Thursday, July 30, 2009

J.J. Locke and "The Lover's Bench"

I recently met my friend J.J. Locke early one morning in the garden. I was surprised to learn that Jack, who hails from Calgary but has lived in Montreal for a number of years, had never been to the Botanical Garden before. As I took him on a quick tour, he was astonished at the size of the garden and the unique beauty of the many theme gardens. A baker by profession, he revealed that he also occasionally works at installing koi ponds. He was impressed by the pond in the Japanese garden and we stopped to admire its spectacular koi.


With the overcast sky threatening an imminent downpour, we decided to head over to the exhibition garden, where if necessary we could find shelter in one several large pergolas.

Of particular interest in the exhibition garden is Lea Vivot’s controversial bronze entitled “The Lover's Bench.” I remember the sculpture when it was on Sherbrooke Street near McGill University. I prefer it here in the garden tucked away under the trees at the head of the small pool and fountain. Here is a playful photo of Jack posing with the three lovers depicted in the sculpture.


I met Jack when he first came to Montreal. He was living at the time in my own neighbourhood of Verdun. Jack is a real organizer and established a memorable poetry reading series at a former Verdun cafe called “Van Gogh’s Ear.” He has since founded The Foundation for Public Poetry and last September organized the highly successful Montreal Public Poetry Festival. This year he is putting together a collection of poems in honour of Leonard Cohen’s 75th birthday. Jack is hoping to raise money through book sales and a Gala to finance a Writer-in-Residence Programme at Westmount High, Cohen’s former school.

But today we were both concentrating on the garden, which after so much rain this summer was lush and green. We each picked a spot—fortunately the rain held off—and settled down to write. At the end of our writing session, Jack presented me with the following villanelle composed on the spot.



As a poetry form, the villanelle has been around for at least three hundred years. With its frequent refrains and complex rhyming, it has its origins in native songs. The name itself derives from the Italian villa, or country house, where noblemen went to relax and get closer to nature, making this a form of poetry ideally suited to writing about a garden.

Here is Jack’s poem—probably the first ever villanelle inspired by the Montreal Botanical Garden.

Pondering My Future At Jardin Botanique

For K.E.S.

Pondering my future at Jardin Botanique
The rain impacts in a craterous way
Surrounded by flowers, yet, only one I seek.

The grey above cannot bring about bleak
Nor can my departure from earning pay
Pondering my future at Jardin Botanique

I see her eyes reflect from stones in creek
I see her eyes in every lily day
Surrounded by flowers, yet, only one I seek.

When peace of parks and poetry become chic
The message of birds we'll learn to obey
Pondering my future at Jardin Botanique

As proud leaves drop I hear them speak
Returning to you pushes my pain away
Surrounded by flowers, yet, only one I seek.

I sense your scent when I press cheek to cheek
I sense you worry when I'm away
Pondering my future at Jardin Botanique
Surrounded by flowers, yet, only one I seek.



J.J. Locke





While Jack worked on his villanelle, I wrote a few tanka in one of the pergolas. If tanka can be considered "a quick check on the state of the heart," then here's what I'm thinking about at the moment.

in the garden
at the height of summer
if I could choose
only one
which flower would I pick?

*

Adam alone
in paradise
rain on the climbing vines
even before
he dreamt of Eve

*

told
I lack subtlety
still
there’s nothing shy
about this crimson begonia

*
along the stone wall
a clematis’s
lush flowering
the need for love
overwhelms me

*

the clematis’s leaves
are beautiful too
but this bee
like a man
goes straight for the flower




Thursday, July 23, 2009

In the Rose Garden with Ann Lloyd


Opened in 1976, the Rose Garden of the MontrĂ©al Botanical Garden stretches over 2.5 hectares, with some one hundred beds and nearly 10,000 roses from over one thousand different varieties. In 2003, it was recognized internationally with the “Award of Garden Excellence” from the World Federation of Rose Societies, making it one of the first rose gardens outside of Europe and the youngest ever to receive this highly prestigious award.

that man
thousands of miles
away
roses in bloom
at my feet


I invited my friend Ann Lloyd to meet me one morning in the rose garden. Ann is originally from Wales and the author of Lurching into the Looney Bin, her unique guide on how to prepare for dementia, stroke or other medical calamity. Her clever use of wit and humour makes it easier--and even fun--to ponder the unthinkable. Her book has been garnering a fair amount of attention from health care professionals and Ann was just back from a conference sponsored by the women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Canada at Laurentian University in Sudbury, where she was one of their keynote speakers.

no one promised
us a rose garden
yet here we sit
on a sunny bench
in a sea of blooms


Ann is also a talented poet and I looked forward to a morning of writing with her. And where better than the rose garden at its peak! Ann immediately gravitated to the bronze statue of The First Jewels, produced in New York in 1973 by Romanian artist and concentration camp survivor, Alice Winant.
Ideally placed among the rose beds, The First Jewels captures the whimsical mood of a young woman, but there’s an unmistakeable air of sadness too. We settled on a bench nearby and Ann later sent me this beautiful lyric poem.
*
In the Rose Garden: Alice's Girl
She is here
Alice's girl
bronzed and curved
statuesque
amongst the roses.
Arms outstretched but empty.
her necklace gone,
sad past Romanian.
Someone, come
necklace her with roses!
festoon her with blossoms!
Let her hands pink with petals crushed.
Rose perfume her.
Drape her, garland her,
bring her back to summer's life.
Sad statuesque
young maiden
Alice's past
love lost amongst the roses.
by Ann Lloyd


*
If you're interested in finding out more about Ann's book, you can email Ann at oldfartspublishing@hotmail.com.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Passion for Peonies



I love peonies. There is nothing like these huge, elegant flowers that bloom so faithfully year after year. Cultivated in China for more than 2000 years, where they are regarded as symbols of wealth, luck and happiness, peonies are among the longest-used flowers in ornamental culture.

They are named after Paeon, who was a student of Asclepius, the Greek god of medicine. Unfortunately for Paeon, his teacher became jealous of him. The only way Zeus could save the brilliant youth from Asclepius’s wrath was to turn him into a peony flower. In other Western folklore, mischievous nymphs were said to hide among the petals, while in the language of flowers, peonies take on the meaning of Shame or Bashfulness.

Here are some photos and poems from the height of peony season at the Montreal Botanical Garden. Peonies may be found throughout the garden, but especially in the Chinese and Japanese gardens as well as in the Flowery Brook area.



someone has cast
a peony flower
into the pond—
drifting uncertainly
this love of ours





peonies
in bloom
he leaves me
a poem
on the kitchen table



tall, lanky man—
come sit with me
by the peonies
and watch that mallard
woo his mate





pink peonies
delicately scented,
ruffled and pretty
I was once
a love struck teen




distracting me
from my contemplation
of pink peonies
that noisy
red-winged black bird



he doesn’t have
street smarts
, they say
of the son
I drag to the garden
peony viewing





slowly
shedding
the weight of beauty
peony petals
on the lawn



just petals
on the grass
and dead yellow stamens
all that remains
of yesterday’s splendour



white petals
tinged with brown
beside them
tightly packed buds
ready to explode



I’ll whisper
as he sleeps
the sound
of white peony petals
falling

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

In Search of the "Fleur de lis"

In honour of St. Jean Baptiste Day, I decided to sally forth to the Montreal Botanical Garden in search of the true fleur de lis. This iconic symbol of France and its former colonies is particularly beloved in Quebec, where four blue fleur de lis decorate its flag. In French, fleur de lis literally means "lily flower," however, it is widely thought that the image is a stylized version not of the lily, but the iris. More specifically, it is believed to be inspired by the iris pseudocorus, a variety of yellow flag iris.

On my way to the garden, I passed the Olympic stadium, which is located on the south side of Sherbrooke Street opposite the front gates of the garden. The Quebec flags looked beautiful against the blue morning sky.



I have always found St. Jean Baptiste Day to be a fascinating holiday in that people seem unusually open and friendly, as was the case today as I walked up Pie IX Boulevard to the garden

St. Jean Baptiste Day--
I exchange greetings
with a Tibetan monk

Here is a photo of a yellow iris, but of the bearded rather than the flag variety.



Below is a photo of a bed of white flag iris.



Here is a photo of pale blue iris.


In the last photo is a beautiful specimen of a blue flag iris and it seems to indeed show the outlines of a real fleur de lis.



Mission accomplished, I headed out of the garden and off to a St. Jean Baptiste Day brunch with friends.
*
St. Jean Baptiste Day
I celebrate with a Finn
a Welshwoman
two Greeks
and a Scot
*
Bonne fete de la St. Jean!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

What is a Garden?

Here is an essay by my friend Sebastian, which he sent me several weeks after our meeting in the garden. Enjoy!

What is a Garden?
by Sebastian Piquette


It is the morning of Summer Solstice and I step through the almost familiar turns of the Botanical Gardens that lead into their Japanese garden. The rafts of irises are enough to submerge me body and soul – and they do; my eyes are wet and my stomach flutters. Even one iris can startle and captivate me with its colour and lines. What chance do I have against thousands of them?

After a brief search my eye settles on the familiar figure hunched over a notebook. She is writing, and writing is what we have both come here to do together. I am prepared to take out my own notebook and simply acknowledge that we are together for this with a head nod and a crinkle at the corner of my eyes. While she is a calmly inspirational presence in my writing life, I would never claim that I am that for her and that last thing I wish to do is interrupt her train of thought.

It was on Angela’s impetus that I have come here to write but it was on my instigation that we planned to meet on the solstice. I’ve become much more conscious over the past few years of the eight dates that divide the pagan calendar into equal parts. If I hope to honour the cycles of nature, why not give myself the luxury of retreating into one of the pockets of this city that holds the city at bay?

What is a garden? It is not, as I once might have believed, a corner of nature untouched by the influence of my species. I’d have to travel far and with no little inconvenience to find that – and I would most definitely not have had such a blissfully insane number of irises to enjoy. A garden is an artifice, and someone has combed through and combined the elements of nature to deliver a multi-sensory experience. And, as with any art form, someone who chooses to experience that garden also has input into what that experience will be.

While I do not confess to having tasted and eaten anything in this garden (for fear of banishment?) this gem of sensuality certainly plays to sight and touch, hearing and smell. Around me are people choosing how they move and what they do in the garden: tai chi, jogging, reclining, eating, talking, taking photographs, writing, and resting. Their experiences are coloured by whether they are alone or not, or with whom they have elected to come. To my surprise it is Angela’s choice to break our silence and as we talk over the week’s events and issues, I know we are freeing our inner spaces to prepare for the pursuit of writing. When a friend of hers arrives later and joins us in our chat, it occurs to me that I am not doing anything to bring us back to our pens and notebooks.

Somewhere just out of visual range but close enough to the garden to intrude on the sounds of wind playing with the leaves and water dancing in the brook, someone is playing music. It doesn’t belong in ‘my’ garden and I observe once again that people who think everyone should be subjected to their music not only have the poorest taste in music but also use sound systems that distort the music at the high volumes forced through them.

So I banish myself from the garden. I cannot clear my inner space to write while this noise keeps filling it. I marvel at Angela’s ability to focus, at her inner garden. But I leave without disappointment. The morning has been perfect otherwise, I’m eager for the rest of the day, and I will be back.

Sebastian Piquette is a special ed. teacher. Over the decades his creative passions have included singing, composing, writing, and gardening. Other interests include nature, sign language, ancient history, and watching dance shows. He loves Montreal and is a member of the Montreal Botanical Garden.

The First Nations Garden

seeds flying
on the longest day
of the year—
I too am looking

for a place to land



The First Nations Garden of the Montreal Botanical Garden was the place to be on June 21st. Not only was it the summer solstice, but it was Aboriginal Day in Canada, a tradition begun in 1996 as a way of celebrating native cultures. That Aboriginal Day is held on the same day as the solstice is no accident—marking the day “the sun stands still” has been an important part of Native culture from earliest times. For the past 5 years, the Amerindian Garden has played host to the Solstice des Nations, which also serves as the kickoff event of the Fete National du Quebec.




The ceremonies began at dawn with the lighting of a bonfire. At 10AM, a traditional fire ceremony began. Mohawk elder Sedalio Fazio made a dramatic entrance.

heating the skin
of her drum
over the bonfire
a medicine woman
in ceremonial dress

She has a powerful, stirring voice and chanted to the accompaniment of her drum.

painted bear head
on her drum—
while the elder chants
the wind
sings its own song

The fire ceremony was conducted by Dominique Rankin, an Anishnabe elder, who spoke in French and Sedalio Fazio in English.



asking the Creator
for permission
to speak English
she welcomes us
to Mohawk territory


She spoke the words “Mohawk territory” with such authority that a gasp rippled through the crowd of well over 100 people. It was a shock to be reminded that we were indeed on Mohawk territory, but we were welcomed and invited to become part of “one mind.”

Madame Fazio appealed to all the various elements of the earth—water, fish, birds, animals, grasses, medicines, flowers, insects, worms, fruits, and the four winds, four directions, and four seasons.

grandmother moon
guiding all the cycles
the wise woman says
this is as far as I can go
with this prayer




The traditional Fire Ceremony, which celebrates the beginning of the solar cycle, was the highlight of First Peoples national day. We were each given a few grains of tobacco and instructed to make our silent prayers, then toss the grains into the bonfire so that the smoke from our prayers would rise to the great Creator.






invited to put their prayers
into the fire
all races,
forming a friendship circle
men, women, children





summer solstice--
into the fire
to be carried
up to heaven
all my prayers

The ashes would later be gathered and taken to the St. Jean Baptiste Day bonfire on the Plains of Abraham in Quebec City on June 23rd.

A number of political representatives were present at the ceremony, as well as a strikingly attractive young woman, inuk singer Elisapie Isaac, who was one of this year’s spokespersons for the event.



kicking off her shoes
and running across the grass
she exclaims
I am a woman
of the tundra


Here are a few last thoughts on the solstice event.




Anishnabe elder
feathers and furs
messages from the ancestors
rock music blaring
from Maisonneuve Park






medicine woman
on a blanket
on the grass
leans back into the arms
of a white man




celebrating the solstice
in the First Nations garden--

tortilla chips & dip
and a free glass
of mango juice