Authors: David Donnell
These days I want to work all morning
until I’m tired,
and then sit in my blue dojo pants
like somebody back from a holiday in Tibet and watch the traffic
go past.
The weather looks good for the next few years.
I miss Church Street
(and the way it empties east of Yonge
south through the city and into the Lake) sometimes
but
in a fairly abstract way. Postcards. The things
I love most are like pale green fruit, papayas, sour-sop, pale green
mangoes.
Touch them to my face in the warm Toronto sun, and
say,
thank you. That was nice. The roast lamb was fantastic. The
rosemary was sweet & bitter & my whole mouth feels fresh
again.
China Blues is a song that Miles Davis never got around to writing, & Oscar Peterson hasn’t written yet. > John A. Macdonald, Yukio Mishima, Billie Holliday. People whose names will be written on the subway walls as far south as Massachusetts, where you can garden as late as September, or as far west as Great Slave Lake – where the big-eyed Loons sing cold & clear. > You might think of John Lone in Bertolucci’s film
The Last Emperor
, the scene at the afternoon party where he sings a slow 30s Gershwin song with English vowels & just a trace of Chinese accent.
Or Molly Johnson singing “Cry Me A River” at a small club on Queen Street West late at night before we walk up to Massimo’s on College Street & get a large
primavera
from the young Thai kid on the front counter. > Or those long sad notes on the Chinese cello I heard from a young Chinese student, shaven head, good musician, from Burma, what was Burma, in the subway at University & Queen. > Isn’t this what Bessie Smith talked about when she first started to record? She had a stars&stripes earring in her left ear, & she said, I’ll slow your boat down, & I’ll send us both to China. > Of course it’s a metaphor. But it does make you think of Mrs. Bedford Stuyvestant-Fish, & Ben Johnson, the fastest man in the world, & of Walker Evans, & of Li Po, who wrote such beautiful poems about early morning air & light on the Niagara escarpment. If you look north on a clear day you can see as far as Thunder Bay.
It’s funny, though, that I should
think of Ava tonight. How she used to walk through hotel
lobbies in dark mink & heels
with nothing underneath.
Apparently she had hearts embroidered on her underwear.
Those hearts & lime green shoes & the black floor
& walls of this club shine up through the soft
indirect lighting that Billie
seems to be singing about while she gives Cole Porter
a nudge in the short ribs. Billie was always friendly,
whatever group she was working with she set up a good
rapport. I’m hot these days, the writing is good,
we’ve got Ontario garden peas in the stores,
Mexican garden peas, & California garden peas. The summer
weather rolls in & there don’t seem to be no reason
why it should end. All I really want
from the world at this exact moment, before we leave
& I go home to sleep with M with one leg sprawled
over her ankle is some cappuccino
&,
if I can get the waitress over here,
another play of that tape which begins
with an atypical cut of Joan Armatrading singing, “You
Give Me Fever.” You do. Yes you do.
for Russell Smith
The Surgeon General has told us firmly,
in that clipped voice,
pushing out his impressive beard,
he looks almost like a Mennonite
except that Mennonites are not so articulate
& they do not have a Yale accent,
we must throw our cigarettes
away, & we must put on condoms.
So here we are, okay,
world of wonders?
standing naked
although Paul has a pair of running shoes
& Neil is wearing red&yellow Argyle socks,
out in front of
Mrs. Smith’s Cocktail Party, across from The Bovine Sex Club
on Queen Street West,
it is a Tuesday afternoon
& it is sunny, the temperature is about 23°
& the barometer must be at least 102.5. We have thrown
our cigarettes away, hurled them, various garbage cans
over the last month, & we are restless. We are all wearing
condoms; put on a condom soft & walk around – it looks
amusing, I think, & affectionate; & we have all sorts
of different colours: charcoal grey, noir, natural, raspberry,
cerise, chromium blue, butter yellow, you name it, the boys
have gotten dressed before dinner.
We are not the hottest
kids to ever come out of the U of T graduate school,
but we are not
oafs, we are open minds. Frank comes out of the restaurant
& he says, “I can’t stand it. I’m going to open up a Walter
Raleigh,” & he lights up a rich Virginia cigarette, inhales
& blows the smoke out gracefully. He is tall with a shock
of flaming red hair & an angular body.
Elizabeth I, she
had flaming red hair also, she was crazy, sometimes,
Frank is not crazy, & sometimes they had to chain
her to the bed. Then Alvin comes out & sniffs the air
& winks one blue eye. “Wonder when,” he says,
“they will get around to issuing us those neat handkerchief
& elastic strap face-masks you see guys wearing in Tokyo?”
We all laugh, standing with our hands in our pockets,
sic
,
leaning against the warm tiles & glass of the front wall
with our hands behind our heads,
resting on our hips,
or on each other’s shoulders. We are waiting to see
what new car designs & Mies van der Rohe buildings
the 90s will bring. “Bet you some crab & 2 Double Diamonds
that the Jays win a pennant this year.” “I’ll bet
you
,”
he says, “a double crab & 2 Double Diamonds
that Jay McInerney never brings out his next book.”
We all laugh, standing around in the sunshine.
We are waiting for the 90s.
Most newspaper articles are not as clear as Thomas Wolfe or Margaret Laurence talking about how you don’t know who you are until you go away, and stop and look back, and see the stone angel in the town you come from – the house where you lived, the smell of the grass, tar on the gravel driveway. The large front windows are lit up, circa 5:30, it must be around 1950; your mother walks from the car up the front steps with a large brown paper bag of groceries and closes the large white front door with its 3 window panes behind her. A flash of gold wedding band, and she doesn’t look back over her shoulder. > I feel that I have lost a large chunk of time. Ontario time I guess, the 40 years or so before I was even born. It has fallen out of my pocket like a grey rock with patches of inside colour. > I think Laurence is very good but she focuses too much on the family as a social unit; Thomas Wolfe is a truly great writer, the unfolding of a giant camera, I’m not saying this because he was tall, good-looking, or because he wrote on top of a fridge at one point. > Open
Look Homeward, Angel
at almost any page and you will see what I mean. The stone comes back into my pocket. > How can we talk about what Ontario was like 40 years ago without talking about the general mood of idealism in America as a whole at that time? > Why do we persist in the belief that Marilyn French OR Bret Easton Ellis are talking about anything of any significance? > I think it’s amazing that so few people read Thomas Wolfe these days. I think it’s amazing that so few people read Mary McCarthy and Edmund Wilson. These days.
We’re in late spring or early summer now
in Alliston. Last night
it began getting dark around 8:30.
I have been a little melancholy for the last week,
& Alliston has been a relief.
Love’s like that.
I had eaten supper, some fish & a mixed stir-fry of bell
peppers, & I began to think about how beautiful
the dark is.
So I went outside & stood with my back
against the wall of the house
& let my eyes play over
the dark backyard
smudged poplars & elms, soft dark late-night hawks
& distant voices,
to watch the darkness doing nothing
except being itself.
But after a while
I began to feel that our little affair was foolish;
in fact I began to feel our affair, your underwear,
your reddish golden hair,
can I be gender conscious,
thank you,
grazie
, your perfect sweet-tipped pair,
wash slowly out of my
kopf.
It’s hard to be serious
about an imagined resentment
while you’re staring at a whole Milky Way full of
stars.
Probably a couple of rabbits down at the end
of the garden
don’t think I noticed them
squinting a bit to see the colour of
yellow zinnias
or the shiny bounce of small light
on a steel trowel left out from the afternoon.
No light from my friend Duck Moon. Should be a
fine dark yellow fingernail paring in another
week or so.
And then I will write about you
as a woman I meet on a fall day in a train station,
in Zurich, or in Kansas going all the way south
to Texas to see your aunt.
You Chinese goldfish,
you sexy bitch, full of planning your first child
with your black tie stockbroker husband,
you English crumpet, look at me in the dark,
I’m blushing like an Italian schoolboy
with fistfuls of change who can’t find his handkerchief
for the sake of looking.
I have been thinking about Madonna
on this blue April morning,
about how pretty she is, & how good she is
at faking defiance.
I like the Madonna video
called “Justify
My Love.” I think Gaultier designed
the cone-nippled bra she wears
with a clear & full perfection, but nobody wrote
a Persian Gulf video for her to bop to.
Although
all she ever does is tilt her head back
& grab her crotch.
But when she
does that
she does me, what can I say? there is something
extraordinarily beautiful about her eyes, blue
blue
blue, like Neil
Young singing “… there is a town in north Ontari io.”
Don’t mistake me.
I don’t want to pick on Madonna.
She’s terrific. She flaunts a form
of fundamental sexuality with a beautiful arrogance.
But it’s a mistake
to assume she’s defiant. We’re
just talking about having a good time. What
does she defy?
And as for singing
let’s tell the whole dangerous truth.
She hasn’t got a good voice. Madonna can’t sing for beans.
There’s Norman Schwarzkopf across the street
short hair raw slab face dark glasses,
big 60 lb. beer gut
hanging over his twill pants. He has a short-sleeved
Hawaiian sport shirt
on; and is signing autographs
as he moves through a crowd of people in Boston,
I think;
or perhaps it’s Philadelphia. He was a good student
at West Point.
Maybe somebody will do a photo of him,
if this is Philadelphia, or Windsor, or maybe it’s Detroit?