FIRST VINTAGE INTERNATIONAL EDITION, JANUARY 1997
   Copyright © 1989, 1991 by Michael Ondaatje
   All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in slightly different form in Great Britain by Pan Books Ltd., London, in hardcover in 1989 and subsequently in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, in hardcover in 1991, and in paperback in 1992. Published simultaneously in Canada by McClelland and Stewart, Inc., Toronto.
   Most of the poems in this collection were originally published in There’s a Trick with a Knife I’m Learning to Do (1979) and Secular Love (1984), published by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
   Copyright © 1979 by Michael Ondaatje
   Copyright © 1984 by Michael Ondaatje
   The Library of Congress has cataloged
   the Knopf edition(s) as follows:
   Ondaatje, Michael, 1943–
   The cinnamon peeler: poems/Michael Ondaatje.—1st ed.
   p. cm.
   I. Title.
   PR9199.3.O5C5 1991
   811’.54—dc20 90–53557
   Vintage eISBN: 978-0-307-94896-0
   Author photograph © Dominic Sansoni
   v.3.1
   For Barrie Nichol
   Contents
   Cover
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Dedication
   There’s a Trick with a Knife I’m Learning to do
   Light
   Early Morning, Kingston to Gananoque
   A House Divided
   The Diverse Causes
   Signature
   Henri Rousseau and Friends
   Application for a driving licence
   The Time Around Scars
   For John, Falling
   The Goodnight
   Philoctetes on the Island
   Elizabeth
   Dates
   Billboards
   Letters and Other Worlds
   Griffin of the Night
   Birth of Sound
   We’re at the Graveyard
   Near Elginburg
   Loop
   Heron Rex
   Rat Jelly
   King Kong Meets Wallace Stevens
   ‘The Gate in his Head’
   Taking
   Burning Hills
   Charles Darwin Pays a Visit, December 1971
   The Vault
   White Dwarfs
   The Agatha Christie Books by the Window
   Country Night
   Moving Fred’s Outhouse/Geriatrics of Pine
   Buck Lake Store Auction
   Farre Off
   Walking to Bellrock
   Pig Glass
   The Hour of Cowdust
   The Palace
   Uswetakeiyawa
   The Wars
   Sweet Like a Crow
   Late Movies with Skyler
   Sallie Chisum/Last Words on Billy the Kid. 4 a.m
   Pure Memory/Chris Dewdney
   Bearhug
   Elimination Dance (An Intermission)
   Secular Love
   Claude Glass
   Tin Roof
   Rock Bottom
   Skin Boat
   Her House
   The Cinnamon Peeler
   Women Like You
   The River Neighbour
   To a Sad Daughter
   All Along the Mazinaw
   Pacific Letter
   A Dog in San Francisco
   Translations of My Postcards
   7 or 8 Things I Know About Her
   Bessie Smith at Roy Thomson Hall
   The Concessions
   Red Accordion—an immigrant song
   In a Yellow Room
   When You Drive the Queensborough Roads at Midnight
   Proust in the Waters
   Escarpment
   Birch Bark
   Breeze
   There’s a trick
   with a knife
   I’m learning to do
   ‘Deep colour and big, shaggy nose. Rather a jumbly, untidy sort of wine, with fruitiness shooting off one way, firmness another, and body pushing about underneath. It will be as comfortable and comforting as the 1961 Nuits St Georges when it has pulled its ends in and settled down.’
   MAGAZINE DESCRIPTION OF A WINE
   LIGHT
   for Doris Gratiaen
   Midnight storm. Trees walking off across the fields in fury
   naked in the spark of lightning.
   I sit on the white porch on the brown hanging cane chair
   coffee in my hand midnight storm midsummer night.
   The past, friends and family, drift into the rain shower.
   Those relatives in my favourite slides
   re-shot from old minute photographs so they now stand
   complex ambiguous grainy on my wall.
   This is my Uncle who turned up for his marriage
   on an elephant. He was a chaplain.
   This shy looking man in the light jacket and tie was infamous,
   when he went drinking he took the long blonde beautiful hair
   of his wife and put one end in the cupboard and locked it
   leaving her tethered in an armchair.
   He was terrified of her possible adultery
   and this way died peaceful happy to the end.
   My Grandmother, who went to a dance in a muslin dress
   with fireflies captured and embedded in the cloth, shining
   and witty. This calm beautiful face
   organized wild acts in the tropics.
   She hid the milkman in her house
   after he had committed murder and at the trial
   was thrown out of the court for making jokes at the judge.
   Her son became a Q.C.
   This is my brother at 6. With his cousin and his sister
   and Pam de Voss who fell on a penknife and lost her eye.
   My Aunt Christie. She knew Harold Macmillan was a spy
   communicating with her through pictures in the newspapers.
   Every picture she believed asked her to forgive him,
   his hound eyes pleading.
   Her husband, Uncle Fitzroy, a doctor in Ceylon,
   had a memory sharp as scalpels into his 80’s,
   though I never bothered to ask him about anything
   – interested then more in the latest recordings of Bobby Darin.
   And this is my Mother with her brother Noel in fancy dress.
   They are 7 and 8 years old, a hand-coloured photograph,
   it is the earliest picture I have. The one I love most.
   A picture of my kids at Halloween
   has the same contact and laughter.
   My Uncle dying at 68, and my Mother a year later dying at 68.
   She told me about his death and the day he died
   his eyes clearing out of illness as if seeing
   right through the room the hospital and she said
   he saw something so clear and good his whole body
   for a moment became youthful and she remembered
   when she sewed badges on his trackshirts.
   Her voice joyous in telling me this, her face light and clear.
   (My firefly Grandmother also dying at 68).
   These are the fragments I have of them, tonight
   in this storm, the dogs restless on the porch.
   They were all laughing, crazy, and vivid in their prime.
   At a party my drunk Father
   tried to explain a complex operation on chickens
   and managed to kill them all in the process, the guests
   having dinner an hour later while my Father slept
   and the kids watched the servants clean up the litter
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   of beaks and feathers on the lawn.
   These are their fragments, all I remember,
   wanting more knowledge of them. In the mirror and in my kids
   I see them in my flesh. Wherever we are
   they parade in my brain and the expanding stories
   connect to the grey grainy pictures on the wall,
   as they hold their drinks or 20 years later
   hold grandchildren, pose with favourite dogs,
   coming through the light, the electricity, which the storm
   destroyed an hour ago, a tree going down by the highway
   so that now inside the kids play dominoes by candlelight
   and out here the thick rain static the spark of my match
                                           to a cigarette
   and the trees across the fields leaving me, distinct
   lonely in their own knife scars and cow-chewed bark
   frozen in the jagged light as if snapped in their run
   the branch arms waving to what was a second ago the dark sky
   when in truth like me they haven’t moved.
   Haven’t moved an inch from me.
   EARLY MORNING, KINGSTON
   TO GANANOQUE
   The twenty miles to Gananoque
   with tangled dust blue grass
   burned, and smelling burned
   along the highway
   is land too harsh for picnics.
   Deep in the fields
   behind stiff dirt fern
   nature breeds the unnatural.
   Escaping cows canter white
   then black and white
   along the median, forming out of mist.
   Crows pick at animal accidents,
   with swoops lift meals—
   blistered groundhogs, stripped snakes
   to arch behind a shield of sun.
   Somewhere in those fields
   they are shaping new kinds of women.
   A HOUSE DIVIDED
   This midnight breathing
   heaves with no sensible rhythm,
   is fashioned by no metronome.
   Your body, eager
   for the extra yard of bed,
   reconnoitres and outflanks;
   I bend in peculiar angles.
   This nightly battle is fought with subtleties:
   you get pregnant, I’m sure,
   just for extra ground
   – immune from kicks now.
   Inside you now’s another,
   thrashing like a fish,
   swinging, fighting
   for its inch already.
   THE DIVERSE CAUSES
       for than all erbys and treys renewyth a man and woman,
       and in lyke wyse lovers callyth to their mynde olde
       jantylnes and olde servyse, and many kynde dedes that
       was forgotyn by necylgence
   Three clouds and a tree
   reflect themselves on a toaster.
   The kitchen window hangs scarred,
   shattered by winter hunters.
   We are in a cell of civilized magic.
   Stravinsky roars at breakfast,
   our milk is powdered.
   Outside, a May god
   moves his paws to alter wind
   to scatter shadows of tree and cloud.
   The minute birds walk confident
   jostling the cold grass.
   The world not yet of men.
   We clean buckets of their sand
   to fetch water in the morning,
   reach for winter cobwebs,
   sweep up moths who have forgotten to waken.
   When the children sleep, angled
   behind their bottles, you can hear mice prowl.
   I turn a page
   careful not to break the rhythms
   of your sleeping head on my hip,
   watch the moving under your eyelid
   that turns like fire,
   and we have love and the god outside
   until ice starts to limp
   in brown hidden waterfalls,
   or my daughter burns the lake
   by reflecting her red shoes in it.
   SIGNATURE
   The car carried him
   racing the obvious moon
   beating in the trees like a white bird.
   Difficult to make words sing
   around your appendix.
   The obvious upsets me,
   everyone has scars which crawl
   into the mystery of swimming trunks.
   I was the first appendix in my family.
   My brother who was given the stigma
   of a rare blood type
   proved to have ulcers instead,
   The rain fell like applause as I approached the hospital.
   It takes seven seconds she said,
   strapped my feet,
   entered my arm.
   I stretched all senses
   on five
   the room closed on me like an eyelid.
   At night the harmonica plays,
   a whistler joins in respect.
   I am a sweating marble saint
   full of demerol and sleeping pills.
   A man in the armour of shining plaster
   walks to my door, then past.
   Imagine the rain
   falling like white bees on the sidewalk
   imagine Snyder
   high on poetry and mountains
   Three floors down
   my appendix
   swims in a jar.
   O world, I shall be buried all over Ontario
   HENRI ROUSSEAU AND FRIENDS
   for Bill Muysson
   In his clean vegetation
   the parrot, judicious,
   poses on a branch.
   The narrator of the scene,
   aware of the perfect fruits,
   the white and blue flowers,
   the snake with an ear for music;
   he presides.
   The apes
   hold their oranges like skulls,
   like chalices.
   They are below the parrot
   above the oranges—
   a jungle serfdom which
   with this order
   reposes.
   They are the ideals of dreams.
   Among the exactness,
   the symmetrical petals,
   the efficiently flying angels,
   there is complete liberation.
   The parrot is interchangeable;
   tomorrow in its place
   a waltzing man and tiger,
   brash legs of a bird.
   Greatness achieved
   they loll among textbook flowers
   and in this pose hang
   scattered like pearls
   in just as intense a society.
   On Miss Adelaide Milton de Groot’s walls,
   with Lillie P. Bliss in New York.
   And there too
   in spangled wrists and elbows
   and grand façades of cocktails
   are vulgarly beautiful parrots, appalled lions,
   the beautiful and the forceful locked in suns,
   and the slight, careful stepping birds.
   APPLICATION FOR A DRIVING LICENCE
   Two birds loved
   in a flurry of red feathers
   like a burst cottonball,
   continuing while I drove over them.
   I am a good driver, nothing shocks me.
   THE TIME AROUND SCARS
   A girl whom I’ve not spoken to
   or shared coffee with for several years
   writes of an old scar.
   On her wrist it sleeps, smooth and white,
   the size of a leech.
   I gave it to her
   brandishing a new Italian penknife.
   Look, I said turning,
   and blood spat onto her shirt.
   My wife has scars like spread raindrops
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   on knees and ankles,
   she talks of broken greenhouse panes
   and yet, apart from imagining red feet,
   (a nymph out of Chagall)
   I bring little to that scene.
   We remember the time around scars,
   they freeze irrelevant emotions
   and divide us from present friends.
   I remember this girl’s face,
   the widening rise of surprise.
   And would she
   moving with lover or husband
   conceal or flaunt it,
   or keep it at her wrist
   a mysterious watch.
   And this scar I then remember
   is medallion of no emotion.
   I would meet you now
   and I would wish this scar
   to have been given with
   all the love
   that never occurred between us.
   FOR JOHN, FALLING
   Men stopped in the heel of sun,
   hum of engines evaporated;
   the machine displayed itself bellied with mud
   and balanced – immense.
   No one ran to where
   his tensed muscles curled unusually,
   where jaws collected blood,
   the hole in his chest the size of fists,
   hands clutched to eyes like a blindness.
   Arched there he made
   ridiculous requests for air.
   And twelve construction workers
   what should they do but surround
   or examine the path of falling.
   And the press in bright shirts,
   a doctor, the foreman scuffing a mound,
   men. removing helmets,
   the machine above him
   shielding out the sun
   while he drowned
   in the dark orgasm of his mouth.
   THE GOODNIGHT
   With the bleak heron Paris
   imagine Philoctetes
   the powerful fat-thighed man,
   the bandaged smelling foot
   with rivers of bloodshot veins
   scattering like trails into his thighs: