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Match

Page 4

by Helen Guri


  The row of them like a stuffed-animal audience,

  their reactions contained.

  Perhaps my life is just extremely boring.

  Or they are baffles swallowing echo infinitely

  at the symphony.

  For a week at the end of last winter

  an abandoned plush piglet

  fattened like a sponge in the gutter,

  drinking up the thaw.

  The urn that held my aunt had room to spare.

  What do they know?

  One wants to tell them everything.

  Maybe they are rubber teats

  clothed in fleece

  for human sheep.

  MY OPINION

  Greta’s fling with Eugene has wound up

  far out. She tells Brian by the stationery cabinet

  how the elastic band of it pinged

  from her hair to other galaxies. (No one notices

  how a metal drawer lifts gradually from its tracks

  until one day it can’t be opened.)

  The whole thing began in the legs,

  she says, a feeling like insects

  shinnying stems. Then lit dust, pollen,

  no way to explain the thrill of a frozen grape

  inching warmer, helium baubles of sound

  let slip from cellphones, a lipstick teetering up its turret.

  Buildings winched a pinkie’s width from earth,

  the whole city twirling in its Archimedes screw.

  Crane operators high above the lots

  ate blimps of leavened bread.

  One velvet-roped night,

  the soprano hit the high note,

  then nimbled even higher to an alien pitch.

  For a drawn-out interval there was no other sound.

  Then it passed into the realm of zero gravity.

  There is a place, far out in the ether,

  where canaries zip like submarines

  on the jet-power of their song,

  which thickens the air like fog

  as they pass from sight.

  High seas. Who doesn’t arrive here?

  Leaning out like a surfer

  from the handle of a stuck drawer.

  Now Brian lends his weight like a shadow:

  two surfers.

  My opinion is not asked, but I know she needs it too.

  In the background as lighting, a wave slowly rising.

  DEAR ANGELA,

  Like any two people,

  at some long-gone vanishing point

  we could have made anything.

  So what did we?

  A non-biodegradable space jalopy

  with spectacular tits

  and a do that frizzed

  and a spine that eventually unspun.

  I have no regrets.

  MODEL

  It was the pig in the middle who had it made:

  a Jenga of twigs with a roof,

  and permission to play wolf

  when the nights turned to doldrums.

  Sometimes for no reason except to amplify my sneeze,

  I lean two cards together on a table with my tea.

  Mine was not a middling happiness on those drafty evenings

  my matchbox car trafficked me to a matchstick house,

  wherein my perfect match – in this case, a matryoshka doll –

  was cultivating a cathedral of darkness for an inner life,

  a darkness in which any number of faces was possible.

  (I saw one such doll not too long ago composed of U.S. presidents.)

  That house came down as it went up.

  I spent several months in a huff

  assembling a model Taj Mahal I scored for next to nothing

  at a fire sale. Three thousand numbered pins

  held down the edges of my breath

  as I wound my pinkie up inside the beehives.

  Onion domes, they are called.

  My model existence

  is peeling layers off my skin on a powder-puff beach

  among scattered bleached shells occupied by hermits.

  The light so bright it damps

  the limpets of my eyes.

  To nap each noon

  with the news as a roof on my nose

  is never to see past the tip

  of the tail of my dream:

  a model undressing for a wind machine.

  Her stockings blow loose

  to chase their illusions freely.

  PERVERT FROM WIDE ANGLE

  Don’t let your eyes focus, this honeycomb

  is more becoming. I could be nude –

  not singular like the lone goat I am,

  but multiplied by ten thousand, all the me’s

  arrayed on a beach or in a city square

  for a portrait by Spencer Tunick, casual as landscape

  or an outsized chenille throw. The drape-moss

  of our nose hairs. Sparse, tired down

  of underarms, inner elbows quite comforting

  to drape around yourself come winter.

  The slow dance of our voices a scattered,

  slow murmur like forest wind.

  It is obscene, an absurdity, how you

  are permitted this June day to stroll

  in our company and breathe

  what we exhale as you remove all of your clothes

  and mark with a felt-tipped pen

  the outposts you too will eventually abandon.

  Alone, you say, and the word resonates

  as if in a flock. Dandelions. Turning, a smell

  like lichens winged out in a window frame to spore.

  PINCH-HITTERS

  i

  When the ceiling sprang a leak,

  I stepped aside and dialled a number.

  Miraculously, someone else stepped in.

  A bum double substitutes the movie star

  in the love scenes, but about this understudy

  we know next to nothing –

  what does he like to eat for breakfast?

  The way we have no idea whether the catsuited woman

  who back-flips off cliffs in action flicks

  is skilled at turning flapjacks sans spatula.

  Most cells in the human body are not human

  but bacterial, and even these crawlies

  may be swapped for a variable

  in the mathematical model.

  At the bus stop in my dream:

  Pinch me, requests a stranger.

  ii

  Once, I stood by

  as a Heimlich-trained schoolteacher

  pressed a grape from my dinner guest’s windpipe

  using factory-grade forearms

  suitable for modern winemaking.

  Her real arms so flimsy

  they sat the round out,

  like wimps in gym class,

  without anyone noticing.

  I’ve never choked,

  but was once caught swallowing

  the last of the expensive cheese.

  The wince of my esophagus, my sheepishness

  (that urge to pass the buck

  one species to the left),

  is the nearest experience I can call on

  to understand the victim’s bottleneck.

  He likes to claim he wasn’t present.

  Very few people go to parties.

  iii

  In hindsight, I’m MIA.

  Where I should be, cakeside,

  in birthday photographs,

  there’s a puffer fish, blowhard

  oohing at trick candles

  that reignite at one-year intervals.

  Looking ahead, in waiting rooms

  where patients play musical chairs,

  I glimpse a man whose face is

  a wattle-and-daub wall of bandages

  with two tiny windows.

  It’s easy to let his eyes, whose stillness

  is a mystery, be x’s. Though likely he still

  has exes, even l
overs –

  for all I know, he spent the morning trembling

  like two bowls of Jell-O atop an actress.

  STORM PORTRAIT

  When the rain falls so richly

  it is almost flesh-toned,

  it is hard to know

  what is background and what is person.

  As through the warping wall

  of a shower stall, the billow of a human form

  asserts its minor strengths on a watercolour landscape

  before the world ends

  three feet later.

  Everything tempts the appaloosa eye.

  In the photo booth of the weather,

  a snail falls for a tape dispenser,

  a stag for a candelabra, happy as a clam

  with a compact mirror.

  The statue is a private encounter.

  A toy digger, bolted in playground dirt,

  describes rainbows endlessly

  with its T. Rex arm.

  Is it possible to become so practised

  at failure in love that you can do it solo,

  like an ocean voyage?

  Like a fruit fly dancing spastically

  along the lip of a glass of sweetness.

  Can the neighbours, caught in their own

  dances, see steps of mine too?

  The air is a series of windows

  stippled with their thoughts.

  DEAR ANGELA,

  I rarely swim, but what I crave

  is Blue to Blue. Each lap lapping

  the tidal mind, my letters fed to glass bottles

  like miniature sharks

  on their way to the moon.

  STUDY IN A BATHROOM MIRROR

  Not human after all, my mug

  more like a volleyball, more like a waning,

  swamp tuber dug from peat, scrubbed

  and peeled. Little serpent of a lip, pothole eye,

  lone pore with a hair pushing up, road-kill nostril.

  Signs point to slow-mo crisis or

  slow-mo recovery. Erratic on a hillside, glacial sluice

  in the valleys, fine lines like skid marks through cream.

  Fifty-one: birthday party for a meteorite, pop-bottle island,

  microbe foxtrotting on a slide. Will I blend

  into the landscape with surprising guile,

  or explode like an improvised device?

  *

  Flick, flick the switch.

  Begin again slowly, approach

  this dim blowhole. Holy antelope!

  Come to steam at the well of the sink.

  Wait motionless.

  So it lowers its mug to my palm full of water,

  withdraws moistened, mammoth.

  Blinks for me a while in the dark.

  NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  The italics in ‘Marriage, Early Days’ are taken from Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; the split quote in ‘Anagnorisis with Sex Aid,’ ‘From the far side of the ocean/If I put the wheels in motion,’ is taken from Van Morrison’s song ‘Astral Weeks’; ‘Sonnet for the Uncanny Valley’ is based loosely on text from the RealDoll website: www.realdoll.com; and the epigraph that opens ‘Rubber Bride’ is taken from Louise Glück’s poem ‘Ithaca’ from her collection Meadowlands.

  Early versions of poems in this book were published in the magazines Grain, Riddle Fence and Event – my thanks to the editors. An early version of ‘My Cactus’ appeared on the parliamentary poet laureate website in 2008, under John Steffler’s watch.

  The Ontario Arts Council and the Toronto Arts Council generously provided me with much-needed funding to work on this book, while the Banff Centre for the Arts gave me a wonderful place to live and work among friends for a month.

  Improbably, the RealDoll company in San Diego invited me to visit their factory to snoop on their production process, and, equally improbably, the University of Toronto gave me funding to make the trip. Thanks to both organizations for their sense of the fantastical.

  For their editorial first aid, I am indebted to Michael Nardone, Don McKay, George Elliott Clarke, Linda Besner, Lindsay Zier-Vogel and David Seymour. Thanks especially to Kevin Connolly, whose tenacious and insightful use of the question mark dragged many of these poems back from the brink.

  My gratitude to Alana, Evan and the other model human beings at Coach House Books for their elegant work.

  My love to Tom Howell, with thanks for the word ‘limpets’ and many others. And infinite gratitude to my family and friends for their aiding and abetting.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Helen Guri graduated from the University of Toronto’s Creative Writing program, and has taught writing at Humber College. Her work has appeared in many journals, including Arc, Descant, Event, The Fiddlehead and Grain. Match is her first collection. She lives in Toronto.

  Typeset in Adobe Jenson and Edwardian Script

  Edited by Kevin Connolly

  Designed by Alana Wilcox

  Cover art, Mastodon, by Lori Nix, courtesy of the artist

  Author photo by Tom Howell

  Coach House Books

  80 bpNichol Lane

  Toronto on M5S 3J4

  Canada

  416 979 2217

  800 367 6360

  mail@chbooks.com

  www.chbooks.com

 

 

 


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