Author Archive

Annexed

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

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Annexed*

That’s right: hide that bald man’s eyes!
Prepare to take him away now:
He’s the culprit but don’t tell anyone his name.

You will know him from the trail of his women
The ones he rates as sevens
Unless they’ve got great tits, then it’s 8.9 and sometimes 11.

I’ve been annexed, taken over by conquest
By the man who likes science and Mars
Whose chest shot out bone and pains to the stars.

Like the song he sent: “My crimson liquid so frantically spilled
the ruby fluid of life unleashed,” lyrics said
Well, head bowed, are you currently dying The Death of Ivan Ilyich, yes?

Announcement!

Sylvie was annexed by Rhy…nchocephalia
Breed: tuatara – god of death and disaster
“M?ori women can’t eat them; but I’m Canadian,” Sylvie commented.

“No wonder I perished, while she lasted, eh?!”

(No wonder you knew it was a newt!)

I should have known you were tapu: sacred and restricted!
Mamma mana! Was there ever serious consequences
For crossing boundaries in London, England?

In this, I was attached to something more important
Serving as the brief 18-month wing addition to his building of sinew
wood, and supernatural: I was annexable.

Yes, amidst your bone, your wood, and supernatural
red passion and word violence, you left a mess
On this grey nightgown: I still haven’t washed it.

Shit’s blowing out your side like Ivan’s!
(My side still burns where you grabbed it.)
Is your third eye, blind?
For a man with such big bovine eyes of chocolate and stylish glasses
The bar is clouding your vision, yea?

Your carefree life is most simple and most ordinary
and therefore most terrible, maybe suggested Syndey
for you seem annexed by this world apart
ill fit, Ilyich
from the one you dream to live in.

© Sylvie Hill 2014
Art: dixon / “Annex” / 50×20 / spray paint and synthetic enamel on canvas / 2010

It’s Time

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

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It’s Time

I’ve been making progress.
Been driving through the city lights.
Burning up so many goddamn tires
Leaving them at the dead-end streets
On fire.
But I keep on trucking.
Until tonight.

Feeling, just feeling
Hormonal, not sentimental.
Pregnant (yea) with emotion.
Godammnit, I was looking for your rage
Feeling in a blue lake
The thickness of your fight
Wanting to take your kind of bite out of this life.
Like when I slapped you on the arm,
Said: “Holy shit, look at you!”
And you hit me back not holding back,
Almost fell into the blooms.
on Bloomsbury.

You don’t know this, but
Your Twitter is sending me notes
To join your account
Follow you there
Stupid Twitter doesn’t have a clue
What it’s dealing with here.

It’s time.

Then tonight on the feed
Up pops up your name and a vid
Of my San Francisco memory band
And a song with lyrics
About “how people change.”

In moments like this,
I punch the fucking walls,
Spit, fierce, shouting: “See that! Jesus Christ!
I don’t make this shit up at all!”
Tonight I was brewing up a poem
Didn’t know what it’d be
But my last thought a week ago
Was to write about what the song did:

The time we walked toward Covent Garden
On some bridge from the South Bank of London
You said: “you shouldn’t write people off, they change
A person can change in 10 years,” you said.

I carried that with me, thinking that you
talked more than you did 13 years before
And 13 years later, you scare the shit out of me
Will things be better when I’m 53?

It’s time.

It’s time to not listen to the music, and I haven’t
To remember the arrangements that maybe I helped in.
(The records spins
and the wheels in the mind keep turning)
It’s time to not think anymore of this
To not get too excited you answered another “Code Red”
Request for a fighting.

I’ve been making progress.
Been driving through the city lights.
Burning up so many goddamn tires
Leaving them at the dead-end streets
On fire.
But I keep on trucking.
Until tonight.

It’s time.

It’s time for nothing to change
Except for my direction.
I keep spinning my goddamn wheels
Chasing something.
But I smile, breathing deep
That our journey has ended.
It’s something I’ve fully accepted.
And the place it took me
Was exquisite.
So when I’ve feared you could be replaced
Just like you did that morning —
Tonight — you asserted your place
Secretly, unintentionally – maybe you knew what you were doing
Regardless of whether I know where you’re going
Do you know you take me to exactly
Where I need to be?

It’s time.
I’ve got going.

© Sylvie Hill 2014

Art: dixon (Juan Carlos Noria) / “It’s Time” / spray paint and enamel on record / 2008

Tempest

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

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Tempest

Yes, the goddamn storms will rage, man!
Will you fight or take flight?
Will you man up and see the light
Or sulk like a fucking little child?

Yes, the times will be tough, man!
You’ll lose the girl and gain
A new one losing her again
Because of your memory of the old one.

You were a druggie, and you partied
And you put away the drugs, finally.
I saw your dad say you had a time lately
All were loving and supporting.

It’s why I stayed after eggs Florentine.
Oh my, I had viscous things to say
To your friend, “not a fan,” I said
He told me you’re better since the chest explosion operation.

At Trafalgar monument, you were finally quiet.
I said: “Look at you! How much you’ve accomplished!
How did you get all this in London?!”
“Mostly bullshitted my way,” but you didn’t.

Today, I wanted to tell some guy to get a grip!
And I did, told him he was a lightweight!
Didn’t want to hear about his bad fate!
His aches and his pains and his bloody sad state!

I thought of you in your critical way
Chest pains, morphine, in hospital, you said.
And you tell it like it was a big fun game
Played with the Asian nurse who mispronounced your name.

It’s why I stayed after eggs Florentine.
Oh my, I had viscous things to say
To your friend, I told him the truth of that day
His response at once was friendly.

He’s a smooth one that guy, eh?
Knows all the rockstar, cool things to say.
Whether he means a word, is a mystery.
You and him are close, so what am I, anyways.
(We were close at one point, I want to say).

Then the man in you, seems, ran the other away.
But that kid in you, I think, stuck by a bit, stayed.
Even though the dick on you really set the stage
The Girl in me remains your friend; Woman in me – aches.

It’s why I stayed after eggs Florentine.
Trust me: I know how I can be annoying!
I know how you dealt with it all, patiently.
Every email, every need, saving me safely …

… to get what you require,
as did I, walking the high wire.

Be that curious boy you once were
Staring at rabbits with big chocolate orbs
Listing all the animals you cared for
And the chainsaws you like to cut wood.

I know I am not sexy like the lady you took to Turkey.
I know I’m not fast or furious like European divas you meet.
But I hope you’ll always respect me
For staying after eggs Florentine

I’m going to think you are trying to be less mean
In your new life where you take responsibility
For your headspace, your career and your handsome body
And your mind space, which explains ditching me.

Were you surprised how calm I could be
in the morning after the take over?
I stood bold in my pyjamas.
You were childish in yours –

But I womanned up and saw the light
Didn’t sulk like a fucking little child.

… you took what –we– required:
fair is fair,
I’m indebted to our tempests,
Baby, storms are gonna rage,
and I wouldn’t care…

© Sylvie Hill 2014
Art: dixon / “Tempest” / 35x65cm / spray paint and enamel on canvas / 2008

By Nature And Not Commodity

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

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By Nature And Not Commodity

And when I needed toilet paper
I crumpled up white Eddy
Made it softer and soaked it in thunderstorm humidity
Dried and it and it was ready.

And when I needed underwear
I wore some panty liners
When they ran out, turned my undies inside out
Or washed them in sink, dried them on the porch.

And when we needed to bread the walleye
I walked on the waxed bag: escalator of crackers
Grabbed the lemons for the gin and sodas
And mixed the fresh-caught fish in the batter.

And when I needed a shower
I heated river water on the woodstove
And used my sock and washed my bod
And made my daytime stuff my bed clothes.

Funny how when the electricity ran out
I fired up the BBQ and cooked our stuff
Meat we had hunted, potatoes from the garden:
Supper’s done, let’s turn on the stars now.

So if I’m so resourceful
In making use of what little
I have to get by,
Which suffices and delights

So if I’m so happy, travelling,
Out of a suitcase and two sweaters
That I interchange for
A fortnight

Then why do I choose to live as I do
And are you living the same way, too,
Dying, lying?

I may have some neat ideas
Or maybe ofttimes … IMPRESS
But I’m as redundant as an electric fan
In the Canadian wilderness.

My city life here makes it clear
I’m about as stale as the ideas
Pre-packaged for us to digest
To consume; becoming complacent.

All the things my body needs
Is revealed when I have Nothing.
All the things your spirit breathes
Is revealed when you toss the obvious –

The store-bought toilet paper
The impeccable underwear
The name-brand recipes
The drain on water resources
The dependency on electricity
The reliance on technology

X marks the spot
Where you need airing out
By nature
And not
Commodity.

© Sylvie Hill 2014

ART: dixon / “Fresh Air” / 37x66cm / enamel on found laminated image / 2008 | http://dixon-art.tumblr.com/post/26088608266/dixon-fresh-air-37x66cm-enamel-on-found

Une Coque Héroïque: Quelle Chicane – c’est dûr

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

Une Coque Héroïque: Quelle Chicane – c’est dûr!

I

Serge Gainsbourg’s concept album
About a Lolita type called Melody Nelson
According to the writer, Darran Anderson
Was a lament, a forecast of what he knew would happen.

It was a premature goodbye to Jane Birkin
After he was let go by Brigitte Bardot
He knew love doesn’t last for long
And relationships end, bring on death, so long!

I’m not Serge Gainsbourg.
But I’m happy to share Russian-Cossack heritage.
I’m a Kazakov by a Grandmother who moved to Saskatchewan
I carry the Jewish Armenian nose of a long time, past.
My first name is Québecoise
And I do like sex
But could never handle the amount of Serge’s booze
Nor chain-smoking les Gitanes cigarettes.
This is the hard truth.

II

The engraving on the ring I gave un mec
Quoted the Sisters of Mercy: “No time to cry,” as if!
His read MUCH more amourous: “Mo graidh”
That’s suitably, “my love,” in Scottish.

He didn’t flinch an inch or criticize the inscription
But what kind of promise ring is that but prophetic projection
Of tears I cried in my family life and that I knew I would leave him
Did he know at the time, I was driven to EXPERIENCE?

I’m not Jacques Brel.
But I’m happy to share his observations and big mouth.
I’m expressive because I’m Canadienne Française, LOUD
I carry my maternal Grandfather’s Acadian poetry and blood.
My first name is French
And I do like tendresse
But am not daring enough to leave the cardboard factory
I am safe in my complacency, parasseuse, bêtise.
This is a hard fact.

III

YOU, on the other hand, LEFT your island for adventure!
YOU have real stories that would entertain Brel over dinner!
And YOU provoke with slapped-flat observations
That would have Gainsbourg laughing in hysterics!

YOU are like Brel, and you did NOT get tied down by a wife.
But YOU seem to have one to whom you may return when you die.
And YOU sometimes can look ugly, in fact kind of scary
But your charisma and your talent turn you gorgeous and sexy.

YOU are like both these men:
you are dangerous and stylish.
You have a personality that is curious
and you eat pistachios that are Turkish.

Do you SEE why I needed to bleed on you,
do you know what you were for?
YOU are for when I put lentils in my tacos,
and I hear you sardonically say: “That’s nice, dear.”
There is hard proof.

IV

Some folks get down on their knees
Sing for change and beg in the streets
Like Edith Piaf who sang to eat
Was the joker and comedienne.

But I’ve no balls, so I sit at a deskjob
Reserve my evenings for writing songs
Playing it safe, I don’t smoke cigarettes
Except – when it all went nuts in London.

I am not Edith Piaf.
But I’m happy to share her curly hair & laughter.
I’m social like her because I’m French Canadian bavarde
That’s my maternal Grandmother’s who they used to call “môme.”
My first name is French
And I do like men
But am not in the spotlight enough to try all of them
So I write about what it would be like, in poems, instead.
It is hard to hold back.

V

But YOU have played many a stage
And swaggered with your guitar
And YOU will play Hoxton Square soon
The irony of that is not too far.

My point about the prophesies and projections
The Artist’s boho lifestyle and romantic enticements
Is that sometimes our life path is much clearer to another
In the way a life is made clearer by a Writer, Musician or Biographer.

So, I scratch back in time to remember
What you said about me; vantage point is better
And all your observations good/bad were true
You were harsh, you were hard, which is why I made love to you.

And when you said the best sex you had
Was with a wild German girl one time in the past…

Well, I’m not her, but had to laugh …
I share her youth and roots
I am on fire because I’m a dual-dueling nature of Canadian and ¼ Jew
With blood by a paternal Grandfather who’s German, ¼ American to boot.
My first name is Sylvie
And my surname truncated German to Hill
I prefer to hide in forests
Make mountains out of mohills
Keen on woods
And hard wood.

VI

And as long as we’re playing word games, fine:
See what lies between the letters of “Rhymes.”
And “Rhythms.” Do you see: There’s me, and you
And thm, so here’s our lesson:
It’s that everyone we meet, my Love
Is not so much our lover
But simply depending on what you’re looking for
At the moment,
becomes One of us, used to discover
it’s circular and dual
But I laugh at my innocence
You probably know this, yes?
You’re a hard sell.

VII

You are my Decoder
Ahh, siii, I’d have fucked you till your balls fell off.
No! If only we had more time and there was love.
And no ocean and annoyance between us.
Ahh, siii, you make it hard for me now
Ah, basta! Not any cock will do, now.

It’s through a fuck that we learn about love:
Gainsbourg was not a pervert, he was a provacteur.
He wasn’t a misogynist he was a tender clown in private.
Brel was not a player, he was honest with his emotions.
He wasn’t a bastard, but transparent in his motivations.
Edith was a sensational woman, living by her rules
She loved men as intensely as she felt life through her tunes.
And you, you were distant as ever with eyes hard as marbles
And in your momentary touch, revealed your romantic violence.

It’s through a fuck that we learn about love:
And it’s through fucking that Love finds us
Not in the act or the particular actor
But in the absence when our hearts grow fonder
For a Decoder who can make sense of our lives
For which we’ve labored for years and pondered
In an instant – and just like that, his fingers snap:
Like the rebel-artist who sees through the bullcrap
And nails with precision the exact emotion,
It is revealed to me in an instant
I laid claim to his cock by being passive
Afraid to REALLY live life,
I am chicken.

VIII

I don’t have to wait for the album, he wrote it
What delicious fate that I starred in it.

I didn’t think I would come that night, either! (ha!)
And in the morning, I didn’t.

I know he didn’t cast me consciously, or did he?
Hard to tell when our moves are synced often – serendipititiously.

Who writes whose fate here, consciously?
Who scored your scene in my Lost-in-London dream reality?

It’s hard to tell what will happen next; but I am very safe in the silence, don’t break it.
Just the fact I laugh knowing you’d be there instantly for me if I asked if that’s a rooster or a chicken,

Reminds me of my immovable appreciation
Pour notre histoire, héroïque
Quelle chicane autours du
Russell Square Station!

© Sylvie Hill 2014

dixon_Hard

ART: dixon / “UAhh…Siii!” / 20x20cm / spray paint and enamel on canvas / 2005

Cairo the Skater Stoner

Thursday, February 26th, 2015

Cairo the Skater Stoner

Cairo’s fucked off the institutions again
Said he’d burn the motherfucker down
That one prof who flunked him
From a 50 to a zero
Fuck the establishment!

He’s on a mission, shitting his britches
Sick with a bug and bad nutrition
Gone south on a mission
To sell CDs
Buy a new deck and a vision.

The tell-tale signs of a stoner is their eyes
“I look tired,” he says, “but I don’t care.”
This kinda made me cry.
From a 10 to a zero
Who is this guy?

Stoners spin their wheels over-thinking:
Case of the persecuted and paranoia
About everything around them.
From a human to a hermit
Fuck these humans, eh?

Cairo’s on fire and a mystery in his Carhartts
Has all the girls wanting to make him hard.
His wicked smile’s perfect
I picture him jerkin’ with it
Bet you he’s hung, erect.

He’s the amalgamation of all things hotness
He’s got the Turkey and the Egypt
The smile of Travis
The body of Bobby
But those cultural references
unique, like no other
and the cryptic connections to the Muse
rather bizarre
And makes me blush with unapologetic
Well-placed sexual references
And sometimes tells me off nicely
but not harsh.
I asked him who is Haznat, he said
“I don’t know. Ask Elton John.”

But how do you connect with a stoner?
How, if you’re high, do you maintain your boner?
Skaters and stoners, you may want to bone them
But their disconnection and neediness always hurts me.

dixon_skater

© Sylvie Hill dixon / “Skateboard Commission” / spray paint and enamel on wood / 2008

Protected: Distance

Sunday, February 1st, 2015

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Protected: A Letter To My Muse

Sunday, February 1st, 2015

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Protected: mesut!

Thursday, October 23rd, 2014

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Re:JOYCE! Sylvie Welcomed Christopher Joyce to James Joyce class at uOttawa!

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2014

On September 22, 2014, Christopher Joyce (Cork, Ireland) who is the great grand nephew of famous and memorable author, James Joyce, travelled from Montreal to the University of Ottawa to give a talk in support of my Personal Enrichment Activity – “Undressing James Joyce’s ULYSSES: Unravelled & Simplified.

As endearing as he was at Bloomsday Montreal last June 16, he gave a wonderfully personal and warm talk to a packed and sunny room.

Thanks to the University of Ottawa’s Centre for Continuing Education & The Embassy of Ireland.

Joyce_Chris and Phil Joyce_CHris thinking

Sylvie Hill and Chris Joyce

Christopher Joyce

Photographs: Roman Romanovich (Ottawa)