After the small press fair on Friday and
Saturday, we left town on Canada Day for two nights in the Laurentian Hills,
slipping out into Christine’s mother’s cottage in Sainte-Adele. Between the
SOCIAL, various readings and small press book fair stuff, it feels as though
we’ve had far too many events lately, escaping into the hills simply to
breathe. Simply to breathe, except with cat in tow, a weekend Christine thought
Lemonade should come along. Two and a half hours in the car, he was breathing
shallow, uncertain if the heat or anxiety (probably both). We stopped for
hamburgers at a chip truck (who, as we know, always have the best hamburgers)
somewhere along highway 17, most likely Clarence-Rockland. Off the highway so the
cat could breathe again, by a convenience store/gas station called Oops, and
logo of a squirrel scrambling for nuts. Really? Their whole business model is
one of poor planning?
Once at the cottage, Lemonade sniffed for hours,
running running running to see what he could see, poking through all the
corners. An indoor cat, we let him run outside on the harness; I know, how can
a harness not be seen as offensive? But there you go. He didn’t care for the
open space, kept running back to the house. The texture of the lawn confused
him.
Christine worked on various things, but mostly
breathing; I worked on a review or two, an article or two, a short story and
even an interview, up soon at Canadian Poets Petting Cats. I wanted us to get some work done on our collaboration,
since we’re reading from it soon at Dusty Owl (and producing a small chapbook of such), but there wasn’t enough time (we really need to come back, already).
All the while, listening to Warren Zevon and
Momus. It was that kind of weekend.
Recently, those nice people at Grey Borders
Books produced a chapbook of this poem, for the Niagara Literary Arts Festival,
in an edition of fifty copies. They’re already long gone.
Lemonade, polydactyl
(or,
the cat with twenty-two
toes,)
Maps on the
soles of their feet.
Michael
Ondaatje, The Man with Seven Toes
1.
this new kitten; bone-cleave,
hindrance; to
de-claw
is to pick out bone; inhumane,
they tell us,
,
litter-box, his smile
round, rounded; sprouted,
only then, begin
white snowshoe, mitten-toed,
2.
congenital abnormality tree-flesh,
thumb cat,
six-fingered
combinations of anywhere from four
to seven toes per paw; a fallen crayon,
one hour out of twenty-four,
at
variable speed,
3.
commonly found on front paws only
fur-speed; sleeps,
sleeps; tears through the house,
Hemingway-cut sentence-short,
spread wide, from Boston
, sleeps in
unknown corners
ship-cats, ported trade; their offspring saw
the world
4.
in Key West, Florida, fifty
cats
or more;
sub-genre,
descend misplaced,
neither
holy, Roman, empire,
this, our cat-house; Lemonade,
some sailors considered them extreme
good luck ; below deck,
tilts his collared
head,
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