Wednesday, August 24, 2011

free book sale

They were giving away books to keep at the library. I expected hordes of people to be there, ravaging the shelves, but what I found was an utterly silent room.

There were four people there. We all just silently shuffled around from table to table.

I touched so many books, felt their weight, ran my fingers across their pages and spines. I was experiencing their gravity, connecting with their physicality as much as with their words. I was aware that a wonderful moment was occurring, right then, to me.

When I left, my arms could barely contain my finds:

Without by Donald Hall 
The Door by Margaret Atwood
Embryo Words by Margaret Lawrence
Spin Dry by Greg Hollingshead
Island by Alistair MacLeod
Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
What We Leave Behind by Derrick Jensen and Aric McBay
A Likely Story by Robert Kroetsch
All of Baba's Children by Myrna Kostach
Since Daisy Creek by W.O. Mitchell
Enduring Prose by various authors (among them are Churchill, Stephen Leacock, W.O. Mitchell, Plato, and Leo Tolstoy)
and several back issues of Other Voices.

My happiest find was Without, a book I've never owned but have read several times. The first was during research at the library for a paper on the connections between grief and creativity. I read the whole book in one sitting, hunched over in a chair at a table in the study section, pulling my hat down lower on my forehead to hide my tears.

These are poems that tore right through me. They bear such personal significance to me that as I read them, even now, I think, "I have written that exact thing." I have thought a long time about grief.

Each of these books is such a lovely surprise. It is good to have them as my own. It is good to hold them, to think about so many Canadian authors (and some others) and place my hands onto their landscapes.

It was a good day.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

a soul place.

There are so many places to love in the world, but this one might always be my favourite.


Monday, August 15, 2011

canada is a big, wild place

now i've been all over.

now i've felt an icy ocean crashing
over my body   rocks slipping
beneath those numbed feet
which belong to this eastward wanderer

i have stepped over acorns
and fossils in rocks 
thousands of years old
to stand on the shore of a lake as big as an ocean
one in a series of freshwater seas.

now i've seen the best sky God has ever created
the living breathing thing of it
so bright i thought it would fall
down on me   small on the atlantic shore

my heart is a fist in my chest
which has opened completely
it longs for vast wilderness
those secret forests it had never known

and still   though the land was more
than i ever thought it could be
and there could never be enough time to explore it

when i moved from canadian shield
to my wide open prairie

my heart felt more glad than ever

it could only sing out across those fields
sloped by river valleys   pooled in by lakes
wandered by deer and coyotes and cowboys

it was flung free across that expanse of gold and green
and ran clear into the crisp line of horizon
and is left to echo into that enormous upwards-falling sky

now i've been all over
and now

it is time to come home.


outstretching


We live in such a magnificent, wild place. I have seen so much of it, felt seawater and lakewater rushing over me, walked through boreal, deciduous and coastal forests, felt cramped in our most crowded cities and felt small in the vastness of our wilderness.

One night in Prince Edward Island, I stood on a field next to the ocean with its ever-rushing crash of waves -- a sound so constant and easy that it seems almost like rain -- and looked up at the most spectacular stars I've ever seen. Not even my enormous Alberta sky could compete. As I stood on this island looking up at the sky pinpricked so heavily with light it almost looked like everything in the heavens was moving with the flow of some supernatural force, I thought about the distance between me and my home. Such vastness lie between us, my prairie and me, and I felt so glad to have treaded on so much of it. 

So often it is good to feel tiny compared to our universe, and it is this insignificance in the face of that wide field of undulating stars in a place so far from my home that makes me know that I am blessed. That moment, a sleepy stumble across a field in the middle of the night, catching sight of bright constellations even on the horizon and tipping my face skyward, that happenchance encounter with the works of God's hand, is my experience to have, and I will have it forever. I am blessed.

Thank you, Canada, for keeping so many wild and historic places safe for me to visit. I have been to nineteen national parks and historic sites so far. I can't wait to explore the rest. 

West Coast and our mighty North, I am coming, I am coming.

I am almost on my way.