Then our eyes clear and the emptiness within is
the same as the emptiness without, and the glass is transparent.
Rosmarie
Waldrop, Driven to abstraction
We woke one morning and the ocean was gone. Some
of us
were relieved. Who can blame it if it had been
our audience?
Sue
Goyette, Ocean
We’ve
already been here for days. Since Saturday, in Boca Raton, Florida at Christine’s
father’s condo, quietly hanging out with Emperor Rose.
The
weather only delayed our flight by two hours, most of which was sitting on the
tarmac at the Ottawa Airport. Ugh. But Rose was a good passenger, sleeping
soundly through most of it, cooing gently throughout most of the rest.
We
are outside slightly less than we were last year. Baby Rose can’t be out in
direct sunlight between 10am and 2pm, and she’s too young for sunscreen, so our
beach time is shortened, slightly later in the afternoon.
We
enjoy all the nothing we’re doing (between bouts of work—Christine, a book review
due, and myself, pieces for Open Book:
Ontario and judging a youth poetry contest). We enjoy all the not-snow.
We
go for walks, go for lunch with Christine’s father and his wife. We head to the
beach, watch the cruise ships skim the horizon. We engage in that uniquely foreign
state of rest.
The
baby exists outside for the first time in warm weather; for the first time
without layers upon layers. We utilize the stroller. We forego socks.
We
engage with Netflix, so much more powerful in America than the one we have at
home.
On
February 20th, she turned three months old. Madness.
Plans
exist to have dinner (again) with Mark Scroggins and his family on Monday; plans
exist to get down to the Keys to see Hemingway’s house (and the
great-great-great etc grandchildren of his infamous cats) and what else we can
discover.
I’ve
been working on fragments of a longer poem, “Standing on a beach in South Florida,
February,” sketching out a series of accumulations; extending a short sequence
of poems composed during our trip down here last year around this time [see my report on such here]. The first creative work I’ve managed since Rose was born
(focusing instead on reviews and other such works during my severely shortened
work day), this is what I’ve been focusing on since arrival.
I’ve
also been rereading Rosmarie Waldrop, who has become one of my favourites, her Driven to abstraction (New York NY: New
Directions, 2010) [pictured]. After hearing Phil Hall [in a review essay at seventeen seconds: a journal of poetry and poetics] and Rhonda Douglas repeat the positive qualities of such, I’ve
also been engaging with Sue Goyette’s Ocean
(Wolfville NS: Gaspereau Press, 2013).
We
sit at the edge of the same ocean, but with a far different perspective. A fragment of the work-in-progress reads:
Recreate, a place of comfort. Return. Aware of
all the possibilities. Distract, an ecosystem. An emptiness of sugar. Pop tarts.
This was once all swamp.
As far as the eye can see. But eyes can’t see
so far. We imagine: Portugal, the Ivory Coast. We imagine Key West. Next table
coos, proclaims: what a beautiful baby. Monsoon, a snow globe shape.
I am drainage. Strip-mine. Inlays, handicap. Tear
away the flesh. Do they know how to make beautiful.
I imagine the water. A measure of silence. Revolved,
oversimplified. A celebration, branded. The heart is an index of first lines. Christine
presses the palm of her foot into wet sand.
Expresses only the plural: water. Measures
sound, a figure. Cut into swaths, sand. Triangulate airspace, the cover of
night. The pith and the pitch of full moon. A beachy front.
No comments:
Post a Comment