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From the archives

Two Other Solitudes

The India-Canada relationship has taken a long time to develop

Are Interests Really Value-Free?

A salvo from the “realist” school of Canadian foreign relations

They’re Still Missing

An insider’s account of the bungled hunt for Robert Pickton

 

She never came.

They left us grief-trees

wailing at the wall.

And that was all.

 

“Death by poisoning,” by Dorothy

Molloy

 

She left us waiting

for the rabbit

in the hat but all

we got was how

long do you stare

at a black top hat

waiting for a white rabbit

to hop out? She was like

a mother for seven years.

She never came

 

back to our tearing calls.

How could she? The blood

that ran through us didn’t

match, so we couldn’t

signal her homing.

They say she flew

across the pond

because our Dad wasn’t

nice. The neighbours,

they left us grief trees

 

in their stances and stark

glances. We saw pity

seed their eyes. Tempting

to rip out

or better yet, tap

it like sap. Poor little

orphans. We aren’t

orphans. We have a father.

Our real mother just doesn’t

live with us, wailing at the wall

 

is one of the many things

she does in foreign countries.

We’ve got postcards and pictures

so we know where she is.

She’s not one for hats

or rabbits (things we can no longer

look at). Magic isn’t a trick,

it’s the return

of what you want, we know that now

and that was all.

Catherine Graham teaches creative writing at the University of Toronto. This poem appears in Put Flowers around Us and Pretend We’re Dead: New and Selected Poems, her latest collection, published by Wolsak and Wynn.

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