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    Lake of Two Mountains

    Page 4
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    Those who live on the island

      survey the lake’s changeable face,

      theatre of water and sky.

      They live among deciduous trees

      growing down into the lake.

      Maples’ thick leaves move the shadows. Sumac

      tropicate near the bridge,

      red velvet torches, green parrot fronds.

      Beeches with pachyderm bark.

      The small pinnated island lies light

      on the water. Those who live there

      know worry: the lake’s currents

      and the whipped rivers of air.

      They pray that the trees, their deep roots,

      will fasten, keep this feather of land

      from lifting into the wind.

      WALKING THE ISLAND ROAD AFTER DINNER

      Walking the narrow raised road

      under the wings

      of your parents, father starting

      to whistle, freed from the house

      of the sisters-in-law, blackbird

      with hands in his pockets,

      mother in polished tan cotton shorts,

      house sparrow, wings folded

      under her soft blousy wrap.

      Asking nothing.

      What were their thoughts? You

      are content just to stroll

      with them,

      hover close to their silky coverts.

      Sometimes you stop

      to burst the orangey weed-flowers,

      tap them or blow, seed after seed

      arcing onto the road. You and your sister

      seeding the road. Asking nothing:

      not the name of the flowers,

      or the tune or the time.

      Or how

      your parents kept hidden

      their back-mounted wings.

      FRÈRE GABRIEL'S LIFE 4

      It is penance. No meat. No speech. No guest who’s not family. No book that’s not God’s. No choice that is not Père Abbot’s. No fish unless sick. In winter frost thickens the windows and walls. Bed at seven like children. Up at two when night still blinds the cold panes and the bells begin clanging. Kneel then, head heavy with hood. Nine offices, each with its own special bell. At least nine kinds of work, each a penance. Milking in shadowy stalls, hardly seeing cow or the pail. Filing out to break stones big as beds. Pulling weeds, haying fields filled with sun. Hay dust swarms the barn. Inside, mopping floors, the refectory stagnant with beans, cabbage soup. Dipping candles, stitching stiff boots. Idle hands cradle demons. Even the silence is thick with merciless sounds: Frère Marcel wheezing through Mass; Frère Jean smacking his lips through each meal. Offering these up. Each penance wings a soul past the stone walls to rest in the willows that weep on the shore.

      FRÈRE GABRIEL'S LIFE 5

      His chewed-up lips. His hands like spades under loose sleeves. How he allows what happens each day. Permits sun to bake his pink, freckled brow. Allows Frère Martin to nudge him at Mass, eyelids shut tight as freshwater clams. How long this monk kneels. His slow gait, his impossible pace, the way he places his fork on the plate. Carefully lifts his light voice in high praise, stills his lips when in prayer. It is not so much that Frère Gabriel talks to God; every monk does. But that God talks to him.

      WHEN HEAT FALLS

      Mid-summer, the lake stares down the sun and the sky,

      what was once thought of

      as heaven.

      A hot lazy raft rocks its complaints twenty feet from shore.

      In the afternoon haze sadness

      loses all definition. The sun

      is another country, a martyrdom

      of touch.

      At forty-five degrees

      the air congeals, props up trees,

      human bodies, houses, erratic stones.

      The heat lowers

      onto the lake’s lassitude,

      its small worn-out wrinkles.

      It hardly breathes.

      Fish bloat on the surface, loll their bellies,

      wash ashore, pallid, appear,

      disappear between rocks.

      The lake prays to Oka’s two highest hills,

      their rolling loft, unseen from the south.

      June bugs pierce the dazed hearing world.

      Words abandon flesh. Chokecherries,

      reeds, milkweed froth the lake’s shore.

      The shoreline slowly recedes,

      beginning to shrink, the lake rising

      in droplets, almost nothingness,

      on its way into the sky.

      CARDINALS, CROWS

      Hear them piping one by one:

      we are here, we are here.

      Cardinal solos –

      suns behind clouds,

      almost papal.

      Look up: each too divine

      to appear.

      Crows do not hide. They are

      medieval friars selling indulgences,

      safe passages, relics they lift from the eaves.

      Holy cards, greased bones, bottle caps.

      Crow tricks –

      everything is at risk.

      Holy, profane,

      hidden, in plain sight –

      the end of the world

      will arrive

      in the mouth of a bird.

      LAKE 2

      drawing cowls of quiet around uncertain space sinking through pebbles and coarse grains of sand no sound it spreads into grass lies flat for seasons timeless hovering even at shore a presentiment a mirage shape-shifting mesmer holding the surrounding rocks in place through reverence alone the air above claims no geography the lake needs nothing but river’s brown mouth solitary quiet as the dragonfly that quilts nimbussed gloss as the eel that ribbons the squelch as unlit fish surveying beneath cirrussed weeds even when shirred when breezes scoop atoms of foam even when the world slants with rain and with wind the lake won’t complain white noise alone nothing the ear can locate even in early morning when heron spears frog no sound will ring out

      GHOSTS MOVING IN FORESTED SHADE

      light through the low woods

      unbinds clavicle soles

      trompe l’oeil

      deciduous shadow and shudder

      quiver with unabashed shine

      what is fixed in the truth is in flux

      sleights the eye there is goodness

      there are ghosts moving

      faster than wind through low bush and leaves

      they move more surely than light

      SUMMER ENDS

      mist then as August tapers

      to September lifts

      the lake’s surfeit heat

      night chills the breakfast milk

      oak leaves still frill

      the kaleidoscoped sky

      the mist slips off by ten

      no one has died yet

      no one swims until noon

      no one speaks of the end

      leaf water child

      THINGS CHANGE

      a bird keening in flight

      the shape of a marsh hawk shadow

      with malevolent wings

      the lake is benign now steadfast

      why imagine it flying away

      small mammal heart

      in its beak

      LAST DAY

      Variation on a glosa – Archibald Lampman’s “Thunderstorm”

      toss in the windrack up the muttering wind

      the leaves hang still above the weird twilight

      the hurrying centres of the storm unite

      an afternoon rain

      starts without enough

      warning though

      to be honest you carry

      a borrowed umbrella

      walk the road

      for the last time above you


      the leaves toss in the windrack

      up the muttering sky

      the sky takes on rubbings

      of charcoal rain-

      patter paces your steps

      but still you will not

      turn back the umbrella

      staves off the worsening wet

      at roadside the leaves

      hang still

      in the weird light

      you race rain for the cottage

      where you lived as a child

      quirk of the storm sluicing you

      onto this particular porch

      side door locked

      new owners away you brace

      the umbrella’s inadequate shield

      wind shoves

      against you rain streams

      down your cheeks

      directly upon you

      the hurrying

      centres of the storm unite

      MONASTIC LIFE 7

      It is gone. The last twenty monks left in a bus for a house somewhere north. Praise songs no longer climb the white pines. Prayers no longer smoke evening skies. No monk bows south to the lake or beats his gaunt breast for trespasses past. No confessions within the scent of the shore. No sheep in the barns. No apiary, no fat-sided bees. Only apples hang heavy from branches – and fall.

      Night galloped through cloisters, cracked stones from the walls, trampled gardens of lavender and mint. Once, two hundred obeyed their vocations or their own mother’s hearts. So many chants. So many white robes. In their small well-waxed cells, devotions and the splitting of hypothetical hairs. So much cider; there was honey and cream.

      MONASTIC LAKE

      Liturgical in its way, the lake unfolds, arising in wavelets in morning, changing with weather or time of day, without evidence of sorrow or blame. The water claims nothing for itself. Without hue or clear shape, it allows what gathers around it – air’s blue, palimpsests of horsetail in flight. Mud washes in from the Ottawa’s tongue, silting through. Summer sun beats the water to bronze. Where rocks curve, the lake bends. It sinks to its depths, evaporates or floods according to season and year. Even its storms bequeath hush. Scent of fish dying, algal bloom, clams broken on shore. Anything that passes through is transformed. Who watches, finally revealed. How self submerges itself, metaphor for mystery, drowning, escape.

      WHAT'S UNDER

      fish down there tadpoles smallmouth bass

      red-eyed bicycle tires musky pike

      walleye and drum

      a fishing hut that fell through the ice four years ago

      three cases of beer the owner out for a leak

      made it to shore

      perch sunfish catfish rosary beads bibles

      carp bullets the sturgeon finally returned

      they bump around in the murk

      nose a ten-horsepower motor

      a rotary phone

      garpike down there and minnows in shallows

      risking jars and small nets

      minnows like sudden cartoons

      the neighbour fishes

      but not through the ice

      wood ducks in spring dabble

      feet paddle the water

      mallards all summer long tipping up

      going down

      EIGHT MILES TO THE CENTER

      You watch how water accommodates wind,

      how the lake turns direction, curls

      its lips white, turns colour, almost

      opaque, from root-brown to light nickel-grey,

      textured and fringed, turns its mind

      to the shore.

      In the middle of things

      you’ve been given a place.

      Eight miles to the centre.

      What difference if the lake changes –

      or if you belong? This water,

      this spring-flooded land, cannot happen

      in exile. The lake you are left with:

      algae, neon-lime silk, skeins of it, spun

      out of nowhere, untroubled cumulus blooms.

      SUN GOING DOWN

      Nine o’clock, the hour of the sun

      going down, listing to the south.

      The drowsing dark lake

      shushes itself on the shore.

      Divinity lingering this way.

      Nine o’clock, the hour of fox

      on the move. Hour of closing,

      the sky closing over,

      heat losing its hold.

      Fox stealing slow

      as the sun,

      going down

      to the shore,

      looking for fish.

      Acknowledgements

      Many thanks to Lorna Crozier, my caring and exacting MFA supervisor, who encouraged and guided Lake of Two Mountains from its inception. Without her, this project simply would not have been realized. Appreciation also to other members of the University of Victoria’s Creative Writing Department, both fellow students and faculty, especially Tim Lilburn and John Barton. Much gratitude to Sue Chenette, my very thoughtful editor, who helped to shape the final version. To my sister, Donna Sharkey, who understands the childhood experience of the Lake better than anyone I know, many thanks for being there. Thanks to the people of L’Île-Cadieux, especially the mayor, his wife and the town’s secretary for their efforts to find accommodation for me; Pat for her friendship; and Lucille and Francois for their hospitality. And always, enduring gratefulness to Chris Fox, my companion and first reader for so many years.

      Thanks also to Ursula Veira of Leaf Press, editor of the chapbook anthology, What Else Could I Dare to Say, where “Whether Wind” first appeared.

      Biographical Note

      Arleen Paré is a poet and novelist with an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Victoria. Her first book, Paper Trail, won the Victoria Butler Book Prize and was a finalist for the Dorothy Livesay B.C. Book Award for Poetry. Her second book was a mixed-genre novel entitled Leaving Now. Paré’s writing has appeared in several Canadian literary journals and anthologies. Originally from Montreal, she lived for many years in Vancouver, where she worked asa social worker and administrator to provide community housing for people with mental illnesses. She now livesin Victoria with her partner, Chris Fox.

      Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

      Paré, Arleen, author

      Lake of two mountains [electronic resource] / Arleen Paré.

      ISBN 978-1-926829-87-6 (pbk.)

      I. Title.

      PS8631.A7425L35 2014 C811’.6 C2013-907368-X

      Copyright © Arleen Paré 2014.

      We acknowledge the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Ontario Arts Council for their support of our publishing program.

      Cover image, design and layout by Cheryl Dipede.

      The author photo was taken by Ryan Rock.

      Brick Books

      431 Boler Road, Box 20081

      London, Ontario N6K 4G6

      www.brickbooks.ca

     

     

     



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