PENGUIN CANADA
   BEYOND THIS DARK HOUSE
   GUY GAVRIEL KAY is the internationally bestselling author of ten novels, which have been translated into more than twenty languages. He lives in Toronto. For more information, visit his website at www.brightweavings.com.
   Also by Guy Gavriel Kay
   The Fionavar Tapestry:
   The Summer Tree
   The Wandering Fire
   The Darkest Road
   Tigana
   A Song for Arbonne
   The Lions of Al-Rassan
   The Sarantine Mosaic:
   Sailing to Sarantium
   Lord of Emperors
   Last Light of the Sun
   Ysabel
   PENGUIN CANADA
   Published by the Penguin Group
   Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Canada Inc.)
   Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
   Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland
   (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)
   Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia
   (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)
   Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi – 110 017, India
   Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)
   Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
   Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   First published in a Penguin Canada hardcover by Penguin Group (Canada),
   a division of Pearson Canada Inc., 2003
   Published in this edition, 2008
   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (WEB)
   Copyright © Guy Gavriel Kay, 2003
   Foreword copyright © Don Coles, 2008
   Author representation: Westwood Creative Artists
   94 Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1G6
   All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
   Manufactured in Canada.
   * * *
   LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLLICATION
   Kay, Guy Gavriel
   Beyond this dark house / Guy Gavriel Kay.
   Poems.
   Originally published: 2003.
   ISBN 978-0-14-316864-5
   I. Title.
   PS8571.A935B49 2008 C811’.54 C2008-900338-1
   * * *
   ISBN-13: 978-0-14-318735-6
   ISBN-10: 0-14-316864-9
   Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
   Visit the Penguin Group (Canada) website at www.penguin.ca
   Visit the authorized Guy Gavriel Kay website at www.brightweavings.com
   Special and corporate bulk purchase rates available; please see
   www.penguin.ca/corporatesales or call 1-800-810-3104, ext. 477 or 474
   for ANDY PATTON
   Volarono anni corti come giorni . . .
   FOREWORD
   After the lines
   If you were here with me tonight
   the sea’s sound might shape itself
   into your name …
   Guy Gavriel Kay adds,
   … I have
   a mild facility that lets me turn
   such phrases
   and I’d like to look at that addition, and that facility, for a minute. The facility is nothing to be uneasy about: it’s the acquired, hard-earned access, on the part of a writer, to those great fields of tact and nuance (based, as they must be, on a wide and still wider experience of literature), which, once entered, need never be left. The thing you don’t want to do with it (i.e., with the facility for, in this poet’s case, coming up with the sound of a sea shaping itself into a beloved’s name: a wholly original, I think, moment in one of the best poems in this collection) is to beach it among near-similar moments where its soft-edged glow will be hard to single out amid all the competing sparkle. And that’s just what too many poets, even the ones who are capable of such moments, never manage to figure out—they just blunder on among the pyrotechnics, and before they know it, they’re doing this all by themselves, since everybody else has gone home rubbing his eyes. Or hers. In this regard, what do we find here? Well, in a poem called “A Northern Man,” which shifts from Greece (“renderings of blue [never before seen]”) to London (“sunshine [that] / … is a pale, soft, small gift”), comes “There was / no stinting, where I have been.” It’s that word stinting that I’m holding up for you to appraise, to know the worth of. The poem was crying out for just such a hard-scrabble, tight-bitten sound there, the “renderings of blue” needed it as much as the “pale, soft, small gift” needed it—and right on its cue, of course, there it was. How nice it would be if, among the profusion of melting constellations that keep on, year after year, coming at us from their publishers, a few other poets would learn how to respond to this kind of cry, this need.
   It’s what I’ve been admiring for years in Kay’s novels, where time and again he sets his characters up for what’s surely, we at first think, going to be a rerun of some welltravelled mythic tale of olden tyme—and then, by virtue of, let’s say, his facility, the writer lifts them into an astonishing newness, bringing off scenes that I, an ungenerous, blade-between-his-teeth critic if there ever was one, am lifted up by as I recognize that this scene that I had glimpsed coming and was already regretting the glimpse, is, bon Dieu, against all my tired certainties, convincing, substantial, very often beautiful, moving, mind-halting. There’s a passage in The Last Light of the Sun (it’s the one where a just-slain prince is glimpsed riding his horse across a stream in the company of a fairy queen and her retinue—i.e., everything that you might think would spell disaster for the twenty-first-century writer foolhardy enough to attempt it) that I defy you to read without getting into the face-dampening thing we critics try hard to steer clear of. I don’t know another writer in this country who could have managed those three or four pages. Beyond This Dark House lives off poems that come from the same unique sensibility.
   —Don Coles
   BEYOND THIS
   DARK HOUSE
   Night Drive: Elegy
   Driving through Winnipeg this autumn
   twilight, a sensation has lodged
   somewhere behind my breastbone
   (impossible to be more precise).
   It is at once a lightness and a weight,
   press of memory and a feeling
   as if tonight has insufficient
   gravity to keep me from
   drifting back, so many
   long years after leaving here.
   Quiet streets, the slowly darkening
   sky (it can take a while). I turn
   on Waterloo and stop outside the house
   where we first lived. No curtains drawn
   on the living room windows. I can see
   into the past, almost. The wil 
					     					 			low in front
   is very tall now. My parents planted it.
   We played football on this lawn
   (and the next one down, and next,
   as we grew older, needed room to run).
   Used the willow sapling when cutting
   pass patterns, slicing in front of it
   to shake a defender. I hear
   my mother from the porch, ‘Don’t
   break the tree!’ A car approaches,
   slows, someone looks at me
   in the gathering night, moves on.
   So do I, gliding a little further
   to Mathers Bay, where we’d race
   our bikes, the finish line
   right at the intersection,
   so we’d be flying flat-out
   and sometimes have to brake
   in a squeal and sideways skid
   (black tire marks on the road)
   if a car was coming east.
   I wouldn’t let my sons do that today.
   The houses along the bay,
   down to the curve and back
   up the other side, were homes of friends
   or girls I longed for, and their
   parents—men and women mostly
   dead now. Each address marks
   a grave. Ghosts water the night
   lawns, rake leaves under stars,
   look up as I coast by
   and then turn away, as if politely,
   not to seem to stare as this rented car
   stops again, this time outside
   our second home, the one
   my parents built when I was nine.
   I am heavy and light tonight,
   entangled and drifting, both
   at once. The city
   is so full of my father.
   I used to ride with him to Saturday
   morning rounds at the hospital.
   Proud, anxious not to show it (Why
   was that? Did he know?) as we’d step
   off the elevator and onto a post-op ward.
   I’d read a book by the nursing station
   then cross the street to the
   Salibury House (long gone now)
   and order two sandwiches, a milkshake
   and a coffee, but only at the exact
   minute he’d told me to. And he’d
   arrive from his last patient just
   as the waitress set the food in front of me.
   I’m guessing he’d watch from the window
   or door, to time it so exactly, for his son.
   East on Mathers now, imagining kids
   on bikes careening into my path forty
   years ago. Waverley, and south. I’d
   hitchhike this route to campus, winter
   mornings, dreaming of away, anywhere
   away. My parents had their first
   date at a nightclub out here on
   Pembina Highway. My father just back
   from overseas. She thought he was
   phony-British, using words like ‘chap’
   and ‘bloody,’ all night long. Still, (she’d
   later tell her sons), that night she
   went home to Enniskillen Avenue and woke
   her mother. Sat on the edge of the bed and said
   she thought she’d met a man she could love.
   We never tired of that story.
   Our pretty mother, barely into her twenties,
   her immediate certainty, the dashing
   image of our father, home from away,
   winning a woman for himself.
   The city’s quiet on a Thursday night.
   The forecast was rain but the sky’s been clear,
   the air cooling down; football
   games and burning leaves. Back north now,
   on what seems to have become
   a night drive entirely unplanned. I steer
   with one hand at twelve o’clock and
   an elbow out the open window.
   The downtown ‘Y’ has been demolished.
   My Uncle Jack would take me there
   on Sunday mornings for a steam and
   a swim. Such a sweet man. White hair
   my father always joked of envying, ruefully
   shaking his head in admiration. Dad’s
   was a duller, white-grey, nondescript. Except,
   it seems, the morning of the day he was
   killed in Florida, my mother said to
   him over breakfast, ‘Sam, look at your
   hair! It’s white as Jack’s!’ Salt water,
   winter sun, had bleached it bright.
   I imagine my father surprised
   and pleased, and thinking of his brother
   when he took that last walk
   with the dog along the coastal highway
   in too much twilight.
   There seems to be no crossing of streets
   tonight where I can avoid
   hitting my father or myself. Wellington
   Crescent now, west towards the park
   where I first kissed some girls, broke up
   with others, dreamed of going away. My father
   took a troopship to England in the
   last year of the war, stayed over there
   in Scotland for five years, came back,
   married, had three sons.
   He taught each of us to catch a football, lost
   deliberately (to each of us) in table tennis,
   grimacing elaborately at a drive mis-hit
   into the net, not fooling anyone. He’d look
   shocked, shocked when we accused him
   of letting us win, as if the idea
   couldn’t have even crossed his mind.
   He quizzed me before high school tests,
   tsking with dismay at wrong answers
   that were clear evidence of insufficient
   application. He worked so hard.
   I think we knew that, even very young,
   but still assumed he’d have infinite time
   and room for us. I wince, tonight, remembering
   the absolute sureness of that. How did he
   elicit so much certainty? I wonder
   if he ever looked for and found
   clear signs of his own nature in
   three very different sons,
   or if that kind of thinking
   required too much vanity.
   I liked coming home from a downtown
   appointment with him. Walking to
   the Mall Medical Building, waiting
   in the doctors’ lounge, listening to the
   talk of football and politics, grabbing
   myself a Coke from the little fridge, and then
   the feel of the room altering as he came in,
   loosening his tie, hanging up the white coat,
   raising an eyebrow at my soft drink
   before dinner. The drive back home,
   just the two of us, end of a work day. He’d steer
   with one hand at twelve o’clock and
   an elbow out the open window. No one
   ever born had hands I’d ever rather feel
   enclosing mine. Then. Now. The day
   the son we named for him was born.
   If it was summer, turning west on Grant,
   the sunlight would be on us. We’d put
   the visors down. (I was too short for that
   to help, but copied him.) Or it might have been
   darker, cooler, under a prairie sky
   in a twilight like the one that started
   and compels these images,
   if it was autumn then, as it is now,
   above this ground of memories.
   Heaviness, and that so-strange
   sense of weightlessness. I thought,
   before, I couldn’t locate these feelings
   precisely within myself. Not so,
   in the end. They reside, together,
   anywhere my father was in this city
   and in me, which is pretty much
   
					     					 			 everywhere, and he’s been
   dead too many years now already,
   with more years and more years
   and more long years of being gone
   still to come.
   PART
   ONE
   Crystals
   Diamonds overhead.
   We walk on crystals
   sharp as longing.
   When you touched me
   I thought my heart
   would crash through
   my breastbone to lie,
   pulsing and impossible,
   on your bed. A screen
   door banged across
   the lane instead.
   We heard a late car
   on the street. Summer,
   that was. I wanted
   the sea, an island, more.
   You wanted tenderness.
   I felt the bone and
   cartilage that held
   my heart. Dreamed
   of crystals,
   sharper, even.
   No Strings
   He will not let himself
   need her. He has too far to go
   he says, no strings.
   Her hair that first afternoon
   was afire with sunlight.
   I thought it would melt the snow.
   Walked home in winter twilight,
   her name beginning in my head.
   In dreams he moves along
   distant beaches in fierce solitude.
   He thrills to the tight hum
   of the right words coming.
   She writes, ‘Convent education doesn’t
   make a hedonist. I must make this person
   over in my own image.’ I wish
   she were with me tonight.
   She called, very late, just to
   whisper a good night that ran
   along the humming wires
   stretched from pole to pole
   over the silver-white snow
   and under the early spring stars
   to us. No strings. Her hair.
   Other Women, And You
   I’ve written good bye songs
   for other women.
   Told how my resolve
   was loosened with their hair.
   Not for you. No poem
   about your blue eyes
   luring me from the blue
   seas of Greece.
   Too deep the knife
   you have become.