A Pretty Sight

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A Pretty Sight Page 6

by David O'Meara


  were flat between hands,

  or dialing out their limits of energy

  in a glass of stale beer.

  When Voyager 1

  was scheduled to clear

  the solar system,

  NASA signalled its onboard camera

  to swing back

  and take a picture of home. Six

  billion kilometres out,

  Earth’s photo

  a ‘pale blue dot’ .12

  pixels in size.

  I am in there too,

  a child in trampled clover.

  If I stand on a scale

  and hold the fruit fly in my hand,

  does the needle drop a bit

  the second it dies?

  Where once there was nothing, something.

  Where once there was nothing, nothing.

  Close All Tabs

  I’ve been reading how they still dredge up

  tacks and ivory eyelets

  scattered near Simon the Cobbler’s shop,

  where Socrates

  often stopped to chinwag in the Athenian agora.

  As the weather clears

  and the austere linden sags into leaf, I watch

  our neighbours

  empty out their rooms across the street,

  propping odds, ends and bags

  of garbage against the realtor’s sign; a big, bold SOLD

  in red Calibri.

  Of the agora scrap, the ancient inventory

  piles up: amphorae,

  broken capitals and ostraka used as votes to exile

  fellow citizens,

  so many loops and lines alike the same hand

  must have carved them,

  proof of ancient vote-rigging. We think the news is over,

  but it never is.

  Mid-May I watch and rewatch the Madsen doc

  on Onkalo, the ‘hiding place’

  in northern Finland. Did I mention you should see it?

  At surface the clocks

  run very fast, Peter Wikberg notes in his Scandinavian

  accent, while in the rock

  it goes very, very slowly. His subject is the shelf life

  of nuclear waste,

  where they hope to stash it away forever.

  Greek diggers raised

  curse tablets found in ancient wells. Socrates might

  have known their authors:

  students, merchants and neighbours who shared a bench

  in the Theatre of Dionysus

  and heard the rhapsodes stitch Homeric tales into local

  stories of their own,

  the orange Attic sun radiant on the southern slope

  of the Acropolis. Onkalo

  will be closed and backfilled with rows of radiation tubes

  secured in passages

  five kilometres below. Conditions on the ground

  will change, Berit Lundqvist

  admits at the table next to Wikberg. On the surface you never

  know what’s going to

  happen. It could be wars; it could be economic depression.

  A caribou lifts its muzzle

  and listens across the taiga’s granite and snow. My neighbours shift

  a shovel, rake

  and lawn chairs from back shed to scuffed, grey porch

  for moving day, clear

  a bookcase of knick-knacks and novels, then clear the wall

  of shelves and art,

  posing tiredly in bare windows as I browse

  and click, exploring links.

  ‘I bind Euandros with a leaden bond,’ one tablet states,

  the goal to handicap

  a rival actor in performance. This curse was scraped

  into hammered lead, rolled

  and clasped with tacks, then submerged to set its spell

  in motion. Online

  new headlines replace Fukushima and Damascus, the late

  Eurozone undertow

  shored up in an Athenian square where a pensioner

  in protest and despair

  has blown his brains out. Sing, goddess, sing the rage

  of Peleus’ son Achilles,

  Euandros intones to the festival crowd, his voice

  steady and clear,

  the theatre’s tiers raised with broken stone from older

  temples. By June,

  new neighbours paint the pine railing and steps

  with two fresh coats

  of biscuit-brown acrylic. I’ve watched them watch the street,

  weighing their lives

  by what they chose to leave or take, knowing

  we must make

  strange with a place before we inherit the sense

  of never having been

  anywhere else, and curse it for ruin, and stoop to paint

  the porch again.

  We sing to free ourselves from the room

  –Wild Flag

  Notes and Acknowledgements

  ‘Vicious’: Ethos anthropos daimon: ‘A man’s character is his fate.’

  ‘Dance’: Osel Hita Torres, the name of the boy chosen by the Dalai Lama as a reincarnation of a spiritual leader, denounced the Buddhist order in his twenties, citing ‘the misery of a youth deprived of television, football and girls.’ Taken away from his family as a child and forced to live a monastic, secluded life, he had been allowed to socialize only with other reincarnated souls, and by eighteen had never seen couples kiss. At the time of writing, he was studying film in Spain. The epigraph for the poem is his reaction to his first disco experience.

  ‘Circa Now’: Michael Madsen, dir., Into Eternity: A Film for the Future. (Denmark, 2010); Claudio Magris, Danube (London: The Harvill Press, 1999).

  ‘In Event of Moon Disaster’: Lawrence ‘Titus’ Oates was an Antarctic explorer on Scott’s ill-fated expedition to be the first to reach the South Pole. Aware his severe frostbite was jeopardizing his companions’ survival on the return journey, he famously announced, ‘I am just going outside and may be some time,’ before exiting their tent into the blizzard. His body has never been found.

  ‘Ten Years’: see Virgil, The Aeneid. Book 3.

  ‘Loot’: Lawrence Rothfield, The Rape of Mesopotamia. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009).

  ‘Talk’:

  ‘The intellect of man is forced to choose

  Perfection of the life, or of the work …’

  – ’The Choice,’ W.B. Yeats

  ‘End Times’: This poem borrows images from the article ‘Life in the Zone’ by Steve Featherstone, published in Harper’s magazine (June 2011). Lines in italics are borrowed from Svetlana Aleksievich’s Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster. (New York: Picador, 2006).

  ‘Charles ‘Old Hoss’ Radbourn’s Finger, 1886’:

  (First known photograph of the middle finger)

  Greeks weren’t the source of its phallic connections necessarily, though

  first to imply an offensive nature,

  documents claim. In The Clouds by Aristophanes

  Socrates lectures on poetic meter. A novice who

  stresses he certainly knows what a dactyl

  is, then produces his middle digit, since dactylos

  signifies both a finger and rhythmic measure, a long and then two

  shorterish spans like the joints of

  fingers, or a penis and testicles, the last a dactylic word like poetry

  which has a falling rhythm ...

  So many thanks to my family and friends. I am extremely grateful for support provided through the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the City of Ottawa and the Banff Centre Leighton Colony during the writing of this book. Some poems were published previously in Arc magazine, The Walrus, The Best Canadian Poetry in English 2012 and Toronto Poetry Vendors. Thank you to the editors. A version of ‘Vicious’ was performed as part of the Very Short Play Festival 2011. Much thanks to John Koensgen and New Theatre of Ottawa. Thanks
to Alana Wilcox, Leigh Nash and Evan Munday at Coach House; to Harold Hoefle, Simon Armitage and Ken Babstock for comments; and I’m especially grateful to Kevin Connolly and my editor Jeramy Dodds for superb edits.

  About the Author

  David O’Meara lives in Ottawa, Ontario. He is the author of three collections of poetry, including most recently Noble Gas, Penny Black (Brick Books, 2008), and a play, Disaster, nominated for four Rideau Awards. His poetry has been shortlisted for the Gerald Lampert Award, the ReLit Award, the Trillium Book Award, a National Magazine Award, and he has won the Archibald Lampman Award twice. He is the director of the Plan 99 Reading Series, Artistic Director of VERSEFest (www.versefest.ca) and was the Canadian judge for the 2012 Griffin Poetry Prize.

  This ePUB edition produced at the Coach House on bpNichol Lane.

  Typeset in Albertan,which was designed by the late Jim Rimmer of New Westminster, B.C., in 1982. He drew and cut the type in metal at the 16pt size in roman only; it was intended for use only at his Pie Tree Press. He drew the italic in 1985, designing it with a narrow fit and very slight incline, and created a digital version. The family was completed in 2005 when Rimmer redrew the bold weight and called it Albertan Black. The letterforms of this type family have an old-style character, with Rimmer’s own calligraphic hand in evidence, especially in the italic.

  The print edition is typeset in Aragon and Gala and printed in August 2012 at the old Coach House on bpNichol Lane in Toronto, Ontario, on Zephyr Antique Laid paper, which was manufactured, acid-free, in Saint-Jérôme, Quebec, from second-growth forests. This book was printed with vegetable-based ink on a 1965 Heidelberg KORD offset litho press. Its pages were folded on a Baumfolder, gathered by hand, bound on a Sulby Auto-Minabinda and trimmed on a Polar single-knife cutter.

  Edited by Jeramy Dodds

  Designed by Alana Wilcox

  Cover Design by Eric Schallenberg

  Cover Design by Rémi Thériault

  Coach House Books

  80 bpNichol Lane

  Toronto, Ontario M5S 3J4

  416 979 2217

  800 367 6360

  [email protected]

  chbooks.com

 

 

 


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