January 2, 1999, when a snowstorm dropped thirty-nine
centimetres of snow on Toronto. As a series of storms kept rolling in. Within
two weeks, a state of emergency, as Mayor Mel Lastman called in the army. Dig,
baby, dig.
January, 1998, when an ice storm caused major damage across
Eastern Ontario and southern Quebec, revealing the poor quality of the Quebec
Hydro.
March 4, 1971, when forty-seven centimetres of snow fell on
Montreal, made worse by winds up to 110 km/hour. The drifts kept rolling,
rolling in.
What else do you wish to know.
Such fierce winds rush through Pyeongchang County, South
Korea. Enough to knock Olympic hopefuls from their path. The snowboards turn to
sails, pushed twenty feet into the air.
The mid-season opener of CW’s DC Legends of Tomorrow that actually includes their resident
historian, Dr. Nathaniel “Nate” Heywood, grabbing his quick-at-hand copy of
Ralph Connor’s 1901 novel, The Man from
Glengarry, in an attempt to discover hints to the location of his
time-displaced teammates. Why would you seek them in fiction? We begin to doubt
your talents as a historian, Commander Steel.
Christine responds to an email. We discuss the
possibilities of childcare. This too, happens.
*
Dead at ninety-five. Dead at sixty-three. Dead at forty.
Dead at seventy-five. Dead at thirty-two. Dead at sixty. Dead at eighty-seven.
Dead at seventy. Scroll through the obituaries, seeking out names, and
particulars. Scroll through the connections. What am I seeking. The names of
the dead and their angular pinpoints: birth, marriage, children. Remnants.
When a miracle is not a miracle. How close to your grammar.
Despite the weather delay, Canada Post delivers a
handwritten note from Brooklyn poet and filmmaker Stephanie Gray. At times, one
forgets such things existed: a note sketched by hand, and offered through snail
mail.
The note’s verso: Brooklyn “Mapnote,” pinpointing Flatbush,
Midwood, Bushwick, Borough Park.
Pattie McCarthy, margerykempething
(2017): “this sentence is from several failed attempts [.]”
*
Stones in her pockets. Off-screen, I place eggs in the
Instant Pot, set a dozen for hard-boil. Seven minutes on manual. Off-screen,
the children sit quietly, flip through their books.
Michael Harris’ poem “Death and Miss Emily,” from Grace (1978). On The Porcupine’s Quill,
Inc. blog in November, 2017, intern Stephanie Small writes of “The act of going
back, of probing a topic like a sore tooth […].” Of which she was very much in
favour.
Snow. What I know of it, falls.
The storm not a metaphor but situated in fact. Shovels the
weight of the walk.
The penitent, kneels. Anna Gurton-Wachter: “The mouth is a
whisper of an earlier event.”
Within days, temperatures rise. The rain. From minus
twenty-three to plus-eight in the space of a week. The snow evaporates with
such force it steams, producing light fog from the asphalt. It lifts.
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