin and Sylvia Skelton. Georgina Montgomery, Bryony Wynne Boutilier, Jenny Winstone, Monica Turner and Sharon Churchill are still The Girls. I thank The Hawthorne Society, especially Sandy Mayzell, John Gould and Horst Martin, for carrying the torch when we lost three of our founding members. Joy Gugeler, editor of editors, I thank for her patience, professionalism and her profound insight. Michael Doyle, with his Irish generosity, made available his beautiful home on Pender Island when I most needed sanctuary. So, too, did David and Andrea Spalding, Kathleen Lightman and Terry Chantler, Georgina M. and Lawrence Pitt. Blessings on your Pender homes. Bruce Morgan of Virtual Consultants is my virtual angel and Alex Lavdovsky of Classic Engraving my artistic avenger.

      Finally, and forever, my love to Ben and Joanna Lillard. Your dad would be proud.

      Note: All quotes from Remy de Gourmont are from Letters to the Amazon, an inspiring but sadly out-of-print book published by Chatto and Windus (London) in 1931. This translation is by Richard Aldington. The music of George Ivan (Van) Morrison continues to give my life a soundtrack with soul.

      Did ye get healed? Yes.

       Waterford Vase

      It captured Sunday night’s sunset. Held Monday’s sun. It caught Tuesday night’s firelight. Look. It saved you some.

       We begin to long for vague happiness which at the same time would be profound, close at hand and far off, soft and sharp, complicated delusive pleasures which are frightening or laughable from their folly. This desire knows only too well that no one has the power to heal its restlessness.

      —Remy de Gourmont, Letters to the Amazon

      who greets my arrival at the gate,

       moves among my feet, along

       the path wetly paved with

       half-frozen December leaves,

       leans on the door.

      I fumble for the key,

       carry my overnight bag

       inside, take off my boots,

       hang up my coat.

      I am the season’s warmth,

       human kindness, giving

       to be given

       in return. There is a cry

       to be let out

       when Grace

       has had her fill.

      of the front porch, forced iris and tender primula veris bloom in clay pots, leaves serene. Beyond, everything is buried in winter, an unwelcome guest settling in. Oh, the kindness of friends who leave keys under stone angels. Ground level and snow-lit, this suite is full of books and straw hats. I try on a shiny blue boot but its owner’s foot is dainty and I’m an outsized Alice.

      When it’s time to go home I’ll have to walk

       in the footprints of others, haltingly,

       in unsuitable shoes, facing immutable spring.

      March came in like a madman.

       Patches of darker grey when we believed

       the pewter sky was solid, of a piece,

       and our private heartache

       would save us.

      Stars we gazed upon that cold night

       a reminder how fleeting

       small lives. In the vast

       classroom of the universe,

       we’re forced to kneel

       and tremble, the sky

       not finished with us.

      The robin’s swan song,

       insistent, urgently cheerful,

       draws me to the window

       where I see nothing more

       than the sky finally clearing

       in the west now that the sun has set.

      Wet cedars droop into night.

       I move through rooms

       extinguishing lights,

       when the bird’s startled cry

       calls me again.

      The flat plane struggles to reveal

       what’s left of the longer view.

       Not wanting reflection to confirm

       how tired, how old, I look

       beyond the pale moon of my face.

       There is grace in the world’s turning,

       if not in the way I draw

       the curtain, or turn to leave the room.

      Hunan

       ginger beef

       and salty smoked duck. My empty plate

       a shiny disc.

       Outside,

       a strange glow over the neighbourhood

       skyline with its white

       observatory dome.

       Look at this

      My friends press close against the table’s

       bounty as the luminous platter

       of the moon slides onto a velvet backdrop.

       Familiar faces are