Authors: David Donnell
The trees are huge outside. Dark green. Good view of big dark green trees loaming up above houses as far west as Brunswick. Birds fly around. Nothing unusual that would interest my friend Carol. Starlings, pigeons, sparrows. The good birds, if you want to make a differentiation between colours or size, are outside in the back eating my Armenian landlord’s lingonberry tree and crapping on his red ’86 Buick Skylark. Am I writing very much? 8–10 pages a day which is probably more than I should be, but I’m in love, or impatient, or maybe just too sure of myself. I have decided that I am a man who was never meant to wear clothes. Dressed I merely exhibit the fact that I’m a largely unpublished writer, a genius, perhaps, thank you; naked, almost, I return to my usual more competent seraphic self. i.e. I am more creative. I produce more work every
day, enjoy even the simplest meal, pace myself more slowly in love-making & sleep like a child.
My old friends, I love you so much. But every day I reject more & more of the tinfoil you have tried to pass on to me; & every day I become healthier, stronger & more, I believe in my heart, what my parents originally had in mind. Listen to enormous amounts of classical music. Spend a lot of time in the sun. Royal Comfort, & Calvin Klein. One slice of Steele’s Bakery dark rye with peanut butter before morning coffee.
All those abrasively angry honking
tenors & hoarse
sad altos expressing black anger
& closing me out.
It pulls at my heart
walking through this club in the middle of a set
& sitting down for a drink before going on
somewhere else to eat. Because it is so visceral
& makes you think about intention.
It makes you
feel guilty for buying all those Joni Mitchell albums,
all those Tom Waits tapes,
all those
Ry Cooder
CDS.
It’s not just me. I can see it
on the faces of both my friends. We listen
& then drive north to a different place
before going to eat. How far down can J.D. Souther
get? How far up can Loraine Segato go?
We want
hot licks we want blue to be an ice-cube
gently laid on the eyelids we want brass to be
the colour yellow maybe Van Gogh’s yellow
or maybe Matisse in a certain mood? As it is, we
don’t even listen to Mingus that much anymore.
I haven’t listened to that album
Mingus Ah Am
for over a year or 2.
It’s easy to slide away
from something you love
& grew up
believing you understood as naturally
as putting your wristwatch on in the morning. But
things change,
for a while, I guess.
We don’t even seem to care if we’re missing
a certain edge.
A certain perception is being
offered & we’re missing it. My friends are
dumb white boys with good ears,
& they seem to be
saying,
“You’re talking about the outer dark. Okay,
so where’s the moon?”
You see what I mean,
as if
we don’t
understand the
idea
of falling in a moonless night?
A New York friend of mine,
Paul,
said to me one afternoon in a bar in Jamestown,
“You’ve never had any buffalo in Canada,
have you, David?”
No of course not you breadhead.
No, he was a good friend. I said, No,
the buffalo
used to stop well south of the North Dakota border
in the 1720s
& turn around,
sullenly,
& head back toward Bismarck. Where once there were
many buffalo, and no oil, of course; & now there is
oil; & there are no buffalo at all.
And he said,
“Why haven’t you mythologized them? & don’t give me
that ‘peaceful capitalism’ bullshit.”
We were
drinking New Amsterdams with a plate of fried clams,
& I found it very difficult to answer his question.
Similarly a friend from Montreal, Anglophone,
you know,
his last name is English but he speaks much better French
than that chinless wonder, Boor ass ah,
said to me,
& this wasn’t in a bar so much it was in a kitchen
at a party in Scarborough & the kitchen table was a mess
of bottles & glasses & corks
& one wet dishcloth
I guess that was the bar cloth, he said, I don’t know a lot
about the States,
we’d been talking Melville & Florida & Ken Kesey,
separately, 3 subjects,
we were a little pissed, a nice guy, but we weren’t drunk,
he said, “I don’t know a lot about the States, but they don’t
have any peace movement down there, do they?”
No, of
course not. The peace movement even turns up in fiction
for Christ’s sake, & in films like
FTA,
Steelyard Blues,
& indirectly in
Five Easy Pieces.
They have peace movements,
sure they do, for sure.
Sherry was like this also,
in several respects,
my friend the west coast film executive who gave up
on Paramount in 1982
& moved back to New York even though the rents
are astronomical
& you can’t go for coffee
after 10, 10:30 p.m., a walk down to Union Square & west,
without wondering about the possibility of being mugged.
Sherry
had a thing about logos, stamps, money, flags perhaps.
Do you, reader, think these things are male attributes?
I’m not sure – I don’t usually find that people
run to stereotype, or at least cultural stereotype,
as much as some people like to think they do.
Sherry
would say, “I don’t know what it is, it’s not just
that goddam picture of the goddamn Queen lying around;
although why is she on your stamps, David?”
And then
one night at a bar down in the Village after a play
by Arthur Kopit,
called
Indians,
a good title,
but compared to Tomson Highway’s
Dry Lips Oughta Move to
Kapuskasing,
the Kopit play was a kop out, a piece of junk,
& Sherry said, apropos of Norman Mailer saying something
about cards, Niagara Falls, it does, it tumbles,
postcard art, Dadaism, stuff like that,
maybe a Duchamp card from MoMa, whatever, Sherry said,
& I think this is the film producer speaking not the woman,
“You know it’s
OK
to have John Macdonald on some of your money,
but what pisses me off,” she continued, “isn’t a presence
so much it’s an absence.”
So we are into Sartre
or Wittgenstein or something. And then she says,
“It’s the absence of Washington
OR
Lincoln
on your stamps. How can you do that? What gives you
the right? Even southerners respect Lincoln.”
And
I said, Look darling, my great uncle almost saved
Lincoln’s life, so get off my back.
Besides I don’t
think the majority of southerners do respect
Lincoln.
Harriet was a girl from Baltimore,
she was born in Winnipeg
but her mother was from Seattle, home of the Mariners,
who lose games & most of whom don’t own
sailboats. We flew to Vancouver together
with her hand inside my shirt for most of the 4 hours
because she said the flight made her feel “queasy.”
She was bright.
She had an
MA
from Princeton & then she switched to
psychology.
But she
couldn’t tell me if B. Franklin’s parents were born
over here. He was 3rd or 4th generation, I think,
& she said, “I think American men are sexier
than Canadian men.”
And I said, What? Sexier
than Donald Sutherland,
or Harold Town? You think,
seriously, that Dan Quayle is sexier than David
Peterson?
And she said, “O, you’re always so precise.”
She was curled up in her seat as she said this,
but she was married; & we were in an
airplane, I think it was a DC 10,
I keep track. And it turned out she meant
sexier than this one specific hoary scotch&soda cheeks
guy in the
VP
’
S
office where she worked
at an advertising company
that did a lot of stuff for General Motors,
Canada Malting,
BOAC, & the Liberals, they had
the advertising budget for the Ontario Liberals. She
thought Emilio Estevez
was sexier than this vice-president at the company
where she worked; & I said, Okay, Harriet,
okay, no kidding. But life is funny
& as it turns out
she divorced her husband & married
the advertising VP, slope shoulders,
soft hands, the whole suitcase.
Sometimes I think all these farms & highways
& major factories are about to swallow us. I don’t mean
physically, swallow, devour, like
an enormous train
accident. I mean our identity. Myself & Marcus & Evan
& Carol.
We will have to restructure some of our patterns,
produce new national symbols,
it will be raw at first,
a little bit like those red&yellow daubed figures
on scraped buffalo skin.
It will have to be different
than the specific myths of our cousins.
We should have our own flag, don’t you think?
And our own national animal.
It can’t be a buffalo,
they didn’t come this far west of Great Slave Lake,
not very often. Perhaps a horse. Does anyone else
have the horse as a national symbol? California, Ga.,
Alberta? And.
There are other dances, where you take
off the loose black shirt & blue jeans & the Argyle socks
& walk out in the fields just because you are tired
of the brass rails & the Mies van der Rohe buildings
& you are in love or you have a bottle,
one of those 2 things, & you want to walk
naked under the moon.
When you go into Oliveto on a sunny
afternoon there is an immediate freshness,
the plump woman who comes to the counter has flour
on her hands; there is a smell of olive oil in the air.
Which makes me think,
somebody compared love to bread
the other day. It was Pieter, late at night,
at the San George at 666 Manning. We were all drunk
& talking about Vermeer & his goddamn loaf of bread.
Oliveto has buttermilk bread but I worked hard today
& I’m tired, so I pass it up for something more
substantial – rich sunflower,
flour-dusted crusty Italian sourdough,
Italian
challah
in great white twists like Rachael’s
dimples,
sunflower-nudged bagels thick with sesame seeds,
flat Roman
paddas
& the great sticks of crusty
Calabrese
baguette
which is almost a Pulcinello.
All of these breads have that subtle touch
of almost nutty olive oil. The breads
light up the store. I can hardly make up my mind,
they’re all so good. A faint purple white glow
like the inside of certain flowers after the rain.
The air in this store is cool & sweet. I take 2 loaves
of multi-grain, 1
challah
, 1 crusty
baguette
& a number of cookies made with ground almonds.
What Aboud said in the restaurant was that
Dali’s loaf of bread is more real than Vermeer’s;
& I,
I said, How would Marquez describe a man
sitting with his back against a wall
eating a loaf of bread with a pocket-knife
& a piece of Parma cheese?
There is a touch of flour on one of the bills
as she gives me my change. Outside I rest the bread
loosely on one arm. Hector looks up at the sky
& sees a huge circle
of infinitely pure blue sky through the belfry aperture
of St. Paul’s rainwashed granite across the street.
The philosopher who compared love to bread probably
didn’t know very much about crops or weather. Bread is