Posted in Living, Poetry

The Extraordinary Gentlemen

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As I prepared to write this post, the Memorial Day holiday uppermost on my mind, my husband flipped on the television to the movie, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. It seemed appropriate, this far-fetched tale about a group of men (and a woman!) who band together to use their unique talents to save the world.

On Memorial Day, we take time to remember our own loved ones who have passed, but also pay much-deserved respect to those who died in defense of our country. The British poet A.E. Housman has a short poem about the sacrifice of our soldiers that goes like this:

Here dead lie we because we did not choose
To live and shame the land from which we sprung.
Life, to be sure, is nothing much to lose;
but young men think it is, and we were young.

Patriotism doesn’t mean you have to blindly believe everything your government tells you or wholly support your government’s actions. The great thing about America is that we have the right to make known our disagreements with those in power, both through our free speech and at the ballot box.

There is a difference, however, between disagreeing with a government policy, or even war, and denigrating those who have chosen to defend our right to freedom with their very lives if necessary. When soldiers of the last Great War returned home, they did so to parades, confetti reigning down on them amidst the grateful cries of an entire nation. The soldiers who returned from Korea were quickly forgotten. Those who managed to come home from Vietnam outside of a body bag were scorned.

So, every Memorial Day, I feel a great swelling of pride for our soldiers past and present, along with sorrow for the times when those soldiers have been made to feel less than heroes by the very people they have sworn to protect.

There are ways to express disagreement with government policy or even war. Write letters to Congress. March on Washington. But honor always those in uniform who did not choose to shame us by defending our right to be free. They are the ones who are truly extraordinary.

Posted in Poetry, Writing

National Poetry Writing Month #30

On Endings

For the final day of National Poetry Writing Month

Being neither Whitman nor Frost,
we have come anyway,
to this place of words,
to this gathering of minds
brought to us by a digital world
that even cummings’ imagination
did not lay onto an altered page.

Equalized by these aughts and ones
that string together like DNA,
this man-made code that awes us,
leads us, Babel-like, too close
to the throne of God,

we are drawn to the light
of our touchable screens
like moths yet to be burned,
seeking connection or truth,
the litany of an age long since
numb to what it knows

of blood and tears and war,
forever proving the depths
to which a species given choice
will fall.  We rise

to forgiveness with humbled hearts,
kept honest by our love of words,
and the peace of a yoke
laid upon us by a God
willing to die.

 

Ramona Levacy
April 30, 2013

Thanks for joining me on this journey of 30 days straight of poetry writing.  Congratulations to everyone who took up the challenge!  May we poets continue to grow in number and the love of a well-turned phrase never die.

Posted in Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #29

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A Meditation

A summer day, Mark Twain propped
between my hands, the sunlight
filtering through the oak leaves
fluttering somewhere above me,
the gurgle of the stream where I’ve come
to be still, a soothing balm
for daily worries, like being wrapped
inside my mother’s arms.

Some days, this place could be
outside my doorstep and still
projects and mopping and bill-paying
keep me huddled at a desk,
clinging to tasks as if they own
all the answers.

On this day in deep winter,
I choose Huckleberry and leaves
green as a late August afternoon,
my mind’s eye conjuring the safest
of comforts, the only place
where any believer truly meets God.

Ramona Levacy
April 29, 2013

Posted in Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #28

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On Things Forbidden

The dented bucket drew me here,
its galvanized metal long since rusted,
its edges unfurled and jagged,
a small, gray feather snagged
just where a handle once had been,
and still, by forces unknown to mere girls
just turned ten, a pool of muddy water
brimmed the pail, defying logic,
glinting the winter sun in blue
and yellow and white.

Propped next to the leaning shed,
past the blood-red signs that forbade
our entrance, the bucket belonged
to them, the couple who lived
in the big house half a mile from our
ten-acre spread, she of the long, flowing hair,
he of the peppermint sticks, cleft chin
and dimples.

Mirna, six years my senior, and her friends
would take picnics to the public lake,
in full view of the long drive that led
up to a world where parents didn’t spend nights
huddled over the Farmer’s Almanac
and bills unopened in piles,
all for the glimpse of them, smiles
on their faces, driving by in a slick coupe
with the top unfurled.

But it was January, and the crisp air
swirled around, kicking up dust,
our ever-present foe, and the lonely bucket
beckoned.

With careful steps, I skirted under barbed wire,
huddled toward the weathered wood
creaking in the wind and waited. Surely,
shiny, hidden things, the promise of all
forbidden places, would be there, just inside
the dark, broken building where even Mirna
would not go.

And then, hearing only my heartbeat
thrumming in my ears, their red tips burning
from the cold or my shame, I stepped
to the gaping hole where a door had been,
the hinges flapping, and stuck one foot
past the threshold of no.

The bucket slapped its water patiently
as I stood with one foot shadowed, the dank
smell of dirt and rodent and rotten wood
sinking through my flared nostrils,
settling into the wool fibers tucked
inside my Mary Janes.

And then, across the barren fields
that separated us in ways ten-year-olds
know but do not understand, the woman’s voice,
full of laughter and promise, floated
to my burning ears, startled
something that skittered out of the dark
and sent me flying homeward,
where tucked in my bed that night,
I dreamed how the water
in the rusty bucket gleamed.

Ramona Levacy
April 28, 2013

Posted in Poetry, Writing

Thoughts On A Month of Poetry Writing

With only three poems left to write in this month of National Poetry Writing, I wish to take a breath in order to reflect on the experience.

When first it was proposed in one of the WordPress blogs that such a task be undertaken, I was pleased to see the parameters with which the challenge was posited: the point of the writing being in the task itself and not some polished, final draft to be presented each day. In fact, those who had never produced poetry before were encouraged to “give it a go” in the spirit of the thing, the fact that those who love to write owe it to words (and themselves) to also give poetry a chance.

Poetry is a highly misunderstood craft. Some think that just because a poem does not sound like a greeting card, with sounds that are the same ending each line a a pre-determined pattern, then that poem does not “rhyme,” that it is, in fact, not a poem at all. Others think that poems are merely a means for those “needing attention” to bare their souls, so to speak, to pour out on the page in the most appalling drivel the deepest secrets, the lies they tell themselves, or to mete out justice like a speaker on a soap box, pounding home the point beyond the hearers’ willingness to listen.

Some poetry is guilty of these impertinences, but not all poetry. Good poetry, really good poetry, pays as much attention to rhythm and line breaks and rhyme as any Shakespearean sonnet. Poets are masters of the minute. We take the smallest of things, notice the dust bunnies in the corners, and magnify them to reflect the truth, exhibit our humanness, make our readers ask why.

Because we work to say the most with as few as words as possible, for the poet each word counts to the utmost. “Use the right word,” Mark Twain wrote, “not its second cousin.” For the true poet, the right word is always hanging just out of reach, like the proverbial carrot. We are never satisfied, always ready to scratch out the second cousin when the right word comes along, even in our copy of our published works, reading in front of a live audience. Posting a poem each day that had had no time to “cure” in my mind, which was most assuredly filled with second cousins, was only accomplished on my poet’s part because I had accepted the premise that we were writing a poem a day in honor of poetry and to experience poetry in a new way. I look forward to taking the 30 poems that resulted from this April and seeing eventually what I might produce from them.

In trying to say the most about the state of being human by means of focusing my readers into the pinpoint of light at which I have shown my magnifying glass, you will have noticed in my poems this April a number of situations in which I have no personal experience. The only autobiographical sense to my poetry is what is given to all true writing: as my writing mentor, Dr. Walt McDonald put it, “I have survived childhood.” That is not to say that I had an unfortunate childhood. Actually, it was quite a blessed one. Still, it was childhood, and the process of passing from innocence into the knowledge of adulthood is a tricky and painful one that teaches us many lessons and gives us even more stories.

I have appreciated the readers who took time to let me know that they have liked my poetry. It has given me a bit of a boost, actually. It is always better to feel you are writing to someone and not just flinging words into the dark. If you found anything of beauty in what you read, I credit the grace of God and pray that I have illuminated Him according to His plan for the words He gives me. If what you read was disjointed or clumsy, I credit it to my own stubborn tendency to try standing on my own, even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Poets may look at the world and words from smaller and more stilted angles when compared to other writers, but we, too, are human, offering what is most dear to us, our words, with every stanza we place on the otherwise empty, cold page.

Posted in Living, Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #27

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PATTERNS

Like the squared-off lines chalked
on a hot sidewalk, any blistery afternoon
when you are eight and school
is out for the summer,

your mother just inside, or off
in some faraway place full of people
you hope she does not like better,
working in either case, her limp hair
clinging to her sweaty brow
in curly waves.

Like the jolt of concrete in your ankles,
the dream of ice cream bouncing in your head
along with the quarters squirreled away
in your pocket, the chocolate cream smooth
on your tongue, pushing away more
than the hole in your belly.

On the radio, around the television each night,
the uncontrollable filters into the living room,
layering the rag rugs and shag carpets
with guns, bombs, the threat of war,
flood, feast, famine, the round stomachs
of children with eyes like yours
but vacant and cold.

The only thing new is your own hand
touching the hot stove, drawing back
in hurt wonder, glancing to the knowing eyes
of the one whose arms you run to,
she who has skipped her own chalked patterns,
licked vanilla as it dribbled down
its sugary cone.

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Ramona Levacy
April 27, 2013

Posted in Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #26

SWAY

The tall grass blades blown
by a gentle breeze, this dance
they know like reaching for light,

the spineless wiggle of seaweed,
a flow of gentle fibers against the might
of salty water, a lesson in force
versus forgiveness,

the furry thump of the tail
from the one being on earth
who gives more than he requires,
a full bowl, water to lap, and romps,

the side-to-side steps of two hearts,
entwined by the silence over cereal,
the sounds of raised voices followed
by loving whispers, the unison
of forever, this covenant that rises
like a Monarch floating to the sun.

Ramona Levacy
April 26, 2013

Posted in Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #25

Sacrifices

This child we cuddled nights,
our stomachs grumbling so we kept
the roof over her curly-blond head,
the perky toddler whose wobbled first steps
marked her own form of independence,
pushing her stroller more times
than she rode,

we watched her win track meets,
built baking soda volcanoes together,
hid our tears from each other
at the movies where everyone cries.

When did her pearly-toothed smile,
its straightness bought on installment,
cause such tears in us, this reminder
of her golden promise, in days
before she took the path so travelled,
the maze of choices based on feels good,
that led her to this cold place,
this mound of earth that marks
what meant so much to us
that we still go to bed hungry?

Ramona Levacy
April 25, 2013

Posted in Christianity, Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #24

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Elemental Series: Water

Is it the crystal -clear promise
of thirst-quenching delight,
the cool cascade of that so pure
its only blemish is bubbles?

Or perhaps it is the sound
it makes, rumbling over rocks,
hurtling through no will of its own
to the end of gravity’s pull,
as loud as a jet’s engine,
as quiet as a single drip.

Mayhap, the need for it,
its vitality so set that even trees
grow miles of roots to reach
a life-giving drop. The next Great War,
they say, will be fought
over the right to control
what falls freely from the sky.

We humans mock its power,
mistake the easy way we make it splash
for superior strength we do not have, for it
has sliced mammoth caverns,
flashed across dry beds with a force
to wash away everything,
faced toxins and garbage and mud,
still cycling through vapor, rain,
stream, river, ocean.

No, it is the image of our God,
the Son of Man, putting on humanness,
standing in a still pool, blameless,
eyes open to the sky as heaven parted
to offer its benediction. And so, He rose
from the muddy waters,
cleansed.

Ramona Levacy
April 24, 2013

Posted in Poetry

National Poetry Writing Month #23

stone

Elemental Series: Stone

Smooth and slick and solid,
so solid we almost forget
the watery polish that ekes
out canyons, makes even
the dullest granite shine.

Through ages, it has stood
beneath and risen above, its roots
layers of refuse, pot shards
inked in pigments like blood,
and forgotten bones.

Tool or weapon, stair or chair,
what we take is only temporary,
so that even what we grind to powder
returns to what once was and remains.

These stones lay as silent witnesses
to all our humanness, to men
standing knee-deep in battle blood
to children holding motherless babies,
to the smiles created by loving hands,
these silent observers, like God’s judges,
waiting, patiently waiting, for their cue
to shout.

 

Ramona Levacy
April 23, 2013