I just found out that a poem of mine called “Pieces of you” will be published on the feature page of Spillwords.com on August 10. I thank their editors once again.
Monthly Archives: July 2019
And so. Just so.
Lines of vines
cling to string.
A swooping tree
dangles hard round fruit,
so green.
Rhubarb, tended,
raises its flower flags.
All this, in the brash and beautiful
life of July.
In a late afternoon cruise
I come, by chance,
to the scene of a sad and early death.
Bouquets by the roadside.
A styrofoam cross.
Tattooed tire marks, black on grey.
Fresh and smooth asphalt
covers that which was melted away.
The stains of her blazing death can’t be scrubbed.
In the small silence of an out of place town
I slow, scolded by the flashing speed sign.
Things cry out for paint.
A little care is all they ask.
A pair of toddlers pursue one another,
tan knees all scabbed.
Will they see a good life,
or seep into this stolid realm
of used-to-be.
Tonight, I tell you truly
A man walks to his usual crossroads, all right turns until he completes the simple square that brings him home. Tonight, he goes out late because of the hot sun, something to avoid with these new meds. As a trade off for the cool and pleasant breeze, someone has provided intermittent clouds of mosquitos. No matter. Without even breaking stride, he plucks up some hobbit courage and decides to take the long way home. All left turns. She’s sleeping anyway, won’t even notice. And besides, I have my phone and it’s still daylight. Hey Google, play The Beatles.
He wants to hear what’s going on around him as well, so he slips the phone into his back pocket and goes without the earbuds. The first thing that Spotify thinks of is “Yesterday”.
He knows that this route is exactly three times longer than the old one, and feels for a second that he has jumped in with both feet. There’s a moment of doubt. He stops and considers turning around, but stubborn pride spurs him on. After all, you’ll be 70 next year. Just easy…take it easy, you’ll get there. The numb knee still works, and it’s still numb, so that’s a bonus.
Ever since, as a kid, he had found the green edge of a twenty waving at him from the melting snow of spring, he had kept his nose to the ground whenever he could. No such luck tonight, of course. Just the expected litter of a sad society. His mind wandered stupidly, trying to picture what might be going on in people’s heads as they chucked things from car windows, smashed beer bottles in the ditch, crushed pop cans in a ritual showing of strength. What if, what if all of this could be gathered somehow, from every street in the neighbourhood? He would direct, yes he would, with his creative talent, a crew of say a hundred willing workers. He would design, and they would construct it, a massive sculpture of a muscular man, kneeling on one knee, shouldering the great sphere of Earth. All integrated, and all made of collected detritus. A name?
“Atlas, the Collossus of Roads”…..Well. Poof. That daydream had occupied his mind for a good kilometer. Now it was back to the slow scanning of sidewalk cracks.
And there, at the entrance to the church parking lot, a dirty spiral-bound notebook. It looked as if it had been run over one time too many. The metal binding was crushed, and the lined pages were splayed out like a bridge hand. What a find, he thought, as he picked it up and brushed the mud off it. Several of the drivers who were waiting at the stoplight got an eyeful, and one smiled and shook his head. Must have thought look at the old bum picking up whatever he comes across. The first page had stickers on it, saying such things as “Stay Rad!” and “You are capable of great things!”
Most other pages were blank. One appeared to be notes taken during a class on the abuse of pharmaceuticals. Their effects. Their routes of entry into the body. Memorize this. There will be a test.
On the dark blue cover of the book, someone had written in fine black marker, barely visible, the names of drugs that were commonly sold on the street: Oxycodone, tranquilizers, amphetamines. Underneath that, in the same handwriting: “Hey Dylan! These are really cool. I can get you some.” Spotify said TURN OFF YOUR MIND. RELAX, AND FLOAT DOWNSTREAM. IT IS NOT DYING. IT IS NOT DYING.
One last page, in pencil, bore the legend “I am sure, Ace, it is best for Wags to stay home”

Our man could see the stoplight of his destination, far off now, and uphill. His pace slowed. It was still pretty warm, and he took off his hat. Damn the mosquitos. Now, as three teenage girls approached him, the strains of A Hard Day’s Night were playing. They giggled, as teenage girls are prone to do, whispering asides to one another, hands covering painted lips. Just when the man thought they were having their sport at his expense, one of the girls did a fist pump and sang along with Lennon as he keened
“You know, I feel alright!”
Home. Finally. And none the worse for wear. He would sleep well tonight. In one hand was the notebook, and the other held a poor man’s bouquet of what he thought were wildflowers, but could have been partly weeds.
“For you”.
“Well, get that stuff outa here. It’s probably got bugs!”
A face, a fate
I am in a band that plays the odd local date. Churches, bars, gatherings and the like.
A couple of months ago, after we had finished our setting up to play for an evening in the town tavern, we sat down for dinner and a drink. When the waitress came to our table, I felt a strong sense of deja vu. I knew her face from somewhere, and had interacted with her in some way. Feeling embarrassed, I told her these things, and asked her where she had worked in the past. She looked at me strangely for a second, reddened a little, and said “well, nowhere around here”. That was the end of our chat for the evening, and, within a half hour, our band was up on stage playing. During breaks, I stole glances at her, and was surprised to see her return the looks. It felt peculiar, and coloured the rest of the night for me.
Two weeks ago, we played there again, on our usual Thursday night. When we were part way through the third set, and the bar was fairly crowded, two of the waitresses approached us. They were crying and signalling us to stop playing. One of them asked for a microphone and she said “We are sorry, but we have to close right away. Something has happened.” Word got around quickly that one of their staff had been killed in a crash. We did not know who. Nor did we ask questions, but packed up our stuff quickly and left.
The next day, I read something of her eulogy on the tavern’s website. It was my deja vu girl. She had been one of their very first employees. Her name was Rachel. I still do not know why she had been in my mind, but the feeling had been very strong and immediate. Strangely, I felt a kind of grief, for someone I thought I knew. For someone that I would have liked to have known.
Haraview Burgers (July 3)
Hello all…
I stopped again today at the mysterious Haraview Burgers on Highway 11 north, a restaurant that has stood empty for more than 40 years. As mentioned in previous stories, it still appears to be unoccupied but nonetheless in good repair.
This time, I came armed with a letter I had prepared asking the owners if they would enlighten me as to the history of the place. After knocking several times without any response, I managed to squeeze the note behind the locked front door.
The place is overgrown with weeds and there is a Beware of the Dog sign that I had not previously noticed. I proceeded with caution around the perimeter, but saw no dog and no evidence of habitation.
Readers have mentioned to me that they had seen people there recently, notably an older couple driving a Jaguar.
I am hoping that they will return and perhaps answer my note.
