let him sit on the beach
my uncle in his lawn chair
that folds like a stork
aluminum and shredded
blue webbing glass of Labatt’s
in his hand
let him unreel
the past on the waves psalms
pastures and lilies
the cosmos blooming stargazing
a blur he almost can feel made one
with what he is seeing lake
and the line between water and sky
let him hum without tune
he spools thin lines of bliss
as if fishing
hitching this place to the quiet
promise of peace geography’s
comforting shape
this bluish brown water this meniscus
parasol sky moving unmoving
unhurried as pre-historical time
let him memorize
the lake’s surface find
in what he sees there
something that mends
Arleen Paré’s first book, Paper Trail, was shortlisted for the Dorothy Livesay B.C. Book Award for Poetry and won the Victoria Butler Book Prize. Her novel, Leaving Now, was published in 2012 by Caitlin Press and Lake of Two Mountains, her new poetry collection, will be released by Brick Books in spring 2014. She has an MFA in poetry from the University of Victoria. Her work has appeared in various Canadian literary publications, including The Malahat Review and CVII, as well as in several anthologies including A Family by Any Other Name: Exploring Queer Relationships (TouchWood, 2014).