Posts Tagged ‘poetry’

From the marvellously be-littered vaults, originally published September 18, 2020.

“such a tangle of what is wrong and what is right…”

what it was: toilet paper collected against shortages
then released into the wind as an act of anti-hoarding,
plastic bags from a big grocery store shopping sent up
to roam free to protect overloaded landfills

what it will be: an unpalatable lunch for larger and then
smaller and smaller and then larger and larger animals,
or if it’s toilet paper maybe a family gathering, a joyful
return to the site of former happy days in the woods

what it is: rubbish of course, but lit and rather lovely,
kite tails caught out of the hands of inexperienced fliers,
doves only temporarily snagged and about to take flight,
their tail feathers spread in the light as they ready for takeoff

the power of it: those lovely dark intricacies and the fans
of white light, lit and fluttering among them, the oddity:
such a tangle of what is wrong and what is right commented on
by camera and sun, their take on one moment of our destruction

 

Judy Gaudet is a poet living in Belfast PEI. Her latest collection is Another Landscape (Island Studies Press, 2026). Others are Conversation with Crows (Oberon, 2014) and Her Teeth Are Stones (Acorn, 2005). She has edited a collection of poems, 150+ Canada’s History in Poetry (Acorn 2018).

[Editor’s Note: the new collection, Another Landscape, has one of the most beautiful covers ever.]

 

♦♦♦

(Judy’s) Biggest Litter Peeve?

Why do people throw empty cans and bottles out of their car windows? At home they’d put them in the garbage or recycling…

~

[Editor’s Note: hear hear! I’d love to see the backyards of litterers… are they chock a block with debris flung out the kitchen window?]

The Women’s Institute does amazing work, not the least is the annual island-wide, community roadside cleanup.

https://www.peiwi.ca/events-1/wi-annual-roadside-cleanup-2

 

 

 

I remember seeing this piece of litter on a street I often used to walk. Likely escaped from a bin on garbage day and yet there it sat and how many people had walked past and what was to become of it? Thoughts that go through my mind whenever I see litter, same thoughts that initially prompted this project. The thing that will never ever, EVER stop blowing my mind is that when I send a picture, in this case of a detergent escapee, to a writer, ‘The Future’ happens.

Thanks to Ronna Bloom, who, I’m delighted to say, has included ‘The Future’ in revised form in her most recent book, In a Riptide, in which the future, as a subject, plays a beautiful role, not least in the closing poem ‘A Full Glass’ — “A few days short of New Year’s Eve, a man stands/ on the sidewalk, bundled against the dry cold./ He holds a martini glass full of brownish liquid you hope/ is hot cider made from September’s Macintosh apples/ with a bit of ginger or lemon for brightness, though the drink/ looks a lot like the slush you’re walking on./ To the future! he says to you as you pass./ To the future! you say, holding nothing.”

Enjoy this most wonderful re-post, first published here on February 7, 2020.

And oh how I would love for whoever once owned that Sunlight to see what became of it.

I saw the icons of my generation trashed, pounded, run over.

Sunlight, Madge, we were soaking in it. That box that held our kisses

was flat. Lifestyle came undone so that life was hanging on by the grate

and style underfoot. What happened and is it everywhere?

“The future is in plastics,” said the man in The Graduate and it is.

One night in the last century, I dreamt I sat on a high wall an open book

on the ground and the sea rose. Be careful the book! I called.

The water came anyway. What is precious and who cares and how much?

To each her own footwear in the apocalypse. It’s not just the litter it’s the latter.

But some people notice. Someone took these pictures.

In Australia, fire eats the houses and the vines in California.

In Venice, someone’s couch was swept into the water, someone’s tombstone.

Tourists looted the Vuitton store and swam away with the goods.

Tom Waits is not dead yet so I ask him what am I seeing?

Misery’s the river of the soul, he says. Everybody row.

The young are out mopping because there’s no school

when there’s no school. And the old, well, it doesn’t matter how tired and dazed you are

when you’re up to your knees. All you can do is wait. The tide will turn.

Sunlight. The real thing. Until the next siren. Fire and water and so on.

Sisyphus that old trooper. Sisyphus is us.

Ronna Bloom is the author of eight books of poetry. Her work has been broadcast on CBC, recorded by the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, and translated into Bangla and Chinese. Her poems also appear several times in Best Canadian Poetry and have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Ronna has brought poetry into health care, specifically developing the Poet-in-Residence program at Sinai Health. She has collaborated with filmmakers, choreographers, musicians, and architects. Her poem, “The Future,” originally published in the litter I see project, appears in her new book In a Riptide (Brick Books 2025.) ronnabloom.com

BIGGEST LITTER PEEVE?

RB — Junk in the water. Seeing a tide with plastic bottles, tin cans, tires and other bits of debris coming ashore just deflates me. The endlessness of the fight… I always cut the strings off masks too as I worry for the strangling of birds. 

https://ocean.org/pollution-plastics/shoreline-cleanup/

This is where we escape the bleaching whine of fluorescent lights in language class.

This is where we learn the best places to get warm coats and international money orders.

This is where we learn who’s hiring.

This is where we teach each other how to tell a knock-knock joke.

This is where we share an orange.

This is where we hatch plans for a laundromat business.

This is where we name our restaurant.

This is where we luxuriate in the tongue of our mothers.

This is where we were standing when we learned that father died in the bombing.

This is where we take a deep breath before trying to shape English sounds.

Christine Fischer Guy is a Toronto writer and journalist. She was a 2024 VCCA fellow and is the author of The Umbrella Mender and The Instrument Must Not Matter (coming in 2026). Her short fiction has appeared in Canadian, American and British journals. She was awarded a National Magazine Award and contributes criticism and interviews to literary journals. More: https://christinefischerguy.com/