글 읽기 좋은 계절입니다. 평소에 잘 읽지 않는 사람일지라도 가을이 오면 책 한권쯤 읽고 싶다는 생각을 하지요. 많은 사람들에게 읽는 기쁨은 큰 기쁨중 하나입니다.
읽는 즐거움도 즐거움이지만 쓰는 기쁨 또한 이에 못지않습니다. 쓰면 생각을 정리할 수 있을뿐더러 삶의 흔적을 남길 수도 있지요.
때로는 쓴다는 것이 큰 부담으로 작용할 때도 있습니다. 펜을 잡았다하면 저절로 줄줄 써지기도 하지만 한 줄을 쓰기도 힘들 때가 있지요. 아이디어가 고갈되어 더 이상 써지지 않을 때에는 아예 필을 놓고 쉬기도 합니다.
최근 두 달간 글을 쓰지 않고 지냈습니다. 써놓은 글을 읽으니 뭔가 가식이 있는 듯 느껴졌습니다. 체험이 가미되지 않은 글은 거짓이라는 생각도 들었습니다.
글을 쉬는 동안 한국에 다녀왔습니다. 지인들을 만나고 친구를 만나면서 그리움에 젖은 마음을 달랬습니다. 한국으로 떠나기 전 뇌에 종양이 발견되었다는 이야기를 들었으나 정밀 조사결과 양성이라는 소식도 들었습니다.
다시 글을 쓰고 싶어졌습니다. 글을 통하여 생각을 나누며 힘을 얻고 싶습니다.
<How do I love thee? Let me rhyme the ways: 2,017 poems, 2,017 days>
Every morning, after he shaves, combs back his romantically long white hair and makes coffee in the percolator, Bill Belfontaine, former Scarborough alderman and controller, sits before his computer and writes a love poem.
In the past 2,017 days he has written 2,017 poems, never missing a day. He is 84.
The poems are formal and courtly, in the style of another time – a Victorian gallantry to express his ardour for a younger woman known as M.
Self-educated – he left high school to help his mother support their family – he has high aspirations, but few illusions. "I wasn't going to be another Robert Browning, but I wanted to communicate in a way that felt real, but also had a lot of fineness."
Composing, he chooses a word and lets his mind roam around it. Yesterday's was "flow": "In the early morning's flow of light, I rise to spend the day with you ..." the poem begins.
"I was thinking of the flow of my heart toward her," he said. "I looked out the window and saw the trees moving back and forth. It's a soft, gentle word you can romanticize."
He met his muse at a book fair in 2004 and was struck by her beauty and poise. A few weeks later they met at a party. "This gorgeous lady smiles as if she knows me ... I thought, `I'm here to meet people, I might as well start here.'"
Lunch at the Art Gallery of ontario followed and then, day after day, a poem. It has been an unexpected way of experiencing love.
M. has declined to be identified. "The poems are so special," she says, "like a private diary ...
"But I'm so delighted to be the recipient and I accept them with great gratitude. I find them uplifting, touching ... I am in awe of his commitment and ability to stay connected and the constancy, no matter what happens."
And at his age, things do happen. She was with him in hospital as he was preparing for a medical procedure, fervently writing a poem on a yellow legal pad that he had the presence of mind to bring with him.
"They aren't suggestive" but more delicate, "a feather boa," he says. "Love can be interpreted in everything, if your mind is available to look for it."
Their bond is not typical, says M. on the phone. "It transcends anything we could consider a relationship, it's a romance of bygone days ... I care deeply about him and will always look after him. His presence in my life is very important."
She says, several times, "He is a beautiful person."
Belfontaine left public office after 18 years when he lost to Brian Ashton in 1988. He ran a public relations firm, revitalized the Toronto chapter of the Canadian Authors' Association and started a publishing company. He called it, not surprisingly, White Knight Books.
"The name alone tells a great deal about him," says Rev. John Niles, a United Church minister who met Belfontaine in 2005 while publishing his first book, about his life as a foster parent.
"I think in some ways he is a white knight, someone who goes out to make a difference in his own way. He brings writers along who have an important message."
Married twice, with six sons, Belfontaine lives alone in a Balmoral Ave. apartment. There's a delicacy there, too – crystal in the cabinets, creamy French provincial furniture, the white brocade sofa and chairs. In his study, there's a statue of a white knight. He has a book of Ovid's love poems, The Little Prince and a Michael ondaatje anthology.
There are gifts from her: a lovely white teapot, a hibiscus tree with a metal W (for William) and M hanging from its branches.
As a politician Belfontaine championed youth and women's shelters. He saw himself as a "street politician" seen more organizing neighbourhood groups than at city hall. He wept once, at a press event, talking about the difficulties refugees face arriving in Toronto.
"He is a very pure person, only sees good things," says M. "He's the only person I know who stops every time he sees a homeless person."
"We have our own lives, we're not entangled," Belfontaine says of W. and M. "I urge anyone who can do it to use poetry to strengthen their lives and make them fuller."
Thirst
By Bill Belfontaine
M.
Drink deeply from the cup of love
Let all that’s seen beyond the rim be generous
Then raise the chalice when all sweetness found
To toast our beloved and carefree togetherness
W.
Wednesday September 8, 2004
M.
Why am I bright in sunlight
When clouds are overhead?
Why am I bathed in moonbeams
When its darkened night?
Why do I thrill with music
When quietness prevails
Why am I inscribed with words
When the screen is silent?
Because you,
in all your beauty
Dwell inside
me
W.
Tuesday June 21, 2005
When love
M
When love’s sweet ode
Caresses round thy heart
And brings dear words
All meanings to impart
And sallies forth the feelings
Of desire
And makes the rainbow’s hue
Unfurl, a blossomed flower
So quiet be we there to know
To hear words sail on tender flow
That finds the sacredness of love
And folds us in its warmth, a dove
W
Tuesday August 2, 2005
Wish
M
I often wish
I could reach to catch a star
That I could bring to you
In worship from afar
I often wish
I could hold a moonbeam’s glow
And set in on your doorstep
To light todays that flow
I often wish
I could reach into the earth
To set on your finger
A diamond of pure worth
I often wish
I could sing okay
Then I would croon to you
Love ballads every today
I often wish
I knew magic ways
Then I could bring you
Only wonderful todays
W.
Sunday January 8, 2006
Oh, how I want
M.
Oh, how I want to soar with you
Above earth’s broad domain
To places where your happiness
Is what we’d choose to gain
Somewhere that cares are never known
Nor brief unkindness shown
A bright and shining paradise
That you and I call home
Amidst the goodness of the scene
We’d wander through today
Watch beauty stand magnificent
And sweet love is in our play
Where always seen is peace and joy
Gaining relevance in all
Each treasure found is manifold
They’re pearls of love we’ll call
Oh, how I want to soar with you
Above earth’s broad domain
To places where your happiness
Is what we will obtain
W.
Monday June 15, 2009
Sonnets
M.
How beautiful are the sonnets
Read, enjoyed from long ago
Enfolded in a loving cover
Over centuries that glean
Not all are romance in the off’ing
But there are so many held
That the wonder of the phrases
Bespeak the magic there in words
How blest the poets of the eras
As I would want to be
To bring thoughts of love endowed
From a heart with love for thee
W.
Thursday October 8, 2009
Flow
M.
In the early morning’s flow of light
I rise to spend the day with you
Where loving memories will conceal
The sweetness our todays reveal
Remembering well where we have been
And what our timeless ventures mean
That brings prior todays to mind
That flows the happiness full kind
I love you
W.
(Source: Toronto Star Friday, October 9, 2009 page 3)
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