Showing posts with label Patricia Monaghan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia Monaghan. Show all posts

Friday, April 26, 2013

Poem of the Week: Patricia Monaghan

         

Loaded
 

They were always taught that all guns were loaded.
It was a way, he said, to keep them safe.
Don't you notice, he said, how people get shot
by pistols they think are unloaded? The gun
on the living room shelf, the unhidden
luger, the rack full of rifles: the children
 
knew each one was death. Now children,
he'd ask, his hand on a gun, is this loaded?
Mute chorus of yes. Mute yearning to hide.
That was their home. At school they were safe
even when textbooks talked about guns
and described how the buffalo hunters would shoot
 
and buffalo crumple down dead, one shot
enough to bring down the biggest. No child
in that school had ever seen bison, gunned
down or living, seen meat being loaded
on travois by leather-clad scouts, safety
bolts on their guns; no child had worn hides
 
or rode on the plains. But in history hid
critical truths that they sought about shooting
and fear and escape. Learn and be safe,
history whispered its promise to children
like them, learn and be safe. But a loaded
gun holds only one promise. A gun,
 
any gun, threatens use of a gun
no matter how they tried to hide
in books, no matter how they loaded
themselves down with schoolwork. A shot
or two in the evening, then, children,
he'd say, don't think the world's safe,
 
then he'd tell how once he had saved
someone's life with that very gun
over there on the wall and then children,
he'd say, be prepared for the worst, never hide
from attackers, they all deserve shooting,
so all guns must always be loaded.
 
Even dreams weren't safe, for hiding
in them were guns, aimed, ready to shoot.
Even children know this: loading leads to unloading.


-Patricia Monaghan   

Used by permission.
From Homefront (WordTech, 2005) 


Patricia Monaghan (1946-2012) died on November 11, 2012 in her Wisconsin home, Brigit Rest, in the arms of her beloved husband Michael McDermott. Homefront is a collection about the effect of war on veterans' return to their families and the damage to both. Patricia was a poet, scholar, spiritual pioneer and practitioner, activist, gardener and endlessly energetic creator. 

Patricia co-founded the Black Earth Institute with Michael and recently co-founded the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology. The Institute is dedicated to artists serving the causes of inclusive spirituality, healing and protecting the earth and social justice. Patricia published over 20 books including many of poetry.  She was awarded a Pushcart Prize among many others. She was also an active supporter of Split This Rock.
  
Please feel free to forward Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this email, including this request. Thanks!

If you are interested in reading past poems of the week, feel free to visit the blog archive.   

Friday, December 28, 2012

Poem of the Week: Patricia Monaghan




Red-Tailed Hawk    

Just past dawn in early fall,
a sparrow screamed at me
as I walked into the woods.

I did not grasp the warning.

Beside the dry creekbed,
I stopped at the shore
of a dark pool of silence.

At its center, a hawk.

Five feet away, chevrons
and arrows on his chest,
talons and beak like knives.

He stared at me. I stared at him.

At that moment, to the east,
men were debating ways to kill.
In the forest, deadly beauty.

I had never seen a hawk so close.

He looked left and right, his beak
a cruel and graceful curve.
His chest heaved in a breath, a sigh.

He flew straight at me.

I could not move. His wings
were as wide as I am tall.
I simply stood and waited.  

He veered away,

alighted in a nearby tree.
Wonder filled me, rushing in
like water down a dry streambed.

Hawk, I whispered, hawk,

and stared straight at him,
into his hard eyes.
Hawk, my heart sang, hawk,

a word of death and life

in balance, a word of death  
and hunger and fierce pain
and beauty and devouring.

I spoke the name of one

who wastes no life, who knows no
anger, whose strength is pure, whose
only weapon is his feathered self.

Hawk, I whispered, hawk. 


-Patricia Monaghan

from Homefront (WordTech Editions, 2005). 
 
Used by permission.


Patricia Monaghan (1946-2012) died on November 11, 2012 in her Wisconsin home, Brigit Rest, in the arms of her beloved husband Michael McDermott. Homefront is a collection about the effect of war on veterans' return to their families and the damage to both. Patricia was a poet, scholar, spiritual pioneer and practitioner, activist, gardener and endlessly energetic creator. 

Patricia co-founded the Black Earth Institute with Michael and recently co-founded the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology. The Institute is dedicated to artists serving the causes of inclusive spirituality, healing and protecting the earth and social justice. Patricia published over 20 books including many of poetry.  She was awarded a Pushcart Prize among many others. She was also an active supporter of Split This Rock.

  
 
Please feel free to forward Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this email, including this request. Thanks!

If you are interested in reading past poems of the week, feel free to visit the blog archive.   

Monday, February 21, 2011

Inside the Cheese Revolution: Poetry in Motion

Dancing with Liberty

(Madison, Wisconsin, February 19, 2011)

My friend called to say, “I’m waiting
at the top of State,” but I was across

the square, so I kept walking with the crowd
past the media stands where a few angry

men screamed through bullhorns while
we answered the call: Show me what

Democracy looks like, singing back over
and over, This is what Democracy

looks like, the marchers slowing to let
parents with strollers cross to the Capital,

past the costumed onlookers, past the sax
player giving us “Solidarity Forever,”

past the Harley-jacketed family, past
“Queers from Chicago” with raised fists,

Show me what Democracy looks like—
This is what Democracy looks like—


but at the top of State, amid thousands
of marchers, my friend and I could not

find each other, so I called and told her,
“Look for the man dressed as Liberty,”

and cut through the crowd to stand
beside a young black man in green silk

and a plastic-foam Lady Liberty crown—
Show me what Democracy looks like

This is what Democracy looks like
and he told me he was from Milwaukee,

and that his mother was a teacher,
and I told him I was from Alaska

and my father was in the service,
and all the while music was pounding

out from the Capital steps, and after
a few minutes we were dancing to

Michael Jackson, swaying and pumping
our arms, Show me what Democracy

looks like—This is what Democracy
looks like
—and somehow, my friend

never did find me, and none of us
who are hoping for justice know

whether we will find it, now or soon
or never, but what the heck, my friends,

isn’t this what Democracy looks like:
each of us, all of us, dancing with Liberty?

-Patricia Monaghan Used by permission.


Ten days ago, Wisconsin governor Scott Walker introduced a bill to strip workers of collective bargaining rights under the guise of reconciling a budget shortfall—one that did not exist several weeks ago, when Walker turned a budget surplus into a deficit by ramming through huge corporate tax benefits. The bill is stalled because, in a game-changing maneuver, fourteen Senators fled the state, denying the quorum needed for passage of the controversial law. And because tens of thousands have taken to the streets in protests, which are continuing after six days.

News reports have described “chaos” in the streets of Madison. I’ve been there, and I have to agree. According to chaos theory, small events can create huge and unexpected results—the so-called butterfly effect, wherein a butterfly flapping its wings in, say, Madison can set in motion a storm in, say, Ohio. (Or a storm in Egypt can inspire a similar storm in Madison.) I have seen the butterfly effect all week, as what could have been just another depressing legislative action ignited a storm of protest.

Another part of chaos theory tells us that systems can self-organize, and I have seen that in action too. Tens of thousands of people have been at the Capital this week—probably more than 70,000 today. No one is in charge. Dozens of groups, from unions to gay rights organizations, are involved. Hundreds of (mostly) young people sleep inside the Capital every night. Yet there have been, according to police reports, no arrests and fewer citations for disorderly conduct than at the last Badgers’ home game. Squads of young folk go around with big black plastic bags, singing a little song about not littering, asking us to pick up after ourselves, so the grounds of the Capital are surprisingly clean.

Chaos in the streets? I did see some people walking against the flow of traffic, but that only happened a few times. And really, the lines at the free bratwurst stand could have been better managed.

The whole thing has been like an immense street fair: drum circles, bluegrass bands, babies and dogs, costumes, wigs. Even today, when the Tea Party descended (about 2000 instead of the threatened 10,000), the festival atmosphere held. Nonviolence training had been offered all week. Omnipresent signs reminded us, “This is a Peaceful Protest.” Near the Tea Partiers, women stood with signs warning, “Do not feed the trolls.” When I left, after three hours of promenading around the square and chanting “This is what/Democracy looks like!” everything was peaceful as the Tea Party buses departed.

And there has been poetry everywhere. Not in the way you’d think: I haven’t seen any performance artists holding forth through bullhorns (though I may have missed that act). No, the poetry can be found in the whimsical, witty, outrageous, ostentatious, funny, punny, sexy, silly signs that the protesters carry. I have never seen a protest where words take center stage the way they have in Madison. Yes, there are pre-printed signs distributed by some of the organizing unions, but the majority are hand-printed and homemade. And they reveal a depth of creativity and passion that can only be fully enjoyed by walking slowly around the square, smiling and nodding and giving the thumbs’ up sign to your favorite, for hours at a time.

My favorites? Let’s see: the baby with “Poop on your bill” on his diaper. The dog wearing “If dogs had a union, I would join.” The many versions of the union slogan “Screw us, and we multiply.” The suggestive comments about Scott Walker’s relationship to the public: “Have a heart, Scott, use lube!” and “Not even dinner before?” Comments on Scott’s political allies: “Scott’s friends are Koch Heads.”

We saw the sorts of signs that suggest a major university nearby: “What is this, a plutocracy?” and “Walker is making Bedford Falls into Pottersville.” And one that could only be found in Wisconsin and doesn’t really make sense anyway: “I blame Favre.” (That would be Brett Favre, former Green Bay Packers’ quarterback who…but, well, enough about Brett.)

So many good signs! “I’m a farmer, I know manure” and a similar, if more mysterious one, “More cowbell, less Walker.” And many versions of “Walk like an Egyptian” and its corollary “Walker like an Egyptian.” References to the Tea Party including the brilliant, “Oh, I thought there would be crumpets.”

After two days of marching without signs, we weren’t going to the march today without doing our homework. So this morning we made two signs. Michael’s read “People’s Republic of Curdistan,” a reference to our state food, the cheese curd. Mine had Yogi brand ginger tea bags stapled to it and said, “I’m with the Herbal Tea Party.” We spent the day admiring others demonstrator’s signs, posing for pictures with ours, and dancing with a man dressed as Lady Liberty. Tomorrow is another day. Snow is predicted, and through the efficient rumor-mill we’ve heard that everyone is to bring shovels to dig out the Capital.

I have one sign, but I might have to make another. I’d really like to come up with something as good as that crumpets line.

Courtesy of Patricia Monaghan


Patricia Monaghan grew up in Alaska and now teaches literature and environment at DePaul University in Chicago; she also tends an organic farm and vineyard in Black Earth, Wisconsin. She is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Homefront (Word Tech Press), which considers the impact of war on families and from which this poem is taken. She is a Founding Fellow of Black Earth Institute, a progressive think-tank for artists striving to connect social justice, environment and spirituality.

Monaghan was on the panel “Giving Voice to the Silence/d” at Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness 2010.


Monday, December 20, 2010

Poem of the Week: Patricia Monaghan











Knowing the Bomb So Well


After the nightly news and four martinis
he quietly begins to draw the inner workings

of the bomb, knowing the explosion needed
to ignite fission does not itself compromise

the real event; how compartmentalized the bomb,
of necessity, is, to keep the elements

separate until it impacts on target;
with what care the bomb is timed so that

from the moment of release it proceeds
inexorably to detonation.

It is necessary then to explain his drawing
in detail to the children, before they go to bed.

After a few moments he quizzes them:
What are the proper names of the bombs dropped

on Nagasaki, Hiroshima? Who captained
the Enola Gay? How does a prisoner

of war answer the enemy? The children
do not speak. They know release has occurred,

the elements are colliding, impact is inevitable.
It is always a first-strike situation. Always.


-Patricia Monaghan

From Homefront (Wordtech Editions 2005).


Used by permission.

Patricia Monaghan grew up in Alaska and now teaches literature and environment at DePaul University in Chicago; she also tends an organic farm and vineyard in Black Earth, Wisconsin. She is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Homefront (Word Tech Press), which considers the impact of war on families and from which this poem is taken. She is a Founding Fellow of Black Earth Institute, a progressive think-tank for artists striving to connect social justice, environment and spirituality.

Monaghan was on the panel “Giving Voice to the Silence/d” at Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness 2010. Please feel free to forward Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this email, including this request. Thanks!

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