Linda Ravenswood’s writing has been published in these magazines, journals and online : 

 

 

Browse by Publication:

Wilshire Review

Flaming Arrows

Underground Voices

Enigma Magazine

Audemus (formerly Mount Voices)

The Poetry Salzburg Review

Opium Magazine

Read This

The Break The Silence Project

Poetry Magazine

The Caterwaul Quarterly

The Relief

Browse by Title:

Flesh,  Pleasure and Paint

 

The Saint of the Pavement

Bootleg Ways

 

Grandfather swim

 

The daily saint

 

The Saint of the Pampa

Leonor Acevedo Suarez: La madre de Borges

The Blind Poet from Argentina

 

The Saint of the Professor Lewis Hyde

So much la-la-la

 

The Saint of Memory

 

The Saint of the College Drive

Breakfast Between the Glass

 

The saint of fish

 

The birth

 

The saint of men

 

Argos

for the singers

 

An Beal Bocht

the poor mouth

 

He knew When He knew What He knew

 

The dna to preserve proved contrary to capital gains

 

On public art and the longevity of an idea

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

from The Wilshire Review  (Los Angeles) 

 

Flesh,  Pleasure and Paint

  

In the honeymooning days of the heart,

before the quartering of the eye,

there was the orchestrated simplicity

of fruit; round on a bordering

cloth, loafing and moist

as a new baby.  Open fruit

braids like the universe,

in the veins of glucose

there is the architecture of the world,

like Cubist painting, the squares

of impasto, heavy and longing

as a pendulum of grapes; 

there is the house, the city,

the metropolis in the ample chamber

of  humble plum, the attitude of

revolution in the placement

of nose on waist-coat

like the cychlorrhaphous eyeing hide

of pineapple, the succulent buttocks

of cherries, rubbery and

ripe as Pablo’s wives, sex

marbling in their mouthes

like over peach and wrinkling pit;  

the scrape of tongue and fibre,

the lascivious dropping

of fruit on the tongue,

the bitter spasm of plumskin, 

the salve of pulp between teeth

a liberal marriage of the senses,

without knives, without words,

only empirical mouthes

and eyes, holding tables

and chairs that line

the great halls, supporting

legs opening to the minaret,

filled with the orchard. 

 

 

back to top

 

 

 

 

 

from Flaming Arrows (Ireland)   

 

The Saint of the Pavement 

            

Bootleg Ways

 

 

Logs when burning 

are really owly bodies

beneath the bark.

Through the tinkling wood chimes

grey and black, feathers segment away

in slivers and crisps

to orangely pulse this secret

to the hob.  Toasting over,

each crackle a flight,

eyes meet memories in the hearth back

through unfocused reverie,

voluble yet steely and lost.

In cool, dark rooms

on Persian rugs so thinned

the pattern blurs,

the old smells rise in my nostrils,

thrilling through hair

like grass liberated in a field.

It is my grandmother

up early to make the coffee

I never drank, but which

the thermos knew so well.

Skyscraping among cardboard

boxes of dusty books and bric-à-brac,

things rap, squeak, whir and lay under

blankets, well-made and thick;

her glass cases and jewelly items

and relics readied,

she is for the swap meet.

Like a character from Steinbeck,

Rupert waits on the pavement

in the darky morning,

his yellow pick-up with wooden roof

open for business, his clumps

of hands muddling in deep pockets.

Close within his sweater,

he stands at attention

while my grandmother’s bandanna

mistrals round the truck bed.

This Okie feel lingers with me still,

and the impression of my droplet

head, awakened in the three a.m.

indigo by her Oregon accent,

old American, real and strident

without ethnicity, without the soot

from the East, unfactoried yet industrial,

gongs and creaks as powerfully

now as when I was nine.

From this woman

and her tinkering folk,

always vending, always uncovering,

I have great stores of wealth

both golden and intangible.

My legacy cuts at me often

and the terms are difficult to blink in;

I am the reduction

of he who was sheriff in Missoula, Montana,

of those who crept from St. Joseph, Missouri

and pressed it to the west, the coast,

through bramble and what was once

the nineteenth century.

I have travelled, but fêted

and in swank proportion

as the last daughter, the last McKee and Everson,

product of the nomad merchant,

rich, bold and apparent

to take what thrift and cunning

has left for me.  But there is nothing

to covet and nothing has the salt anymore.

In the Donner Pass I reach

rumbling to find California,

the state, before the 1960’s

let it go, let it blow away.

In the quarry of our age

ideals like rocks broken by a wave

lie in rubble, briny tedium

washing over, unrebuilt,

unrecreated, unreborn.

Grumbling I want for the grime

of a good clean town,

for society without the saps,

for Gloria Swanson to swirl around

and lick these bastards

for what they have done;

for the world in black and white,

ham sandwiches, Henry Miller and some

slab of guts and soap blocks

washing down the hurried slam

of billions of flappy feet.

The plea for evenings spent

spreading thick preserves on hunks of bread

and ruffling toes around socks

is met with then what ?

by those who want for the zip.

Listen and I’ll tell.

Inside the fire

there’s still a kernel

burned and swept back

but lurking and pouting in pinched neglect

like the last blackberry of summer

lost behind a refrigerator

and only baby knows.

 

 

back to top

 

 

from Underground Voices  ( Los Angeles ) 

 

http://www.undergroundvoices.com     

 

 

 

Grandfather swim

 

The night nurse

came in

even that last time

to wake him.   

She came

to push at his

rivers, 

to lean on

his warm streams,

to constrict the flow

of his blood,

to chart him. 

She came

with her trawler,

dragged a

silver footed

hypodermic

across the stillness

of his arms,

dipped her mercurial stick 

into his tired mouth.  

She asked

if he needed

anything. 

He did not — 

except for rest,

the thing that she

would not give him

before his long trip

home.   

 

 

back to top

 

 

 

 

from Enigma Magazine ( London )    

 

http://enigmamag.wordpress.com  

 

The daily saint   

 

Harold Rallup and Times Rallup, brothers, one dead

one almost dead, wore grey in the 50’s, but most times  

black and white.  Times, because he’s still a little alive,    

lately wears a swatch of colour round his creases.               

The Rallups loved to tell the tale in their day

but now they’re one down,

and the one that’s lightly living’s

almost too old to know what to call a story

or why he used to once care. 

S’like that gal I dated

and now I can’t remember how that worked

or what her number was,

even if I wanted to call her which I don’t believe me

Sometimes the crawl gets Times down and he laments for the old ways.  

He still bites the pencil in the middle with his fakes in, and breathes

on a wheeze oh, remembering the smell of the news room

and the boys of the press.  Where’d all that erudition and guts go to

and another thing, I don’t b’lieve much in generations

because the way I see it they didn’t get much from us

and they don’t even know they’re missing something,

like a granny what’s been robbed

and she never will miss that pocketbook anyway. 

Senile they’d call her, but what do you call it

when the pinched ain’t old,

just dumbed of spirit ?

I never did know where it came from, some said the 1960’s

but them kids was still good, and some say foreigners made us numb

or the coloureds but ain’t people just want to be true no matter where they from. 

They called me a idealist but that’s just a word for someone

who the ones doing wrong can look to and say he doing right so we don’t have to.  

We use a have to, that was our business,

to tell it the way it rightly was and to care.       

 

back to top

 

 

 

 

from Audemus formerly Mount Voices  ( Los Angeles ) 

 

http://www.mountvoices.com/     

                                                        

The Saint of the Pampa
Leonor Acevedo Suárez: La madre de Borges 

The Blind Poet from Argentina

 

 

They always said the blind poet from Argentina did such and such,

That his mother fed his eyes and wrote his mail

And that his arms were brown and white and blind

As they crept in the house on their typewritten requests for bread

And paper, Mas papel, Mama, Necesito

Papelitos para la ropa de mis hijos.  Mama ?  

Perhaps the cynic thinks that there were times

When his mother hated him for his eyes

Perhaps the cynic thinks that there were times

When his mother wished that she had only held

Her legs together and refused the seed. 

Perhaps the spirit would have come to her again,

But it is an unnecessary train of thought,

She did not stiffen to refuse his father,

She let her legs fall apart like leavening yellow cakes,

Like splitting nut halves, green and awake,

Two pink and sticky fig bodies, her thighs

Ruffled open in brown, luscious skin. 

Of the blind poets’ paternity we do not know much else. 

Perhaps the cynic thinks that there were times

When the city could have used another worker in the plaza,

Another hearty body to lay the columns in,

A sweaty face and a healthy back

To carry the sacks of cement

Along the treacherous road of the quarry,

A man, with heart and limb

To offer his energies for the land and for the state. 

What is this poetry anyway ?  Can you eat

These spotted white loaves of words ? 

Can the children eat these visions ? 

And of his brilliance, his dripping tongue and shocking brain,

His never-was-ing eyes, his so - called gifts,

His naked eyes alone in the stabbing darkness,

His naked eyes alone at the top of the stairs,

His naked eyes encroaching on a vision too terrible to speak, 

A vision that groans behind the lids and must be born out,  

A monstrous human vision chased by death

And the blinding reality of disconnection from

Every one, every where. 

Grey shadows lap and laugh across the rug shirrs,

The little dog licks a new patch of dusty fur,

Silent tea leaves muddy the side of the demitasse,

And soak in their slitherage and in their waiting. 

The poets’ room is cool, as time lightly calibrates

In the hollow dancing clocks on an afternoon of old flowers

And the occasional fly.  There are no words today. 

The metronomic brethren of his mothers’ house,

their polar eyes of tick and tock, regard him always

In the house of glass, his mother feeding and

Wiping him from infancy through his genius,

Her ministering thumbs, her needly golden thumbs

From the caverns of almost too, too much. 

In the great white house in the jungle

Where the white hides in the brown, the poets’ eyes

Bead and swell and know a subtle language.  They elide,  

I will tell of our sweet scented kisses

Of the fallen decades,

From the dusty tens and twenties

Of calendars past

I will tell of your hot blown skirt cuffs,

The blue velveteen purr in the crushing embrace

I will tell of your white smudging eyes

In the blinding sunshine of Buenos Aires,

The women staring us down for our love, our youth

Their tight Modotti hands braiding spells in the husks

Their knowledge of blood and freedom mashed

Between the powdered kernels, the sweet technology

Of time and chlorophyll 

I will lay my heart down like the labourer in his cot

I will lay my blind pen before the alter of My Eyes

I will …

The blind poet sits choking in the sunshine on his bright memories. 

His old skin hangs like the crepe dangles of Christmases past,

Solemn old paper twists of rainbow DNA,

Strung out like flags of mediocrity, old skin and hair

Hanging like the funereal banners of an ungrateful town,

In an unfinished, mauve appointed Social Hall, 

So long, Sorry to see you go, Thanks for the things you did,

What were those things you did ? 

The blind poet from Argentina, a good moniker, but only

If you like that sort of thing. 

His tears and longings are the same as ours,

He is no bright Moshiach,

Get a hold of yourselves, artists. 

He sits with a crooked look on his old face, his mouth aslant and wondering

If all of his letters in ink

Amount to the brief signs of a child

Standing before the morning glass,

Pressing finger messages in melting condensation. 

The poets’ eyes are shut so tightly together in his blindest reverie, 

Even the closest investigation of breath from his mother,

Coming in with the tray of coffee and pan dulce, will be shut out.  

In the room there is a high scent of moss and jasmine and seashells.  

Somewhere in his breath there is a little flame of magick.   

The Spirit will come back another time, and the children will eat

And thrive on his visions.        

 

 

back to top

 

The Saint of the Professor Lewis Hyde 

 

So much la-la-la    


I have been known as Negro
Sable Mother's genius was on me.  
I did not go to banks;  
Humans could not budge me,
I was all at once unmanageable.  
The word Art, I made that.  

I married a mathematical topologist.  
( Not much was available.)
He had sixteen sayings and at night
Would pray " O Babylon, Babylon
To translate is to betray " and fall asleep.  
I would look at him over the cigarette smoke and scowl in the dark.  
The cattle once stolen become domestic beasts.  

Hear now, the essentiality of love
In a bed, of sex in a bed, a kind of bed,
Or a ship, a bedship, the arms of lovers enjambed
Unto the dawn, the chests of lovers beheld and spun
Of all the blue darkness that lives behind closed eyes
And of all the red spotted darkness that shakes behind desire there,   
And all of this held against the shamed-whispering cries of childhood
In a broken down penny arcade in Visalia,
Or a beat shaft card room of  Chiang-Yuan,
Or a miserable sweat box in Chichen Itza, everyone is eleven once,
Every one is blistered of loneliness;    
To and fro that longing rests, finally, upon the life of another.   
A man, a woman, a scrap of time and try, and Love,
The cosmic linguist, the one who cuts along the joint,
The one born last, Hermes, the forge stone.  Love,
That sings the song of open passages, in languages found
In sleeping bibliographies, Love, who cries for the broken lexicon,
And for the alternating seasons of raven;  
Papa Legba, open the gate, the barrier of difference, Love
Is dancing in the backlogs, and shouting with tears, Come
And let us run in the dissolving day.  

Stolen butter should never be the basis of marriage
Krishna will steal the heart of anyone, then disappear.      
Hermeneut, decipher the rags of the belly,

Unplait these dripping brains,    
Make me pure again, like I never was.  
A man comes and begs admittance.  
Long ago I lost a hound he says.  
Zeus himself is the uninterpretable speaker
And we stare into the misunderstood,
The world, our beloved illegible codex     
While the children of woman and man

Eat the dirt on the outskirts of
Town
And are trapped in history.  

back to top

 

 

from The Poetry Salzburg Review    

 

http://www.poetrysalzburg.com 

 

The Saint of Memory

 

 

The Peas

 

 

She came from the west

where rain

measures the hours

in drops

against the house,

where land

breaks into great crags

along the coast of water.

Her high, gothic façade

of radio hollowly sings

through the sitting room

where she has been waiting

against the window panes;

it’s raining

down the garden rows,

and the trellis

is beating the overhang

like a metronome.

The apples sweat

in the lane

above the soaking smudge pots;

in the beds

the lettuce leaves

are ripped and drizzling,

and mushrooms bauble

in the mud,

but the peas,

she says, against the panes,

the peas are safe.

In their fibre boats

they are lolling

in the trickle,

their greenness unmuted

by the wash.

In the dawn of that day

she flung some out

of their shells,

sweetly plinking into a bowl,

a ghostly memorandum of spring;

the house was clean and agile then,

the basins white-shining

and the wood well-rubbed.

1930 in the fall

was before money and moving;

her people were plumbers and farmers,

but she married well

and took to tea and touring cars.

I never knew her that way;

as she was aging

she sloughed superfluous finery

and became an Oregonian,

old and mindful in the window.

In the dusk of that day

she was so old

in her bed,

her daughters about her

against the tapestries

like Bayeux matrons.    

There, in the spinning,

I saw that even in

death she was more alive

than those stiff keeners,

she was real and oaken

and pirating the bed.

She was tilting

and wet, but she managed to say

her words

 

put me where the peas are

 

and she was fast away.

In the years beyond

I pull them

from the bins

in the market,

all green and wonderful.

They are holy, these slim

vegetables, a legacy of will,

a trust of spirit

endowing more than

any stick of Louis

or stretch of oil.

They are of the good

lathery soil, like her—

green and sure,

forward in the window,

watching the garden in the rain,

long ago days when she was living

with her whistle

and her custard

and her canvas shoes. 

 

 

back to top

 

 

 

 

 

The Saint of the College Drive

 

Breakfast Between the Glass   

        

 

The birds were marginal, hesitant, leaping.  They plucked between the pebbles of ruined blue windshield like robotic crumb identifiers, fearless, searching bread.  Around the corner at Adams and Fig before the weathered cathedral, the asphalt kernelled with the remnants of the crash.  Stan drove alternately calmly, alternately asking directions, alternately petulant, alternately angry about being asked to drive.  It’s funny when you don’t want to be someone’s partner anymore, when you’ve seen their sides and the facets just don’t work for you.  White horses on the lawn.  To want something.  To want something else.  I think and think again, the devil you know.  Student, teacher, mirror, mode.  Maybe he’s not that bad.  Maybe all men and women feel this way about their partners.  There’s the sun again on the buildings downtown.  Garfunkel’s singing about the Bridge.  A wash of veridian chunks of tempered glass shine on the boulevard.

 

back to top

 

 

 

from Opium Magazine  ( US ) 

 

http://www.opiummagazine.com 

 

The saint of fish

 

if you go down to the mongers,

in the half open market

downtown

before the crowds come - 

nested in the brazen ice pack

shoved against the glass - 

you will see the sainted remains

of fish. 

it will be quiet

before the crowds come,

and under the tin fluorescence

of light bouncing from display windows

and mellowing with the early morning grey

that wraps itself within

the chill stalls of the market,

you will see, with his eyes still in,

the last looks of his fish brain, out

and above his watery world

gone belly up into the air; 

of boat, of hand, of the articles

of death unknown to fish mind before

but inextricable of the day. 

if you go down before the crowds come

you will be apt to see the project

that fish has become.  you will see,

as you stand on the planks, the end

of fish in rows.  you will see

the game of solitaire the monger plays

with the bodies

that warp and weft and buckle

between his gloved hands,

a ghastly charade

of their erstwhile vitality. 

you will see him

slug the carcasses into view,

scales smoothed and undersides gutted,

planting fish seeds into thumbed ice grooves. 

you will linger as long as you will linger. 

you will make eye contact

with the vendors,

smiling to say that you are not

controversial, 

but a good wage earner just out

for an early

constitutional. 

certainly you will say

with your eyes that

though you’re not buying, 

you’re no threat. 

you don’t want to be known

as the crazy fish staring old maid,

who probably keeps cats

and catches moths in teacups

and walks them out of doors

into the blue moonheaps of the back yard. 

but at night, in sleep,

the side lain face

of fish comes to call,

to ask why

you do nothing,

when you know

how much it hurts.

 

 

back to top

 

 

from Read This ( Montana State University )    

 

 

The birth

 

 

The ones on four legs

ran away. 

Her screams

were a shock

even to her.    

 

Though the mate

had mated

previously, 

he too kept in the

outback.   

 

When the little one

fell out

from between her legs, 

she had no reason

to smile

and carry on with

all of that laughing

like she did, 

but she did it 

anyway.     

 

She picked him up

and brought

her mouth

over his nose /

sucked out the clog /

jettisoned red streams

from his nostrils

through the flute of her tongue

onto the earth —    

she had no idea why she did it

but she did it anyway.   

 

She rolled over in the leaves

nested her backside in the grass

and cupped him against her.  

 

 

back to top

 

 

from The Break the Silence Project   ( US ) 

 

http://breakthesilenceproject.com/?p=703#more-703   

 

The saint of men  

 

he sat there telling her some of the truth during the self congratulatory part of the constantly running, invisible documentary of his life  presumably filmed by the angels and the ghost of ingmar bergman.  the continuity was amazing except for those times when the machine was on the fritz.  whole sections of the time he’d lived in idaho were missing, and most of his daughter’s pubescence — and there was that one section during his second marriage that had someone’s entire thumb in the lens.  he absolutely never thought of those times though, so it was really a blessing in disguise.  trouble was one day, one of the lost sections showed up on the front porch, when his girlfriend was home and dressed for company.   she said,  how the hell are you ? and showed the section around the house.  the lost section said it was comfortable waiting for him in the living room, and, drinking tea out of the girlfriend’s china, told her all about the rape and the photos, about the big n slutty porn and something about tax evasion.  the section was calm and pulled no punches.   after a while though, he said he couldn’t wait any longer and stiffly stood and walked out of the house.  when her boyfriend came home, all he said to the news of the return of the lost chapters was that if she’d really loved him, she wouldn’t have brought it up.  later that night he shoved her awake in the lamplight and with it tight between his thumb and fore finger, snubbed his cigarette butt out on the pink area between her labia and the close canal.  lucky for her, the constantly running, invisible documentary of her life had a finicky record button too.  she would hurt for a few days, but pain never killed anyone, like he always said.     

 


back to top

 

from Relief Magazine  ( US ) 

 

http://www.reliefjournal.com/    

 

 

Argos

 

for the singers

 

 

When I was young

we worked,  out in the close —

even the other boys

ran with their bodies against us

and pressed me on

to bite that old rabbit ­­—   

And through the eyehole in the thicket

we ran— him and me first,

beside the fleet little thing

and all of the trailers streaming after.  

I never understood what Ilium means, 

but after he went away

the old men said he went to where that is 

but it is no place any where —

even a days’ run from home. 

And you wouldn’t believe it,

but just like the sun falling over

across the yard, he went invisible

and it seemed like so many nights

I just scrambled around the heaps

for a peck of something or other

in between looking for him. 

It seemed to me it was a long time

before anyone besides me even noticed he was gone,

the men just played thimbles in the fields

and the girls picked up their front parts higher

but let the covering laces hang down lower

and there wasn’t much to - doing like before.   

It seemed to go on like this for a long while

even getting a meal was lean — 

but one day, two fellows came walking —

I saw them far off still

and I closed my eyes to rest

until they got a little closer

because I was tired, so tired like you

couldn’t believe, and I fell asleep —

I must have, because I dreamed of hot fruit

fallen off of the stalk and set down

to where I could reach it

and in there some where deep

I thought I saw a man, 

a coat of mohair and a staff

and clouds behind.  

When I woke up

the sun was so bright and there

were the couple of fellows

who’d come from far off, 

and I lay there blinking for a while —  

until I heard one of them speak.    

And I almost couldn’t breathe.  

So I sniffed out from the dust

and it was him,

and I tried, but I couldn’t raise my shoulder

and I felt something crack inside —

and just then, his eye was in my eye

and I saw that he truly knew me, as I knew him —

but that’s all I remember.        

 

And the lord said to Argos,

Stretch back, good, old man;

we know and we have seen

all that you have sweetly spoken —

Though you might not have understood

what was Ilium, understand now

what is Elysium.  And with that,  

the lord lifted back the veil and revealed

to most faithful Argos, his long awaited master.  

 

back to top

 

An Beal Bocht

the poor mouth 

 

 

I. 

I walk, a cephalopod, on roads beside walls

both laid with the same material

Ireland thickly spreads like marjareen.

At home the peat splits stand in a cone,

Neanderthal Irish peeping in

over the seething chips; 

Plato’s children, burning

in their camera oscura,

flames shutter-clicking the flue.

 

II. 

There are stiff ravers on this island,

pissed on pints and aggrandized visions of nationality — 

as there are plodding labourers,

fists bridling in pockets,

captured tumbleweeds rippling under the weft,

digits shaming like Puritans,

soil under nails like wide brims on black hats.

On a drumming set of fingers

there’s  a gypsy with a rose at the throat

from a ragged, chewn bit and reddened cuticle—

the old monger of Dalkey

in the bishop’s mitred index, calcium

deposit eyelids thinly drooping away

from the ballsocket skin, thick slug

with fatty tears likely stung from public houses

full of smoke and yelpings.

There is no middle ground

in the collective visage,

in country side or city,

except for what money draws — 

Cash paves the middle road,

makes-up the middled face, 

but if you’ve got it

you’re no Republican,

if you haven’t

you might as well

be a tinker. 

 

III. 

Shadows churn in angled lamplight,

the after – hours – 86’ed holing up under lintels,

centered knobs shoving up backsides

flush against the coloured doorways of Dublin.  

Moving in the cold, moving upon each other

stray dogs find me everywhere

from Howth Head to Dun Laoghaire,

walk beside me for comfort, or a change,

knowing I’ll give it them

with my dissident smell — American. 

Somehow the dogs discern

the only energy raised here

is for hand to pint to mouth,

pen to paper to ash. 

Crackling like the Monkstown bell,

Pepy’s words bang stereophonically;

Ireland, last refuge of the self-defeated.   

Eveline never had a chance. 

 

IV. 

And her Eveningis a

denizen of the town. 

Her Evening leans,

a drunken split in the wind,

stunning along the road

like the young madman of Birr,

who jammed into the Vauxhall

when Vincent lapelled him over,

You’re beautiful, in’ya ? blearing

on his screwed up face,

shuffling over stones pushing 

She’s a beauty ! out from inside.    

Ireland can not resist beauty or madness. 

It feeds madness and swallows beauty

to feed madness and swallow beauty. 

Eveningis the tinker’s daughter,

with that Stokes head on her — 

you could spot it anywhere in Foxrock. 

After she pinched the gold bracelet,

the Gardi came for reports

and when I described the child,

one after the other of the cops

aha’d in the sitting room:  

A’course she’s a Stokes, her. 

Give them tinkers a house

and a few sticks of furniture,

but never you’ll get them

to stay on the land or make any improvements. 

That nice little house at the end of the road

will be a burned out cinder by next year.  Mark.    

Eveningcould be anyone so familiar. 

Evening could be the bell itself in Monkstown

Crescent, creeping out to tell the time,  

a Christian Brother up to none

good, its’ clap soaring into the cleaners shop,

soaking the whites, rushing across the duvet covers,

thrashing at the windows of the market shop,

as I’d lean across the HP and wilting greens. 

Evening may well be my brother. 

Eveningmay well be the unforgettable dead. 

 

V. 

It’s a terrible cold feeling — 

thinking of Ireland. 

Gary’s gone now

and the streets of home 

may not even remember us.     

But surely they would remember us

strong and wild upon them, foot by foot,

stride b’stride, learning her old secrets,

her old song.  Can a street remember ? 

A street can take a load

and not complain that I have heard — 

the occasional quake notwithstanding. 

(Who could imagine a quake

is the earth remembering

some offense ?  I suppose it could be.)  

But a chunk of earth

will stand a long time

without reminiscing to a tree.   

What is all of this remembering then,

so heavy on the human heart ? 

Perhaps there is another kind of consciousness,

a consciousness that does not rely on a thing like

memory to exist.  A street might be silent

for a thousand years.  A thousand years

means what, to a road ?  Is a road even a road ? 

Is there even a thing as purpose,

to such as the earth ?  

Alas I have been brainwashed by the island

and my compass upon it skewed as well,

for in this way I am my ancestor’s daughter —  

Irish in the meat of me,

because there is no consciousness

without memory

and there is no memory

without the land.  And what I asked before

about the earth not flickering

its’ news to a tree

was a lie,

because everyone knows

that the earth

is telling her tales

all the day long

to anyone who’ll listen.  Even a tree.      

 

 

VI. 

Once by the wall in Blackrock,

just at the waterside, we found

a rolled up girlie magazine,

its’ tucked cylinder waiting in a crevice

for a thrilling bunch of fingers. 

I always wondered if it was a grown man’s rag

or some dumb kid’s, hiding his wares in the sea wall

from a maternal invasion into his room,

her hawk-Irish face swishing into all of his places for contraband. 

Sometimes the sea is the only one who understands. 

Sometimes the sea is the only one who’ll keep your secrets.   

When Joyce’s pitiful vision

comes, that’s Ireland. 

The pitiful vision is Ireland’s gift. 

I was too young, too scared

to appreciate her enough.   

Her devastated years

of brilliance in the fire,

her knowing

that all we walk and love

and gush and pray and are

is rippling wheat,

fading, erasing as we rush to reach. 

Too young to thank her

for all of the fleeting pain,

the pain that deepened my voice,

and built my vision —

though I’d have sworn

she was pulling out my eyes instead. 

Ireland is a state of mind, you see — 

she is the grain and the grist. 

And later, She tears at the loaf,

spying mold on the bread heel, Mother.

 

back to top

 

He knew When He knew What He knew

 

 

Ifa and Eshu are best friends  

They walk the roads —  

they light candles for each other — 

they spin into the myth of each other, into each others’ dreams. 

Once, Ifa would see who really loved him — 

so he put on his wake, and hid himself behind a cold

stare, laid out on his bower — 

And everyone was there 

some came for the milk — 

others came to see his tall hat — 

some came to take prizes and souvenirs. 

But Eshu, half shaved and dripping, 

slammed through the gate and

crossed up to see if it was true.  

There he found his friend —

eyes fixed behind the display 

cheek painted pall and jaw

quiet as a broken mill stone.   

And Eshu, of all his wonders, did feign imagine

to lose this friend — he slid down from the palanquin

and turned to leave.  No medallion of the day

did he stoop to take from the table of relics,

no comfy piece of cake or cozy chair, Eshu — 

whose heart had broken at the mock death

wanted nothing.  He went out on their roads.  

He kicked the small dirt and smelled the evening 

and tried to find Ifa in the places they had been before — 

he looked at the silent faces of the orchard workers

as they bent through the branch weft sky

and remembered Ifa

sewing the black tourniquet

that held each star in place. 

He saw the night fruit of the farthest limbs,

and remembered Ifa

when he sang, full face and roses. 

He saw the wind

throwing itself in loops

within the dust of the cause - way

and remembered Ifa when he ran. 

He heard the far away voices of the town

and remembered Ifa when he would come up, over the rise

bellowing his morning hail, the birth of hope. 

Destiny and Accident hold each other

in the solemn quivering light

and there is laughter and forgiveness

at the end of the game. 

If only we were gods.   

 

Two carved heads of ivory and elephant bone. 

Two pods.  A divining chain,

A divining cup — a lidless divining cup.  

A divining bag — 

A circular divining tray — 

A wooden divining bowl — 

these things were returned to Ifa by lunch time. 

 

 

 

back to top

 

 

 

from Poetry Magazine   ( US ) 

 

http://www.poetrymagazine.com/editors_choice/index.html       

 

 

 

 

The dna to preserve proved contrary to capital gains 

 

 

No more tears.  The place is sold, she told herself. 

What had been a ferocious dream from a hundred years away,

outside a Cork tavern a million moonbeams ago, and

night after night walking home, with lads, few bob,

her grandfather sailing away and bringing it with him,

beside his mothers’ folded lace, trailing

reels and jigs and candle light,

had been made in America. 

With 40 dollars and his good wife withal,

he came with those dreams and filigree,

ambition lathering the way. 

He was young then, younger than the man himself,

who walked the plank in this, his fathers’ bar,

long decades after the ground was split to build the place. 

Halloran, McDaid, Daffey, Coons, all had wanted a pub in the new world. 

But only Hanlon had done it. 

And now it was gone.  Useless to even remember the past. 

She spent the afternoon insisting that she move on and forget about it. 

Just like a new Irish would do.  Losing the gene to remember

hurts for while, like a nail being wrenched out

of the body;  but in this new century,

it is for the best.  In the short time. 

 

back to top

 

 

 

 

from Caterwaul Quarterly   ( US ) 

 

http://caterwaulquarterly.com/

 

 

On public art and the longevity of an idea 

 

 

If the explanation it requires

is short

or not necessary at all,

an idea can last.  

 

If the explanation it requires

is long, needing students

and postulators to translate

and decipher

an idea can last - 

 

it can endure. 

 

It is the middler that is the concern,

the one without champion 

 

the one with the gaping

hole, and folding hands,

the scrap of music from a reel to reel,

a stone chipped fragment

from a forgotten language,

someone’s cherished thing,  

once of the midnight drive

once of the smiling girl by the junction,

once of the moment,

real and crumbling,

he who may not find a friend

in the loping crowd

who inherits ideas from the dead -

 

who will spark to the great middler

the great I did

who pronounced so beautifully

his causes

into the mirror  

 

 

 

 

Linda Ravenswood BFA, MA 

theravenswoodjones.com

 

back to top