This home owner decorates their home for Halloween and the children love it, on their way home from school you might see ten or more children walking among these ghoulish characters. It's Halloween and the children are happy. On the corner of Chester and Montclair:
Monday, October 31, 2022
Sunday, October 30, 2022
"The night is darkening round me" by Emily Bronte
This is the Sulpician Seminary, the College de Montreal, on Sherbrooke Street West near Fort and Towers, near Atwater; that is one of the towers. Taken in 2013. |
Saturday, October 29, 2022
This little sparrow
This little sparrow had a great time jumping around the rim of the bird bath, then he'd stop and have a drink of water. He was a happy little sparrow, now he's moved on, hanging out at someone else's bird bath or on some maple tree branch near here.
Look at the little sparrow and don't worry about anything!
Friday, October 28, 2022
Last days of October
This has been a spectacular October, the autumn leaves have never been more colourful, tree lined streets with yellow or red leaves, and it's been mild, +24 C earlier this week. Who could ask for better than that? And birds love this mild weather. I guess they were mostly young robins hanging out at the bird bath, jostling each other for a position, acting like adolescents, that were here a few weeks ago. The younger robins seem to have migrated, but the older robins are still here and not as eager to leave since the weather has been so good. Robins, blue jays, cardinals, and other birds, visiting the bird bath; and one has a feeling of affection for them and happy I could do something for the birds, provide this bird bath and keep it filled with clean water. They give me more than they take, a bird bath and some clean water. You get the idea of the back yard and the birds from these photographs, taken from our dining room window.
This is a second bird bath, it's the pedestal of an old bird bath with a plastic plate glued onto it to hold about a two inch deep amount of water. Not very elegant but it works... |
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Where poems come from
For the most part, poets don't choose what they write about; a poem is given to us, it comes from deep within the psyche. Of course, everything takes a lot of work; poets need a foundation on which to write their poems, this includes reading, education, and years of commitment to poetry and writing. As all poets know, when a poem is given to them it has to be listened to; some poets get up in the middle of the night to write down a poem before it is forgotten. The most famous example of losing the thread of a poem when the writing is interrupted is Coleridge's anecdote of the "visitor from Porlock"; because of this interruption Coleridge felt that one of his most famous poems, "Kubla Khan", was never fully completed.
What a poet writes is an expression of deeply felt psychic issues. The soul deciphers what it perceives and begins writing (or dictating) a poem. Over time the writing will change, but what doesn't change is the need to write poems. Poetry is one of the places in life where we see the surrender of conscious choice; it is a demand on us by the soul, a demand that we listen, a demand to write our poems as they are given to us, and a demand to be faithful to writing poetry over a lifetime.
We poets were once a tribe, as Margaret Laurence described the community of writers back in the 1960s; but the tribe has broken up, it has dispersed, it has been fragmented. Nevertheless, what we write about doesn't really change; perennial themes supersede what is newly fashionable or entertaining. What has importance is our creativity and depth of perception, our visceral need to write poetry, and our knowledge that after everything else has disappeared from life, it is poetry that will still be there. This is my experience.
Monday, October 24, 2022
"A Noiseless Patient Spider" by Walt Whitman
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Spider web outside a church
When I noticed these spider webs outside of St. Philip's Anglican Church, I thought they were a Halloween decoration. But they are actual spider webs, I think made more visible by moisture on the filaments. There they hang where a spider made them, ponderous and visible.
Thursday, October 20, 2022
Morning at the hidden trail
In the air, the smell of wood smoke; passing just below the ridge, a train, a freight train. A few birds singing. No one else out walking here today. Morning of October 19th in Montreal.
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
Live stream, an oasis in Namibia and fat bears having lunch
Some of my favourite videos on YouTube are live streams; for instance, here is a desert oasis located in Namibia, in South Africa, and you can see different animals and birds visiting this oasis at any time of the day the animals are peaceful, they come and go and they don't bother each other. It's actually quite interesting.
Another Live Stream are of the fat bears, grabbing a salmon for supper and preparing for months of hibernation. BTW, they are actually referred to as "fat bears", they will soon hibernate and need all the fat they can put on. Here is a sample of the fat bears:
Live stream is a stationary video camera aimed at a specific site and what you are seeing is what is currently happening at that site. Sorry to be simplistic but this may be new to some people. If nothing is happening on screen you can go back about twenty-four hours by moving the red time line at the bottom of the screen to when something is happening.
Something I realized when watching the Namibia live stream is that a bird bath is a small oasis for birds; the birds come to drink some water, wash, preen, and socialize. It's a meeting place for birds.
My first experience with live stream was in January 2021 when the truckers' convoy arrived in Ottawa where they stayed for about three weeks, ending with Justin Trudeau's invoking of the Emergency Act. I'll discuss the Ottawa live stream event another time.
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Louis Dudek in Paradise
to the city below;
this bitter winter
ending with a death.
When a poet dies
a light goes out,
a bit of brilliance
At the funeral, I listen to Louis' poems
2) that was then, this is now
Darrell Morrisey? She was erased as an artist,
her work discarded by her family after her death, at age 33,
in 1930, it soon became as though she never existed;
of his life, and our life-long work as poets,
the vision of art, the act of creation,
the company of poets—
only knowing that he likes what he’s listening to,
--------------------------
Thursday, October 13, 2022
Fall leaves here in the West End
You can't get much further west than here in the West End of Montreal, we are adjacent to the Town of Montreal West. The leaves have changed colour or are in the process of changing colour and it's good having four distinct seasons, each season and each month in that season is a little or a lot different than the preceding season, and the next season coming up.
At Loyola Park |
On Fielding Avenue |
Corner of Chester and Belmore |