seasonal

sparkle

Last night John was setting the table and I turned from making the gravy to see our little corner waiting for us. The lights twinkling and reflected in the dark window, the candles lit. We have had two Christmases on our own here in our nearly 44 years together. The first, Christmas of 2020, was a sad one in many ways. There’d been a surgery that had resulted in an unexpected injury and we’d been advised to keep to ourselves as much as possible to avoid exposing John to the COVID virus in his weakened state. I remember our children set up a WhatsApp group video call so that we could all share a festive drink together. On our phones. (It had come to that!) I roasted a duck and we sat at the table among the shades of those who usually joined us for Christmas, wondering about the future. But even by the New Year, everything had brightened. This year we chose not to travel and in retrospect, I think it was a good decision. The airports and ferry terminals were not happy places to be during the cold week leading up to Christmas. Everything that could go wrong did go wrong. I remember hearing a news item on one particular ferry cancellation because the throttle on the life-boat had frozen.

Last night was quiet but lovely. As I always do, I read the nativity passages from the Gospel of Luke as a grace. I’m not a Christian but somehow the words of the King James version carry a message that is worth hearing.

And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.

We had prime rib with port and shallot gravy, potatoes mashed with celeriac, roasted Brussels sprouts, and light high Yorkshire puddings. John made the trifle that was traditional in his family, garnished with a pink marzipan pig. The lovely Waterford wine glasses shone and when we tapped our glasses together, the crystal rang like a silvery bell. After dinner we watched A Christmas Carol. My father loved this story of how a miserly man is transformed by his encounters with his own past and his own choices to become a paragon of beneficence. We have an aging video tape of the 1951 production starring Alastair Sim and as usual it took some time to remember how to play it (so many remotes!) but then we settled in, each scene so familiar that we knew every line of dialogue. As for ghosts, I remembered the first time our children watched this version, having previously seen the animated Mickey Mouse one, and how Brendan exclaimed incredulously when the Alastair Sim character first appeared: That’s Scrooge??? I thought he was a duck!

So a quiet and mostly sweet Christmas day, birds fluttering around the feeder, the snow melting so quickly that the world was green by lunch time, so green this morning that I just looked up to see an elk grazing under the arbutus outside my study window. And then John saw one lying down in the moss just beyond the greenhouse, and then another, and another. A huge one at the bottom of the stairs leading to the upper deck. This one was nearly as tall as the greenhouse roof! (She’s on a slope above it.)

almost as tall as the greenhouse

The day after Christmas, a day of leftovers, birds, and the huge elk gathered around like carollers. Carollers who want bark and tree tips rather than mince pies but just as seasonal.

“her heart was like a bird’s nest” (Dylan Thomas)

basket of goodness

I am first up this morning. Coffee, a warm fire in the woodstove, some work on the quilt in progress. On the radio, Dylan Thomas reading “A Child’s Christmas in Wales”.

All the Christmases roll down towards the two-tongued sea, like a cold and headlong moon bundling down the sky that was our street; and they stop at the rim of the ice-edged, fish-freezing waves, and I plunge my hands in the snow and bring out whatever I can find.

How old was I when I first read that wonderful accumulation of Christmas memories? Probably 12 or 13. I remember that a friend gave me the recording as a gift and I remember I bought a little edition of the–well, it’s not a poem, but certainly a work of lyrical prose–anyway, I bought an edition illustrated with wood-engravings. One year in my late teens or very early 20s, I batiked some small cotton squares with images from the book–the sea, with its waves like commas; a few simple buildings–and made them into cards. I didn’t keep one for myself but wish I had. Listening this morning, I was reminded of all our Christmases here. We always put our tree up on Christmas Eve afternoon after an expedition up the mountain in search of the right one. Sometimes that happened on the day before Christmas Eve and I’d see the tree waiting in the woodshed for its grand entrance. We draped ivy around the leaded windows in our entrance hall, made garlands for the sliding glass doors, and put strings of little lights everywhere. (For the last 10 or so years, we’ve left the strings of little lights up year round.)

Quilting and listening, I wondered how many of my Christmas memories are layered with the images in Dylan Thomas’s wonderful prose?

“Were there postmen then, too?”

“With sprinkling eyes and wind-cherried noses, on spread, frozen feet they crunched up to the doors and mittened on them manfully. But all that the children could hear was a ringing of bells.”

“You mean that the postman went rat-a-tat-tat and the doors rang?”

“I mean that the bells that the children could hear were inside them.”

One year John and I were awake in bed long before the children. We were lying in the warm covers, listening for their voices, but instead, we heard…bells? Sleigh bells? Church bells? Here, in our woods, many miles from a church, and the woods green that year as no snow had fallen. It took us a few minutes to realize we were hearing a wind-chime hanging from the eaves of the sun-room off our bedroom, the long metal tubes ringing lightly together to make a most bell-like sound. We were willing to believe in something more magical, though, for those first moments.

In our house, no one came out to the kitchen where the stockings were hanging by the woodstove until John put on the Chieftains’ “Bells of Dublin” cd. The first cut, a grand ringing of bells at Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin, ushered in our morning as the tree lights came on, a fire was made, the coffee beans were ground, the scent of oranges filled the kitchen, and we opened our stockings by the woodstove.

This year, we are on our own. We were invited to Edmonton, Ottawa, and Victoria for Christmas itself but our travel experiences over the holiday haven’t been smooth (one year one of our toddlers spilled coffee over someone’s new leather coat on a crowded ferry, one year everyone got sick, one year we were stranded on the Malahat until we figured out it might work to follow a snow-plough all the way down to Victoria). Given the chaos in airports and ferry terminals just now, after the big snow fall and freeze-up, I think we made the right decision. Today we’ll bring in boughs. Not a tree, because there’s too much snow to go to our usual place, but yesterday John gathered a huge armload of Douglas fir, cedar, and huckleberry branches. They’re waiting in the woodshed and we’ll decorate them with some of the special baubles and stars. I feel a bit wistful. (Of course.) But the wonderful archive of memories–Dylan Thomas’s, my own– is a rich source of colour and music and even the unexpected sound of bells. I always identified with Auntie Hannah, the one who laced her tea with rum (because it was only once a year), who loved port and sang like a big-bosomed thrush, and who was in some ways the presiding muse of the piece.

Auntie Hannah, who had got on to the parsnip wine, sang a song about Bleeding Hearts and Death, and then another in which she  said her heart was like a Bird’s Nest.

My heart is like a bird’s nest this Christmas Eve morning, a winter nest, emptied of its little chicks, but open to the weather, still ready for the possibility of shelter. I wish every reader who finds this post the richest and warmest holiday, and a good sleep to follow.

Looking through my bedroom window, out into the moonlight and the unending smoke-colored snow, I could see the lights in the windows of all the other houses on our hill and hear the music rising from them up the long, steadily falling night. I turned the gas down, I got into bed. I said some words to the close and holy darkness, and then I slept.

the scent of paperwhites

paperwhites

What is that smell, I thought, as I came into the kitchen first thing, the sun barely up, the air outside frigid (as I discovered when I went out to hang the hummingbird feeder). I knew it, but couldn’t bring the origin to mind. Until I saw that the paperwhites I brought down from the sunroom yesterday were beginning to open. A single blossom filled the kitchen. Every year I pot up some paperwhite bulbs in pebbles and forget them. Until they bloom. And then it’s every solstice, every Christmas.

It’s cold here on the Sechelt peninsula. Colder than it’s ever been in our 40+ plus years. Snow on the ground, birds in great numbers under the feeder, waiting their turn. I didn’t have suet the other day so mixed lamb fat from Monday’s birthday roast with peanut butter, shelled sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, and pumpkin seeds, chilled it in a little tart pan, then put the disk in the suet holder. The juncos and chickadees love it. I was worried this morning about the Anna’s hummingbirds who’ve been coming daily to the feeder hanging outside the dining area window but about 10 minutes after I’d hung out the feeder (brought inside overnight to keep the contents from freezing), one of them, a female, came and drank deeply, hovering on the rim, then drinking again.

Yesterday, on the way back from our swim and errands, we saw coyote tracks winding up the driveway (we were on foot, pulling the bins of groceries on a sleigh, because there’s too much snow to get the car up to the house), and the tracks of a snowshoe hare coursing in and out of the bush.

This morning there’s a good fire and pinky-grey light over the tops of the snow-laden firs. I’ll listen to old carols, dip the orange peel I candied last week in dark Belgian chocolate, and work on the essay I began two months ago and which shows no sign of coming to a conclusion. So maybe not an essay after all but a book-length memoir? Who can say. Not me, tied up in knots over the memories revisited in its sentences, its evocations of a difficult time in my life. But it’s warm inside, the kitchen filled with the scent of paperwhites while outside the birds are gathered for their breakfast. Just beyond the house, the coyotes are tracking through the snow, perhaps in pursuit of the hare. I won’t say “Let it snow” because there’s enough for anyone. Any living thing.

O come, Thou Dayspring, from on high,
And cheer us by Thy drawing nigh;
Disperse the gloomy clouds of night,
And death’s dark shadows put to flight.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

“I feel like I’m knockin’ on heaven’s door” (Bob Dylan)

seeds

First things first. It’s cold this morning, with some snow, and the birds have emptied the feeder once. When I went to replenish, they were skittering around, impatient for more. I try to feed the Steller’s jays on the post outside the sliding doors to the deck because otherwise they monopolize the feeder. They chase the smaller birds away. So I spread some seed on the bare ground in the woodshed, swept snow away under the feeder and sprinkled some seeds there, and put more pumpkin seeds out for the jays. They prefer peanuts but you know what they say about beggars.

Inside we are warm. We’re burning fir, which gives a long deep heat. It’s John’s birthday and the plan was for a couple of friends to come for a celebratory dinner: homemade chicken liver pâté with green peppercorns from Madagascar; roast lamb stuffed with olives, pine nuts, and herbs; tattooed potatoes; focaccia with flaky salt and rosemary; and chocolate torte with sour cherries. I gave John a bottle of Hester Creek Cabernet Franc, which would be perfect with the lamb. The friends called earlier to say that they don’t think they can come because of the snow. In our area the highway is kept clear but many of us live down hilly winding roads that become treacherous in weather like today’s. We’ll see what happens to the snow by late afternoon. Whatever transpires, alone or with friends, we will eat well tonight.

This morning, in the quiet kitchen, I was thinking about the years. When we met, John was 31. Today he is 75. To me, he looks pretty much the same. He has the same laugh, gets a particular look on his face when he reads something really good — this morning, it was the first poem in Phil Hall’s The Ash Bell, a stunning book (and another birthday gift). One grandson sent a picture he drew for Grandad, a boat with 2 funnels, and all of us on it. He loved that.

The years. This is the season when I feel their accumulation, their bounty, and also their sorrows. For so many years, a large group of friends came to celebrate John’s birthday. I remember one snowy afternoon when they kept coming to the door, having left their cars down the highway because our long driveway was too difficult to drive up, bearing gifts, flowers, overnight bags (because several came up for the event from Vancouver; 3 of them are now dead and one has ghosted us for her own reasons), and it was like being in a Chekhov story as beloved friends came in out of the snow, stamping their boots, and bringing the brisk cold air into the kitchen. The fire was blazing, as it is this morning, and maybe lamb was being stuffed with rosemary and slivers of garlic, wine on the sideboard, bread baking, a cake waiting in the porch for the sparklers to be lit, the old songs sung.

I put a cd on the stereo earlier, a compilation I asked my daughter to make probably 15 years ago, maybe longer, when we had slow dial-up internet and she was at university with high-speed; I wanted to hear all my favourite songs at one go. “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”,

With your silhouette when the sunlight dimsInto your eyes where the moonlight swimsAnd your matchbook songs and your gypsy hymnsWho among them would try to impress you?
 
a few by the Rolling Stones (I’m not a huge fan but always loved “Play with Fire” and “Wild Horses”), a couple of old Van Morrison songs, a single Elvis Presley (“Suspicious Minds”), Linda Ronstadt, Bruce Springsteen, a single U2,
 
Through the storm, we reach the shoreYou give it all but I want moreAnd I’m waiting for you
 
Billy Joel’s beautiful “And So it Goes”,
 
And this is why my eyes are closed
It’s just as well for all I’ve seen

And so it goes, and so it goes
And you’re the only one who knows
 
and finally, the song that is also the ringtone on my phone: “Knocking on Heaven’s Door”.
 
They date me, don’t they, these old chestnuts? Yet listening to them this morning while the fire snapped and glowed, while the birds emptied the feeder of sunflower seeds and kernels of hard wheat, it was every birthday we’ve ever celebrated in this house (and we moved in on the eve of John’s 35th, 40 years ago yesterday, in a wild storm, the power out, one window leaking, no stairs to the front door, and a kitchen sink but no counters or cupboards). It felt like an adventure. It still does, here in the warmth of the fire, snow falling, remembering (and yes, wishing, wishing) the winter afternoon when friends knocked on the door, in snow, and came in bearing gifts.
 
I feel like I’m knockin’ on heaven’s door

“a memory of watching coho spawn in the creek near your house”

pale fish

You do this for the process and what you learn along the way. That waxed dental floss sewn along lines with a basting stitch can be pulled tight for water, that waxing a fish into plain cotton with a mixture of paraffin and beeswax, then dipping the cotton in blue dye gives you a memory of watching coho spawn in the creek near your house, a cycle that has been going on since the last ice age at least. That others have dipped cloth into dye and worn the pigment on their hands for weeks afterwards.
                                    –from “The Blue Etymologies”, Blue Portugal and Other Essays

redux: wild mountain thyme

Note: this was two years, anticipating our first Christmas ever on our own. This year we will also celebrate alone. Busy airports don’t feel safe to me this time of year. We will save our visits for a quieter time. The other day, in Sechelt, the gravel-voiced folk singer was outside the liquor store again, though not singing “Wild Mountain Thyme” and at the mailboxes, the delivery woman said it’s a good idea to collect your mail daily because the thefts have begun again. So the spiral repeats itself, curling in as we approach the longest night.

thyme

Some days are easier than others. For me, for us, for all of us. Yesterday was dark. When we went to pick up mail from the day before, we saw that all the parcel boxes at the community mail boxes had been pried open. This was the second time. Someone has been going around the Coast, stealing parcels from the community mail boxes. In a year when our lives are reduced and constrained, when so many people are depending on Canada Post for parcel deliveries and Christmas mail in general. There was confusion at the Post Office itself when I stopped in to mail my final family parcel. Usually you have a key to the parcel box in your individual mail box if you have a parcel. Or if the parcel is large, you have a card asking you to pick it up at the post office. Can I assume that I didn’t have a parcel in the box that was pried open if I didn’t have a key or a card, I asked. But no one could say for sure. It turned out I did have a parcel card in that day’s mail, for a parcel that hadn’t yet gone out. I wanted to ask if two break-ins in as many weeks meant that the mail person would no longer leave parcels in the community mail boxes but the post lady was already cross with me about a postal code she insisted was wrong on the parcel I was trying to mail so I left in tears.

Tears that were never far from the surface throughout the day. Someone scolded me in the 1st grocery story (long story). I got wet everywhere I went. John was grumpy and although I know he has more reason than anyone to be grumpy these days (paralyzed foot….), I took it personally. In the library stacks I cried. I cried as I loaded groceries in the back of the car from the cart after my stop at the second grocery store, unbagged because the cashier spoke sharply to me when I said I’d use my own bags. You’ll have to put things in your cart, then, and do it out in the mall area, she said. We can’t have your bags on the counter. (I know this. I’ve been shopping at this store for 40 years, and once a week throughout the pandemic. I wouldn’t have put my bags on the counter. But I didn’t want to cry in front of her so I just wheeled my cart out to the car with the groceries heaped in any old way.) Wiping my face with the back of my hand as I closed the trunk of the car, I suddenly stopped. Was that “Wild Mountain Thyme” I was hearing? It was. The older fellow who plays his guitar outside the liquor store, the one who usually plays old Gordon Lightfoot songs, who sings with a world-weary voice, and into whose guitar case I’ve dropped many twoonies over the years, was strumming and singing (behind a face-shield).

O the summer time has come
And the trees are sweetly blooming
And wild mountain thyme
Grows around the purple heather.
Will you go, lassie, go?

Some days are hard. You think of all the people who will be alone this Christmas, waiting for parcels or cards, you think of the cashiers saying the same thing over and over, hoping that someone doesn’t infect them, the nursing staff in the hospitals consoling, consoling (I think of how kind they were to John when he was in pain), the people working in post offices trying to do their best with mountains of deliveries to boxes that are clearly not safe, the families lined up at food banks, and you wish, wish for the beauty of summers in years gone by, the garden flourishing, your loved ones sleeping in every bed in your house, the long pink sunsets, and even the scent of thyme you’ve cut for the lamb you are preparing for the barbecue, enough for everyone.

I will range through the wilds
And the deep land so dreary
And return with the spoils
To the bower o’ my dearie.
Will ye go lassie go ?

what I loved (with thanks to Nazim Hikmet)

Is it too early to write a reprise of this year, 2022, what happened, what I loved? Maybe it’s too early but this morning, a warm fire in the woodstove, bread rising in the big bowl, I am thinking about the months that led to this one. Some of them were long. Last January, for example. It was cold and it went on forever. But in February, our family from Ottawa came for two weeks and our daughter and her beau came for part of that. We had delicious meals, all of us together, and the weather was often mild enough for long walks, even a swim in Ruby Lake where Forrest and I stood talking on the sand afterwards, wrapped in towels as though it was summer. (The giveaway that it wasn’t summer? My tuque.) There was star-watching with grandsons, and the beauty of a pod of white-sided dolphins at Francis Point.

summer in February

I just remembered the stars
I love them too
whether I’m floored watching them from below
or whether I’m flying at their side

It was a pleasure to do the final work on Blue Portugal & Other Essays in early spring, preparing it for a late spring publication. Everything about the process of working with the team at the University of Alberta Press was positive. John printed bookmarks to send to those who bought the book and I spent a few afternoons pasting scraps of indigo-dyed cotton onto them and fastening them with akoya shell buttons and red silk thread. And when the books themselves arrived, I kept going into my study to look at them over and over again. I wonder if a book of mine has ever had a lovelier cover?

book and keepsake

A few events to promote it through the wonders of Zoom, interviews, discussions, phone calls from generous friends, and the sense, reading it myself as a book after months of fixing commas, considering placement of photographs, etc, that my life has accumulated. So much living in the book! Travels and friendships, discoveries of family history, memories even of train trips across Europe.

I didn’t know I loved so many things and I had to wait until sixty
    to find it out sitting by the window on the Prague-Berlin train
    watching the world disappear as if on a journey of no return

There were some disappointments. A planned trip to Ottawa had to be cancelled because that family all developed COVID19. (We were going to have a little party to celebrate Jen Falkner’s Fish Gotta Swim Editions novella, Susanna Hall, Her Book, in Forrest and Manon’s garden but had to cancel that too.) By the middle of May I was swimming daily in Ruby Lake, though John insisted it was still too cool. I’ve come to regular swimming late in my life, though I’ve always loved water. It was a health concern 7 years ago that flung me into the local pool 3 times a week during the months I can’t swim in the lake, with daily morning swims in the lake from mid-May to early October, and I feel I’ve become part seal. (I have the body fat to prove it.)

I didn’t  know I loved clouds

Outdoor dinners with friends now that everyone is vaccinated (at least 3 times). Mornings on Joe and Solveigh’s deck, talking among the flowers, a conversation we began in the summer of 1985 and which has continued, drifting out over Oyster Bay with the sound of ducks, a boat in the distance.

I didn’t know I loved the sea
                                                  except the sea of Azov
or how much

The summer was endless. John’s cousin and his wife coming, followed by all 3 of our families, overlapping, children racing around in the moss, playing football and soccer, swimming with us each morning, helping me with the watering, going for picnics and swims at Trail Bay, followed by ice-cream.

I never knew I liked
night descending like a tired bird

I thought summer adventures were over but then Howie called and asked did we want to go up Princess Louisa Inlet on his boat with Andreas and Sharon, overnight, and wild horses couldn’t have stopped me from saying yes, and even now I am still remembering what it was like to wake early, push up through the skylight above our berth, and see this (John’s photo):

heaven

Later in September, we drove to Alberta to see our Edmonton family, taking a few days for the trip, stopping at Nicola Lake for a swim, eating dinner at the Brownstone in Kamloops, following first the Thompson River, then the Fraser, then the Athabasca.

and here I’ve loved rivers all this time
whether motionless like this they curl skirting the hills

The trip back was a little fraught, with tire problems in Radium, but the long stretches of highway through rich valleys, mountains, trees turning, bighorn sheep grazing, farm stands with squash and bins of apples, and everything so beautiful on the cold morning out of Grand Forks (leaving early, because we stayed in the worst possible motel). the lights on just before 6 a.m. at the Copper Eagle in Greenwood so we were able to eat muffins hot from the oven and cups of dark coffee before going on to Osoyoos, Keremeos, Princeton.

I never knew I loved roads
even the asphalt kind

A second trip was planned for Ottawa, with a promised picnic and maybe even a swim in the Madawaska River, but this time we were the ones who developed COVID19 and had to cancel. Two actual readings, my first since the pandemic, with generous audiences listening to me talk about Blue Portugal and read from it, not minding my tears as I remembered the magic of Ukraine 3 years earlier. The weeks pass, the months, with swimming, with daily work on both a novel and an essay that is becoming a memoir, they pass with stitching on quilts, planting bulbs, garlic, getting parcels ready to mail to my family for Christmas, which we will spend here, just the two of us this year, before heading to the south end of the Baja peninsula for a couple of weeks of sun and ocean swimming.

I know the river will bring new lights you’ll never see
I know we live slightly longer than a horse but not nearly as long
    as a crow
I know this has troubled people before
                                            and will trouble those after me
I know all this has been said a thousand times before
                                           and will be said after me

Note: the passages of poetry are from Nazim Hikmet’s extraordinary “Things I Didn’t Know I Love”, translated from the Turkish by Randy Blasing and Mutlu Konuk

“In the narrative that follows, then” (Myrna Kostash)

single woman

It was May, 2017, when Myrna Kostash and I were both guests of the Word on the Lake Writers Festival in Salmon Arm. We’d met several times over the years and I remember we’d talked of our shared Ukrainian heritage. Hers was a daily living part of her. She knew the language, knew the Ukrainian Orthodox religion and its saints; mine was something I was just beginning to discover. At the gala event, I remember Myrna read something from a work-in-progress about finding an unknown ancestor, a writer, in a photograph and trying to trace both the image and its story. John leaned to me and said quietly in my ear: You have so much in common. He knew I’d also discovered a name, my surname, attached to a writer in a village not far from where my grandfather had been born, a writer who founded a small museum. Myrna and I had a drink together on the sunny patio a day or so later and she encouraged me to travel to Ukraine. She’d been several times, maybe more, and I remember she mentioned the company whose name had been given to me as a sort of secret password at the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village, east of Edmonton, in 2015, a moment that is part of “Museum of the Multitude Village” in Blue Portugal & Other Essays.

You were walking just beyond the pigsty, beyond the wide shorn fields with stooks of hay standing like men waiting for winter, you were pushing the stroller with your baby granddaughter, your husband and son (the baby’s father), when a wagon drawn by two horses turned onto the narrow road. Would you like a ride, asked the woman sitting on a bale of straw, scarf tied neatly under her chin, and an apron over her skirt and rough cotton blouse. Of course you wanted a ride. The horses stood quietly while, between the three of you, you hoisted the stroller onto the wagon, and then you climbed on too. Where do you come from, asked the woman, and you knew the rules at this living museum: she was in character, a Ukrainian immigrant from the 1930s, and she would act and talk as though the years between then and now hadn’t yet occurred. Ivankivtsi, you replied. And then she whispered, Have you been there yourself? And you whispered back, No, no, I don’t even know how to begin to find it. Cobblestone Freeway, she said in a low voice, a woman passing on information best told in secret. Then she was herself again, joshing with the driver, talking about the harvest.

Myrna said she’d gone to her family village, Tulova, as part of a Cobblestone tour. That set the wheels in motion, not for the next year, though we booked a tour for fall, 2018, but had to cancel because of health issues, but the year after that, 2019, 6 months before the pandemic, and well before the Russian invasion, wagon wheels, train wheels, the wheels of the car that took me to my grandfather’s village, the van that drove us to Tulova, Myrna’s village, where lamps glowed on the graves in the cemetery, to Kolomyia, Kosiv, to Tiudiv, Bukovets, to Kryvorivnya where a priest kissed a gospel already worn thin, though not to Valyava, where the Kishkan who was a writer had lived. When I met my grandfather’s relations (my relations!) later, unexpectedly — they’d learned of my visit to the village where I wasn’t able to find them and had tracked me down to a hotel in the Carpathian mountains–, I asked about Vasily Kishkan. They weren’t sure of a relationship, though probably there was one, and Nadya, who called me her sister, said, He wrote a book, though she wasn’t sure what kind of book.

Last week Myrna’s new book arrived at Talewind Books in Sechelt. Ghosts in a Photograph. I’ve been trying to read it slowly, savouring each word, even waking in the small hours to read just a few more pages before trying to sleep again, my head filled with stories, hers and my own. In her Foreword, she talks about the form her books takes, using fragmentary bits and pieces of source materials, song lyrics, hand-drawn maps, biographies, autobiographies, conference papers, scholarly works.

In the narrative that follows, then, my voice echoes different sources and takes different forms–straightforward narration, storytelling, intervention in other people’s texts, speculation, second-guessing, and argumentation, often with my own previously published texts.

As I read this, I was agreeing with my whole heart. Sometimes this is what we do. Sometimes we’ve written what we know, what we can guess, and then later, we find out more. Does that make what we’ve already thought deeply about, and written about, wrong? Or is what others have written, with knowledge of the photograph, the map, the newly discovered letters, wrong? Nope. I think of it as an ongoing and living history, a hybrid history, always changing a little, evolving in a way. One generation hides or submerges the story, to survive. Another generation discovers and attempts to decode. Twice now I’ve published books with versions of my family stories and maybe there will be a third book because I keep finding out new things. The essay “Tokens” in Euclid’s Orchard, for example: it’s about my mother, who never knew her biological parents, apart from a few strands of, well, not story, exactly, but hearsay. A year or two after I’d written the essay, I submitted a DNA sample to one of the companies specializing in that sort of thing. And a year or two after that (maybe a year after the book came out), I found out who my mother’s biological father was. My mother is dead; but she has living relatives. She had two half-brothers, now deceased, and they had children. I’m not ready to begin that particular adventure yet but one day, perhaps.

So I’m half-way through Myna’s book, a wonderful and meticulous work of love. And as I read, I’m remembering the photograph I found last fall, a group of men, several women, and even a baby in front of the Ukrainian Hall in Drumheller:

ukrainian hall

That man, second on the right in the back row: I’m almost certain he’s my grandfather. When my archivist son was here last February, I showed him. We compared it to the small hoard of photographs I have of my grandfather, and Forrest said, Yes, I think you’re right.

The photograph at the top of this post is a ghost who has become part of my daily life. I don’t know who she is. This image is one of only a handful of photographs left as part of a small secret hoard of my grandfather’s papers  I took from my parents’ home after they died. I say “secret” because I didn’t know about them until it was too late to ask but my father kept almost everything about his early family life secret. Or at least he didn’t — wouldn’t— talk about it unless he’d had a few too many whiskys and he’d become maudlin. Was this woman a sweetheart my grandfather left behind when he came to North America in 1907? I showed her to my new-found relatives in Ukraine but they didn’t recognize her. She’s become the focus of part of a novel I’m working on but maybe she needs to be more.

What is it I want? I want everything. I want to know the long line of my family going back centuries, I want to know their houses, their gardens, their sorrows, their hopes, the names of each and every one of them. I want to know about the feuds and the weddings. When Myrna finds a baptismal certificate for her maternal grandfather and a historian friend helps her to read it (it’s in both Latin and a form of Ukrainian unfamiliar to her):

Suddenly, out of the void I had assumed was my grandfather’s genealogy, I have great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents, Ivan, Hryhori, Mykhailo, Anastasia, Anna, and two Marias.

I want this also. I want their names, the colour of their eyes, how it felt to go out in the mornings when frost was still on the tall grass, how it felt to smooth the hair of a beloved, how it felt, how it felt, all those years ago that are my years too.

redux: “Everything I am remembering is burnished with moonshine…”

Note: 3 years ago. I was still starlit with the memory of my trip to Ukraine a few months earlier. Still thinking I’d return soon. (And who knows…) This weekend I’m preparing the boxes to mail to my children and their families and have entered the spiral of the season.

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I am preparing some gift boxes to mail to the children I won’t see this Christmas. What goes into them: small gifts, boxes of buttercrunch (to be made this afternoon), gingerbread (made this morning),

gingerbread

some homemade items, and this year, rushnyk from Ukraine. Rushnyk cloth is used for rituals and ceremonies; when we arrived somewhere, we would be met with a tray of tiny glasses of horilka, or moonshine, a little bowl of salt, and a loaf of bread wrapped in the most beautiful cloth embroidered with symbolic elements I learned to decode, or at least some of them. They speak a language I sometimes understand. A little. In churches they draped the ikons. They were also a means for women to communicate. They hold wishes, dreams, history, and the cycles that bind us to each other and our homes: fertility, childbirth, harvest, marriage, death, the afterlife.

rusknyk

Sometimes I can’t believe we were actually able to travel to Ukraine and I’ve dreamed of the moment when my relatives came in the door of our hotel, presenting us with champagne and a beautiful rushnyk I’ll use to wrap bread the next time my family is here. Somehow these threads become more important to me as I age and as the occasions for my family to gather become more complicated. The final essay in the collection I’ve mostly finished is about Ukraine—what I hoped to find there and what I did find.

Everything I am remembering is burnished with moonshine, the taste of cherry-filled varenyky, sweet butter on dark bread. Mornings I swam in an unheated pool, the bottom littered with drowned insects, while all around me mist rose from the valley below our mountain slope. The mountains above me, source of the Dniester, Tisza and Vistula Rivers, the upper streams of the Black Cheremosh and the White, the Prut. I thought of those mountains forming a long spine to the Beskids in the Czech Republic, where my grandmother was born, 2 years after my grandfather, though they didn’t meet until 1919, in the badlands of Alberta, she a widow, and him? I have no idea of his romantic history, though in his small archive of papers there are two photographs, one of two women, taken in Chernivtsi, one of whom resembles him enough to be a sister, and another of a woman with a generous mouth, dressed in a fur vest like the Hutsul women wore. Everything I am remembering, burnished with light too faint to read by, like the moonlight that came through my curtains at Sokilske, haunting the room like old history.

–from “Museum of the Multiple Village”, part of Blue Portugal.

“And yet there is always less of it” (Adam Zagajewski)

candied peel

This morning I was going to write about panforte. The other day I candied orange and lemon peel for it, and I have figs, hazelnuts, and spices to mix with honey and unsalted butter, a little dark cocoa so that the panforte is nero. I was going to write about last year’s panforte, packaged and ribboned and tucked into Christmas parcels, and how we ate the last one in January, with sherry in the beautiful Waterford glasses passed on to us by Rosemary and Glen. I was going to write about the traditional Christmas treats as palimpsests, part of the layers we preserve, remember, forget (did my mother make light or dark fruitcake? I don’t recall. But for years I made delicious white chocolate cake dense with golden dried fruit…), prepare for early, or late, and how we honour the past by saving orange peels, drying apples (and even smoking them, as I did the fall I returned from Ukraine, to replicate the taste of uzvar), hoarding nuts and chocolate, and silver dragées for the trifle. (In my fridge, there are two pink marzipan pigs, one to send to Gatineau and one to remain here.) I was going to write about panforte.

panforte

But then I found myself re-reading a poem I read yesterday. I’d opened the New Yorker that I’d just taken from our mailbox at the Hallowell corner and there was this:

The Old Painter On A Walk

In his pockets treats for local dogs
He sees almost nothing now
He almost doesn’t notice trees suburban villas
He knows every stone here
I painted it all tried to paint my thoughts
And caught so little
The world still grows it grows relentlessly
And yet there is always less of it
            –Adam Zagajewski (1945-2021), trans. Clare Cavanagh

It made me quiet. It made me cry. A poem by a poet I’ve loved for years, a poem reminding me of my own failing eyesight, the world I have cherished and am watching diminished by war, hunger, drought, climate change, the incivility of our social and political systems, and I cried then, cried again as I read it this morning, just now, the magazine open on my desk where I came to make notes about panforte. And yet there is always less of it