The Certainty Dream

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by Kate Hall


  OVERNIGHT A HORSE APPEARED

  I crawled out of a war machine.

  You didn’t recognize it as such, but

  I did. I held it and nurtured it

  and fed it strange wooden apples from my purse.

  To spend a lifetime waiting inside

  a stick horse is to live with the confusion

  between hollow and hallow. I’ve lived

  in this one room my whole life.

  It looks a lot like outside. A tiny farrier

  by the red barn in the distance. Four horses waiting

  to gather us up. We cannot see beyond them.

  We coloured their coats

  to explain the end to ourselves.

  The red horse and the pale horse

  and the other and there is hunger. A tiny farrier

  on the horizon line. Meaning, it’s time

  to crawl back inside myself. As the wind,

  I’m drawing these patterns in the sand.

  Accept the horse as a dangerous gift

  you find meaningful, the offering

  before the first burning arrow is fired

  into the city. It could have been

  fireworks or lightning. For my horse and me,

  it hardly matters. Though it will matter for you:

  how you decide to read me or

  whether you do. Overnight, one horse

  will gather us. The equine sternum

  a drawbridge to a corporeal castle

  we are plotting inside. Four horses

  released on the unsuspecting city. I am the only one left

  inside the warhorse I am holding in my hands.

  I will have to live with him, maybe

  for him. I am ready

  to practice non-participation.

  I want this to be the last thing I’ll ever do,

  to stop here and say I’ll go no further.

  MYNAH – LAST TIME

  Mynah, if I knew how to play bridge would you love me better?

  , I attached your leg to my key chain.

  , I’m a bad loser. I didn’t win the award for sportsmanship.

  Mynah, I crawled around in the pigsty and now I don’t know what I am.

  , the distance between your house and mine is expanding.

  , I can’t cross over the field.

  Mynah, I loved it when you shot me. I deserved it so much.

  Mynah, I don’t think I want to eat berries and insects anymore.

  , my entire flock is of mediocre quality. The craftsmanship is

  shoddy.

  , you are just a shapely hole I sometimes fill in with words.

  , if I stop, we’ll have to sit in silence.

  Mynah, if you left me a feather or a beak I could build you again.

  , give me something to work with.

  Mynah, I took a fish-gutting knife and cut off my toe.

  Mynah, it’s possible to survive without a toe.

  Mynah, I let the dog loose in the field and she swallowed you.

  , the grass swallowed her. I swallowed myself.

  Mynah, we can’t have this conversation another time.

  Mynah, the wind doesn’t scare me.

  Mynah, I didn’t think the wind would scare me.

  DREAM IN WHICH I AM SEPARATED FROM MYSELF

  I don’t want to see the city through

  myself anymore. I imagine an open body

  stuck with pins and flags ready

  for labelling. The city is a city of constant

  sidewalk repairs and household renovations.

  If I could lay my hands on the interior walls

  I would know enough to miss myself.

  The city is a city of streets named

  after saints and explorers. On the dock

  I am cold. I imagine myself

  at an art gallery looking at installations

  and not pretending there can be

  any sort of understanding.

  But somewhere the water

  may meet the unseen shore

  and someone like you believes

  it happens. There

  is a line where they touch.

  I would like to speak

  to that line and have it speak

  to me in return.

  MYNAH DREAMS HIMSELF INTO A STATUE

  and when he came he lopped off the beginning

  along with the feet in favour of the here and now

  and when he came he repeated something quietly

  in the empty room I built a skeleton

  and he dreamt a piece of fabric to attach his broken wing

  and when he understood he was a statue the sea was a bathtub

  he couldn’t enter and the rest was draped with sheets

  he laid his shadow on them

  and under pressure he was stripped and stripped again not knowing

  how to lift the sheets to ruin the imminent surprise and he repeated

  hollow

  and this became the dream his dream in which I did not allow him

  to speak

  and the dream in which I imagined him speechless before me

  and he repeated I am something

  awaking on a back seat and who will swear the statue not accountable

  the dream not accountable my tongue his

  tongue an antenna and then

  who will call out

  and calling out who will answer

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  To my family and friends, many thanks. A huge thank you to my editor, Kevin Connolly, who helped shape and tweak this book into its present form. To Alana Wilcox, Christina Palassio, Evan Munday and all the gang at Coach House for making this possible, thank you very much. Particular thanks also to Stephanie Bolster for the insight and careful readings that first turned this collection of poems into a manuscript; Heather Jessup for poems, friendship and exuberance; Judith Herz for the lessons on forsythia and poetry; Sarah Partridge for the biology facts and continuing conversations; Sara Hall for being the ‘common reader’ who is anything but common; and Lesley Hall for being my personal copy editor. Thanks also to Matthew Zapruder, Matthea Harvey and Christian Hawkey for their poems and support. To Luis Da Costa, who helps me experience words in a different way, thank you.

  Thanks to the Canada Council, who gave me a grant to work on this manuscript from January to August 2007.

  Thank you to the editors of the journals in which the following poems first appeared: The Antigonish Review: ‘The Certainty Dream,’ ‘Letter to My Father,’ ‘Schrödinger's Cat,’ ‘Insomnia’; ARC: ‘Pascal’s Wager’; The Bedazzler: ‘The Sun Library,’ ‘Survival Machine,’ ‘As Though Sealed in a Glass Jar’; Boston Review: ‘Dream in Which I am Separated from Myself,’ ‘I Invented the Birdcall,’ ‘Dream in Which the Dream is Scaled to Size,’ ‘Antelope Dream,’ ‘Little Essay on Genetics,’ ‘The Shipping Container,’ ‘Quick Tour of the Cathedral’; Colorado Review: ‘Watching a Leaf Fall I Cannot See’; Denver Quarterly: ‘One Point of Reference,’ ‘Vitrine’; jubilat: ‘Dream in Which I am Allowed Twelve Items’; Open City: ‘Remind Me What the Light is For’; LIT: ‘The Lost-and-Found Box’; PRISM International: ‘Variation on a Theme by Lyn Hejinian’; Swerve: ‘A Few Words About the Sea,’ ‘Mynah Speaks,’ ‘Love, Mynah,’ ‘Hearing Mynah I Hear Myself,’ ‘Mynah Flies Off,’ ‘Dream in Which I Apologize to the Birds,’ ‘Dress-up Dream,’ ‘The Birds Enjoy Their Morning Cup,’ ‘Mynah—Last Time,’ ‘Mynah Dreams Himself into a Statue’; Verse magazine website: ‘Overnight a Horse Appeared.’

  ‘Suspended in the Space of Reason: A Short Thesis’ first appeared in chapbook form, published by greenboathouse books under the title Suspended.

  The line ‘manipulating the bodies they ride in’ (in ‘Little Essay on Genetics’) and the title ‘Survival Machine’ are borrowed from Richard Dawkins.

  ‘Watching a Leaf Fall I Cannot See’ is for Jennifer Cooper.

  ‘Letter to my Father’ is for John Hall with t
hanks for the jellyfish poem.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Kate Hall’s poems have appeared in journals such as the Colorado Review, jubilat, Swerve, the Denver Quarterly, Open City, LIT and the Boston Review. She has won the Irving Layton Award and the David McKeen Award and travelled on the storied Wave Books poetry bus tour in 2006. She was co-editor of the Delirium Press chapbooks and co-hosted the Departure Reading Series in Montreal, where she now lives and teaches.

  Typeset in Montrachet

  Printed and bound at the Coach House on bpNichol Lane, 2009

  Edited for the press by Kevin Connolly

  Designed by Alana Wilcox

  Cover art by David Trautrimas

  Coach House Books

  401 Huron Street on bpNichol Lane

  Toronto on M5S 2G5

  416 979 2217

  800 367 6360

  [email protected]

  www.chbooks.com

 

 

 


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