His sister Jane
was nearest the green couch when its phone rang
And she jumped at
it to shout at it: "I listen to CHUM!"
How was he to
know, back then, she was the best of all?
The couch itself he
burned a hole in it a while later
With a pointy
thing, a burin, that was made for burning wood
But his brain
said: "Burn it" and so he did. His brother Pablo
And his sister Jane
knew he'd done it.
He really should
thank them both, you know, thank them for putting up
With a retard like
himself, all through nineteen sixty-eight to
Nineteen
seventy-four, when he pissed the bed every night,
And Pablo, and Jane,
and David, they took it for what it was:
They had a
brother, meaning him, who was exuberantly pissy.
Can any memory be
happy? They had bunk beds, and Pablo
Was on the top one.
He made his models of automobiles
And they walked to
School. Along Arden and to Adelaide,
To Harmony Road, their
schools, to the dull schools in which
No-one has thought
to murder everyone, a place which has not now,
In retrospect, become
bloodbaths.
They were sure
that fortune would come, if only they said:
"I listen to
CHUM" to the telephone whenever it rang.
They lived in a pre-organized
universe, Arden Drive,
They thought there
were killer satellites overhead
And they were all
so stupid, David, Pablo, Jane, him,
When, he couldn't
talk about it, but he was thinking
That every part of
the whole universe would come apart
Some day, nothing
would cohere: he'd read about that in Omni.
And the teachers
at the first school, who were they?
Mrs. Zimmerman
taught something, and who else taught there?
One of them looked
really pretty to him, it seems likely
She taught
language: spelling, comprehension, grammar,
From the simplest
materials (though he remembered
They were given Moonfleet to read: Moonfleet, of
all things!)
There was a French
teacher there too, and they all
Had to learn
something of the language, leastwise to him.
His brother came
home from school one day and said:
"We're
learning the times tables," and the boy tried
To imagine what
these exotic things looked likw, they were tables;
He had to look it
up right away and understand them.
Bullies, too,
though he can't remember their names,
Some real sadists
were of his age and lived in that area,
And they did some
mean things to him sometimes:
They shoved fibreglass
down the back of his shirt
And he's sure
there's still some fibreglass
Back there, because
he can feel late at night, and
Not only when he's
drunk, it's all the time
When pain is all
that can be heard.
He taught himself
how to ride a bicycle, formerly his brother's,
(His father was
probably too drunk that Saturday),
By rolling down
the gentle slope out front, walking
Back to the top,
and over and over until he had balance.
The bicycle was
orange and unadorned, put cards in spokes
Did wonders for
its self-presentation, ticktickticktick,
Where ever he felt
like being obnoxious to anyone nearby.
It was a kind of a
way to get an education, testing the limits
Of everyone who
came within earshot. In any case, it was
Much quieter than
a lawnmower, so it was a gentle test.
The French teacher
(who was Belgian, and probably a refugee,
He realized much later)
told them about learning English
In her country (namely,
Belgium): To make how to make a 'th' sound,
They would put
potatoes in their mouths to get the feel
Of the foreign
sound, 'th', 'th', 'th', and she nearly
Got it out of her,
though it did sound a bit weird and forced
When she talked English.
There was a whole history he didn't
Know, all he has
were fragments of the past, like a jigsaw
Puzzle that had
lost its illustrative cover. The pieces
Fit, he knew they
had to fit, he was conscious of that.
Some clues were at
home. His father had been a warrior.
One afternoon,
snooping around, he found in his father's
Desk (yes he was
that much of a snoop) an identity card
That wasn't his
father's identity card; in fact, it was German,
And it had a
soldier's picture on it, a German soldier's,
And the text was
all in German. Also, in the folded book
Was a black and
white photograph of a girl, the girlfriend
(It seemed pretty
certain) of the German soldier. He pieced
All these facts
together, that his father had taken it off of a corpse,
The corpse of a
German he'd killed somewhere in Europe.
He regretted not having
asked any bit of it ever.
The world was
wide, and he only knew some odd square miles.
Going with his
mother to the public library was a treat,
Though they had a
limit of five books at a time.
Then there was a
used book store (Morgan Self) nearby, two blocks away,
Where you could exchange
books not to be found in the library, for other books likewise
Not to be found in
the library: if you gave Morgan two books, you could
Get one you hadn't
read yet: mostly horror novels,
By James Herbert or
English people like James Herbert: Pan books, the Pan Books of Horror Stories
volumes 1 to 5 or so,
And the more
morbid the better: All too shocking for a
Public library.
And, in an effort to expand
the classroom,
He almost
innocently got his teacher to read a couple pages
Of 'The Survivor,'
out loud, to encourage reading widely.
She got to the
little sex scene, and cried out: "Oh, I can't
Read this,"
and all the kids laughed because of his 'prank.'
On the hammock out
back on weekend afternoons he'd pile
Up comics and so
on, on his tummy, and read them,
but eventually
he'd simply fall asleep. In the outdoors,
Spreading for
miles, there were vast fields, and a burned-out silo
From a long-gone
farm, with dirt paths for bicycles
Created from use,
through the sandy soil surrounding.
(Makes you understand
why the farm failed long-gone.)
A concrete silo
open to the sky, and inside he knew
That bad things
took place there, some nights, with teens,
But for some
reason he never went there at night to do ...
Whatever it was.
It was drugs and sex and booze, sure,
As he later
deduced, but for some reason he never went.
And, on that
topic, down near the back fence of the school,
The subject of
sexual intercourse came up in conversation.
One trustworthy
lad told him how dogs managed to have sex.
"They stand
up, and they put their paws together; it's like dancing.
Then they get
closer and closer together until his penis
Goes into her
vagina. That's how dogs do it. I've seen it."
The explanation
was believed, because the lad was earthy,
And he knew the
ways of the violent world more than most.
Our hero was well
on his way to understand what made the world.
For surely there
was a light, and there was a star,
And everything
could be explained by a wise teacher;
The ideas that
glowed and summarized everything else
Would shed its
light upon his rather dreary head.
He learned about
music, too, how to read music, he knew how
To read music
almost intuitively, at least the basics of it.
It was rhythm, and
the tones moved up when the circles went up,
And while he
didn't understand key signatures and the circle
Still he could make it
out, and read along in the scores.
In California,
aet. 12, his great-aunt had an electric organ
And a book of
familiar songs, and he worked on plucking out
The melody of 'Here
Comes the Sun' and other popular favorites.
Musically, he
started with maybe the first single he ever bought
Which could have
been 'Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves' which
Undoubtedly made
him want to know what the words really meant;
Plus at about that time
he listened to 'Hair' a lot,
And he even made
something of a puppet show for his mother,
Performed from
behind a clothes hamper with the record playing
On the little
orange player ... but his mother was not impressed.
She had laundry to
do.... She must have known this kid of hers
Didn't understand
at all what it was about, and was merely
Latching onto
radio music like 'The Age of Aquarius' and
'Let the Sun Shine
In' by the 5th Dimension. (And about
That time, 1971, she
gave him a shirt with a zipper up near
The top, and
suspended from the slider, was ... a peace sign!)
The kid was
appropriately naïve, appropriate for his age,
And maybe he
wasn't that much different from other kids everywhere,
But there was
something special about this kid, really special!
He learned about
nature, not only, as I already said, because
He was surrounded
by it on three sides, but also because
He found himself
in certain Muskoka Region cottages by choice
Or chance, i.e. friends of his parents, his aunt and uncle,
A rented place for
just the family, or, at times, the cottage
Of his best friend
(of that more later, if he lets me tell).
Imagine being nine
years old, set loose in the woods,
With a lake nearby
to swim in, and the feeling of old blankets
(Though often with
a rubber mat between mattress and sheets,
Put there by
someone in contact with his mother, of course,
To prevent the
mattress from becoming stained with piss)
On the beds, the
sounds of 'critters' somewhere out the window,
And sometimes a
great storm would come, once or twice a year,
And someone'd turn
off the lights and they'd watch the light show.
The big wide
world! (He
didn't think that at the time,
Fifty years later,
though, he imagined himself saying that;
All he's told me
must be in the end imaginary;
There's nothing
like a bad poet running over the past.)
And during the day
there would be strangers to meet; they
Were, of course,
from other cottages, and he got to know the kinds
Of ideas adults
dealt with, because there was no way to get away.
One night, playing
cards with his friend, his parents,
And two friends of
his parents, the subject turned to education,
Namely, sex
education: and the woman friend was describing hearing
Words from a
classroom: she was an administrator or something:
"Boys and
girls, this is a diaphragm," and because he understood
Nothing, thinking
it was a rather inoffensive body part,
And because he
couldn't rightly ask what the usage of the word was,
He stored it away
in his mind, since it was obviously taboo
And was therefore
an interesting word, to be explored later on.
Also, all these
places were a little bit frightening.
There were bears
out there in the woods, and they were hungry!
If you didn't
watch out, your next trip to the outhouse
Could be your
last! It was so dark, so outside of the suburb
Street-lamp-lit
world that once a month you couldn't see a thing
In the night, just
blackness everywhere, and no nightlights
Were ever
available. The mornings were strangely cold, though
That was probably
because everyone got out of bed earlier.
Strange people
everywhere around, and sometimes he'd see them
In bathing suits
even, with all their imperfections or perfections,
Some with giant
birthmarks on their shoulders, some rolls of fat
Here there and
everywhere, and it was a learning of humanity
In general, not
only his little enclave of mostly chosen
Folks; it was, in
general, a widening of the world to include
Not just two or
three miles around, but rather two or three hundred,
Like world
travellers (even though he later understood
That those places
were almost exactly like the place he was from.
So it was both an
expansion and a contraction, like much else.)
There was a lot to
learn, and there was no structure to it:
Every day would
arrive something new and (obviously) unforeseen,
Like a girl named
Kim Wilson, a little girl, and they were both in
The first grade; of course they were never in love: rather,
It was a matter or
her being terribly pretty (and though they
Knew one another
for ten years more, they never once got
Involved: strange,
that), and he was allowed to go to her house,
Which was down the
street and over and in a dead-end court.
Just a couple
children, seven years old and plus and minus one.
Kim had a
funny-looking brother, a younger brother, who couldn't
Talk much even
though he was only two years younger: he didn't
Understand that
the kid had Down's Syndrome, he only understood
That he was pretty
big and he couldn't play with them because....
He didn't know the
because, and it was only later he understood.
One day, at Kim's
house, he got blamed by Kim about turning
On the faucet in
the basement, and flooding the basement,
And though he
protested, saying he didn't even know where
The faucet was,
the blame stuck, and it never washed off.
(Of course, we
know who turned on the faucet, and why,
But I figure some
families have to go through a bit of delusion.)
Which turns his
mind to another memory, of about that same period,
At the cottage of
his friend; he got accused by his friend
Of clogging the
indoor toilet with toilet paper, which wasn't
True; he never
figured out who'd done it, and the blame stuck,
But blame gets
forgotten pretty quickly since there's only so
Many minutes to
live and always there's other reasons to
Go through the
routine of shouldering blame to get along to get along.
What he figured,
as he conjectures today, was that sometimes
The truth cannot
be admitted, and someone nearby has to take
Responsibility,
someone for whom the cost is very much lesser.
It was the way
things worked, and nothing would ever change that.
The whole family
loaded into a brown station wagon one summer
And drove across
North America, summer of '70, to California.
His mother's
parents loaded the car with daily presents, like
An advent
calendar, so in the back of the station wagon
He and his
siblings tumbled around on the interstates playing
With plastics and
games. Mother's mother had a sister there,
And thus mother had at least one cousin there, and when he got
Out of the car he
went up to his great-aunt and declared:
"I'm
five!" (He heard about this some years later, having had
The childhood
amnesia because of all the sense perceptions
Flooding in from
all sides.) They went to Disneyland, and the
Grand Canyon, and
he swam along with everyone else in the ocean.
How many of these
people not seen much of again are still here?
Whatever happened
to the class of whatever time you want to say?
Statistically,
some or many must be dead by now, but which ones?
And how do you
think they died? How many finally killed themselves?
Mad Magazine. He
read all the issues. Archie comics. He read those.
Their views of the
world he found to be much like his own.
There's nothing
some positive reinforcement won't do!
In some ways he
was in a very lonely world, and he wanted solitude,
Perhaps, reading books,
solving puzzles out of Dell magazines,
Plastic models,
plenty of those, though thrown together very
Sloppily. (He was
emulating his older brother here, who had built
A magnificent
Man-o'-war from a wooden kit, with stitched sails,
But he himself had
almost no skill or patience.)
And sometimes when
no-one was around he'd pull out a board game,
Land Grab, Risk,
sometimes Monopoly, and he'd play all four sides
Of the stiff
square board, all about chance the situation was,
But there was some
kind of a pattern in the chaos of it all,
And likewise in a Hilroy notebook he
once took down encyclopedia headings,
Following from
reference to reference to see how it all connected.
Each concept lead
to other concepts and around and around,
Like a web cast
over everything, through perhaps only internally,
(He wasn't sure
which it was at all,) as he'd strung string from
Tack to tack all
around his room, making it impossible to cross.
There was
definitely a pattern to be found in all he noticed,
And he was drawn
for some reason to discover what they were.
Oh, this education
business! There's no point to trying to sort
Out any
chronological order anymore; each route moved at its own pace,
Intersecting in
places as interesting as a string dangling
From another
string. The school got a portable, and a girl died
One rainy night in
Baker Park. She was bicycling down the slope
To the bridge and
she missed the bridge and smashed up
In the stream, and
there were still a few bloody marks on a rock.
He'd gone down to
see it, along with a couple friends: it was true.
Blood on a rock,
and a girl was dead, but none of his fellows
Knew who the girl
was, because she was older and went to a
Different school.
They had a black mutt in the
house, something of
A beagle, but not
coloured like a beagle. The dog was named
Cookie. The dog
had to be walked, or else in the back yard there
Would be turds all
over the place. Yes, and they had a swimming
Pool: his father'd said: "It was either get a cottage or a
Swimming pool: We
chose the latter." (Which had been rather a
Mistake,
considering what cottage values were fifty years later.)
He could swim, he thought
well at that, and it was only in a regatta
That he discovered
he wasn't really that good after all.
On Boxing Day,
they would visit his grandmother, his father's
Mother, who lived
in a row house somewhere in Toronto. She had
Two young adults
living with her, but he never quite figured out
Who they were, or
if they were related to him at all.
I think one of us
has covered this territory before, so I
Won't get into
explaining who these two, or three, young people were.
Well, okay, I
changed my mind. They were cousins of his, and they
Would have been
acknowledged save for the fact that they were
The children of
his father's sister, who had died some time
Between 1965 and
1970, in a car crash involving no other car,
If you can get the
meaning I am hinting at; it was a forbidden
Subject, not to be
talked about during the car rides from Oshawa
To Toronto:
besides, he was just a kid, and some matters didn't
Matter to him very
much or even at all. Still, he's got some cousins
Out there in the
world, who knows who they are? What’s their names?
Where are they?
Are they dead, are they living? The children of
Her aunt Joy, whom
he'd never met, apparently, dead on some road
Probably not far
from the DVP.
On boxing day,
they would visit
His grandmother,
who was a redhead, like he was, the cousin
Of Bessie Burdock,
MP, from Liverpool, or maybe second or third cousin,
Who famously said
to Winston Churchill he was drunk and he
Called her ugly, which
she was, indeed, fat and Labour,
But we're getting
way off topic here, he loved her, this
Bizarre British woman,
his grandmother, with her poodle, Pierre,
That he walked in some
place, when he was nine, somewhere
Not far from the
DVP.
Naturally, and logically,
we all went
Through what I'm
talking about, here, in this phony poem.
You! You! You! Had
a childhood, a time of mystery. A time during which
Language doesn’t describe
it. There's no-one to tell you that
What you think is
true is not true. Back to the track. 1970.
Kindergarten. Kim,
John Waukaluk, James Deakin. He thinks:
Man, John Waukaluk should get a whole Canto to himself.
His father fled
the Communist murderers and went to Detroit
(How did he manage
that? [Oh, but how could a kid get
The geopolitics?])
So this very Ukrainian man escaped the Russians
And got to Detroit,
Michigan, and married a very American girl,
Who was gruff, in the
kitchen, insulting her husband,
And there's no way
to communicate what it was like!
Fifty fucking
years ago, a half a century, how can it be
True? He's sitting
now listening to Emmylou Harris records:
How can he parse himself
into existence? He has a tense.
The present tense.
He is now.
Kim Wilson, and she was pretty
Then and she's probably
even more pretty now. He still
Loves her; if
anyone knows her, let him know. I have his email.
Yes, maybe I was a
kid a lot like this John guy. He had
A bully yelling:
"Kiss her! Kiss her!" because, because,
There's no way to
explain the cruelty little kids have;
Is it the way
they're raised? Did they all have rotten parents?
There were indeed
more than a few rotten parents around in that
Industry town.
Maybe there's something about industry towns that
Attracts rotten
people, maybe with get-rich-quick schemes
All of them, a
brutal place altogether, and he had to live in it.
Another girl he
met later, perhaps two or three years later, in
The fifth or sixth
grade, who was a very sporty girl, and once
They'd come to a
kind of maturity, in a house that was being built,
She fluttered a
note down to him from a second floor.
He missed seeing noticing
its fall, and she had to prompt him
To pick it up. The
note read: "Wanna make out?" It was
obviously
Prepared
beforehand, it was so neatly written. So, they gave it
A shot, even
though it was very cold. They didn't know what
They were doing,
but they were learning. Education doesn't stop
When you leave school-age,
but it certainly slows down in
Intensity. They
played mommy and daddy, and she was very curious.
It got to the
point, a couple years later, they stuck hands down
Pants to find out
what was different down there, and the difference
They found. That
was another cold day. In retrospect, winter
Was the time for
them to play together like that. Maybe she went
Away during the
summer: fifty years later, he can't quite recall.
The whole thing broke
off unexpectedly, by proxy, at that.
He had done
something, and she didn't want to talk to him again.
He didn't even
wonder why. He didn't know what he'd done.
He couldn't find
any reason to pursue her. Yes, he was cruel,
He learned then,
and through his life it always surprised him,
A little. So he
wasn't that nice after all, which was true.
A little learning
goes a long way, about oneself mainly,
The surprising discovery
of the shapes of humanity
That don't go
along with whatever you're taught in books:
How different it
was from anything else, not even Shakespeare's.
One summer day,
his grandmother, his father's mother, called
The house on Arden
Drive, wondering if he was all right, for she'd
Dreamed about him
the night before: "He dived into the pool,
And he didn't come
up. So, I want to know he's all right."
Well, as a matter
of fact, he wasn't all right: The previous day,
With John Garry in
John Garry's backyard, he'd been standing
In the wrong place
when John Garry had swung his father's golfclub
Behind himself,
which was where he was standing. The club hit him
Full in the face, knocked
him down, then he heard himself screaming.
All sorts of blood
vessels in his cheek burst, he tasted blood,
And his ears were
ringing. His face was all puffed out on one side
For the rest of
the summer, and he still has an scar on the inside
Of his left cheek.
The idea was that if the club had hit him
A couple inches
higher up, he would have died. His grandmother
Seemed to have had
something of a communication through beyond,
But he never quite
believed it, but still the tale is there,
And maybe someone
remembers it aside from himself. It proved,
In any case, that
Hamlet was right in what he said to Horatio.
He came across a
class picture recently, and it was funny,
Because, judged
objectively, it looked composed of circus freaks,
Like something
Francis Bacon might have come up with if he'd been
A class
portraitist: Everyone looked stunned, and himself no less so,
For he was
cringing in something like fear of photography.
The individual
portrait of himself is no less ghastly,
For there he sat,
his eyes pitched open and no smile on his face,
Some things can't
be helped, and he must have been going through
Troubles at home
(which he recalls having been ever-present),
And he was probably
a cause of the troubles, being as he was
Such a complete
doofus, with terrible habits, and they had no hope
For him.
He'd watch tv bingo, to watch the board
as the numbers
Lit up: he'd be
looking for patterns in how they connected into
Islands that
joined and he'd try to find something mathematical
In how they
started alone, then joined together with other numbers.
How did the board
work? What was the process of joining together?
He wanted to know,
he always wanted to know, it was like a sickness,
Wanting to know.
(A widespread sickness, bred in the genes, but
Sometimes these blasted
genes go a bit too far, don't you think?)
Other matters have
been forgotten, but there are things remembered.
The smell of
sheets, how the clothesdryer would hop around,
The rumble of the
furnace way back in the basement, the basement's
Flimsy fake walls,
the shag carpet down there in David's room,
The ice grinder
attached to the staircase, his father's ice cream
Bucket, where the
brooms hung, where the windows were,
The dining room with
people around it, the little porch beyond,
The swimming pool,
the bookcase with the radio on it,
The chairs with
their wicker seats and off to one side,
The den, in which
he'd once come across a science article about
Topology, in which
the basics were laid out: a doughnut is
A torus, and since
a torus can be deformed in any way
And still retain
its torus-nature, and since the human body
Is a torus, in
that the alimentary canal is the hole in the torus,
It can be said
that we are no different from doughnuts. And
For two days he
told everyone he ran into: "We're doughnuts!
We're no different
from doughnuts, and they're no different from us!"
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