Al Purdy
Born at Wooler, Ontario Dec. 30, 1918 – died in B.C. April 21, 2000
My friend Marguerite McColl’s first teaching school was Wooler Public. I wonder, if Al attended Wooler did she teach him? But then I wondered if Al had any connection to Purdy, Ontario, near Combermere?
In fact Al Purdy attended school in Trenton and then Albert College, perhaps, at that time affiliated with the University of Toronto.
I taught Jr. K – grade 12 my entire career North of Belleville, in the Bancroft area. This was one poem on my curriculum – for obvious reasons. By the way, in the early 70’s I taught one of the first, if not THE first, Co-ed Health course in Hastings County.
The Country North of Belleville
Bush land scrub land –
Cashel Township and Wollaston
Elzevir McClure and Dungannon
green lands of Weslemkoon Lake
where a man might have some
opinion of what beauty
is and none deny him
for miles –
Yet this is the country of defeat
where Sisyphus rolls a big stone
year after year up the ancient hills
picknicking glaciers have left strewn
with centuries’ rubble
backbreaking days
in the sun and rain
when realization seeps slow in the mind
without grandeur or self-deception in
noble struggle
of being a fool –
A country of quiescence and still distance
a lean land
not like the fat south
with inches of black soil on
earth’s round belly –
And where the farms are
it’s as if a man stuck
both thumbs in the stony earth and pulled
it apart
to make room
enough between the trees
for a wife
and maybe some cows and
room for some
of the more easily kept illusions –
And where the farms have gone back
to forest
are only soft outlines
shadowy differences –
Old fences drift vaguely among the trees
a pile of moss-covered stones
gathered for some ghost purpose
has lost meaning under the meaningless sky
– they are like cities under water
and the undulating green waves of time
are laid on them –
This is the country of our defeat
and yet
during the fall plowing a man
might stop and stand in a brown valley of the furrows
and shade his eyes to watch for the same
red patch mixed with gold
that appears on the same
spot in the hills
year after year
and grow old
plowing and plowing a ten-acre field until
the convolutions run parallel with his own brain –
And this is a country where the young
leave quickly
unwilling to know what their fathers knew
or think the words their mothers do not say –
Herschel Monteagle and Faraday
lakeland rockland and hill country
a little adjacent to where the world is
a little north of where the cities are and
sometime
we may go back there
to the country of our defeat
Wollaston Elzevir and Dungannon
and Weslemkoon lake land
where the high townships of Cashel
McClure and Marmora once were –
But it’s been a long time since
and we must enquire the way
of strangers –
Copyright (c) Al Purdy. From Beyond Remembering: The Collected Poems of Al Purdy, Harbour Publishing www.harbourpublishing.com.