—Photo by Robert Ramming
—Poetry by Robert Ramming, Yolo County, CA
—Photos by Robert Ramming and Joseph Nolan
FOREBODING
Something's wrong tonight
the moon is full
but the light's not right
Dust swirls where it shouldn't be,
branches move where there is no breeze
Something's wrong tonight
daytime birds
startle into flight
Headlights on the road, tilted and askew,
shadows move, just out of view
Something's wrong tonight
it chills the spine
avoids the light
Led on by promise of sorrow, loss and pain,
has that rough beast, at last, slouched into Bethlehem
Something's wrong tonight
the moon is full
but the light's not right
Dust swirls where it shouldn't be,
branches move where there is no breeze
Something's wrong tonight
daytime birds
startle into flight
Headlights on the road, tilted and askew,
shadows move, just out of view
Something's wrong tonight
it chills the spine
avoids the light
Led on by promise of sorrow, loss and pain,
has that rough beast, at last, slouched into Bethlehem
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan, Stockton, CA
COMPTON 1968
Obliviously out of place, mother driving, father navigating,
two not-quite-teenaged boys in back,
we rolled over Compton’s asphalt avenues
on an August pilgrimage to the
orange skies of Los Angeles.
From our perch, my brother and I
gawked gape-jawed at the big city kaleidoscope
of posters & graffiti,
glitter & litter,
hippies & hookers.
We were tourists in an
ambivalent ambiguous otherworld.
Vague vanguards of vagrants
trudged carts up & down the boulevard,
circuit riders for uncertain times.
An angry black man stood astride a street corner,
shouting his prophecies into the smog.
We could not hear what he was saying
through our tightly rolled-up windows.
Space Station Transiting Crescent Moon
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
THE EARTH-SPINNING GOD
Surely they are wrong,
those people who say it's just turtles
all the way down
Maybe you've seen the glimmer
of the divine lines extending west
on the surface of our planet,
sensed them especially close to sundown,
when unseen planes of existence
reach out to touch us
These mark the path
of the ever-westward god,
spinning the earth with every step
That sense of movement just beyond your sight—
that's the god passing by,
intent only with rotating our blue-green ball, west to east,
unconcerned with humanity,
our squabbles, our fears, our loves
Surely you've done it too—
maybe not so much now anymore,
but when you were young,
and followed the tracks of the earth-spinning god,
felt the turn of the earth
with every push of your toes,
the swing of your arms
Didn't you do that?
Didn't you join in along that westward journey
and for a moment, you were part of that god,
something aligned with the universe
Indigenous Fence
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
WHEN OUR RAGNAROK COMES
When our Ragnarok comes
we will know that it is of our own making
but we will curse the gods anyway
For allowing Pandora's Box to open
For giving us fire
For dangling the apple of Knowledge before us
For creating us
When our Ragnarok comes
the gods will not emerge to shake the world
with their final, divine combat
They have been silenced by iPhones,
gagged by one-hundred-forty characters of hexadecimal runes,
bound by the entangled photon beams
of quantum communication satellites
We sit, unaware, above the imprisoned gods,
casting our zeroes and ones into more perfect patterns,
self-righteously enraptured by the spells of our Priuses
and air travel carbon-offset purchases
While dolphins die,
polar bears drown,
coral reefs bleach to bone,
oceans choke on our plastic,
insects disappear
The world heaves and burns in agony
as Alexa plays our music
When our Ragnarok comes
there will be no horrific creatures of Saint John's Apocalypse,
no thundering of Thor's hammer, Mjolnir.
But, there may be the whine and roar of Tomahawk cruise missiles
blindly guided to their destiny of destruction
The goddess Kali will be smiling in her fitful slumber.
But she is lost to the world, encased in our disbelief,
a chrysalis, awaiting the call of vanished worshippers
to bring her forth in proper, terrible glory.
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
"Write what you know," they say.
So, I'll tell you what I know.
I know if something is advertised on TV,
I probably don't need it.
I know blackberries are sweeter
for their thorns.
I know everybody is strange,
some just hide it better than others.
I know if you're not going to let sleeping dogs lie,
it's best to wake them from a distance.
I know happiness is over-rated,
but I still enjoy it.
I know there is beauty to be found within ineffability,
but I'll never find the words.
There was a time I knew so much more
than I know now.
Like the song says, "Seems like everywhere I go,
the more I see, the less I know."
I once met a man in a magazine.
He said, "No one gets out alive."
I met another man on a movie screen,
and he said, "We all got it coming, kid."
I know that, as much as I like comfort,
I prefer truth—most people don't.
I know that the lessons will be repeated
until learned.
I know life is short, love is sweet,
and nobody knows whether that matters at all, in the end.
I know the stars are far away,
but there are times I can feel them in my blood & bones.
Cat Sushi
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
Today’s Middle-Sized-Nip:
MOTHER SHIP
—Robert Ramming
She stretched up my chest,
claws hooking through shirt,
slightly into skin—
a threatening sign of feline affection.
Vertically-slitted eyes stared unblinkingly into mine—
so I blew a puff of air onto her face.
She did not blink,
but claws did dig in a little deeper.
I could sense observations being transmitted
to the mother ship, orbiting invisibly
somewhere above our planet.
Into my mind she said,
"Not your planet for much longer, bub."
And there was more, so much more,
but she erased it from my brain
with her alien eyes.
—Public Domain Photo Courtesy of Joseph Nolan
________________________
Robert Ramming and his wife of 42 years, Debbie, reside on their small farm in Yolo County. Robert is a full-time small-scale farmer, occasionally dabbling in poetry and other forms of trouble-making. Besides fruit, vegetables and poultry, they have also produced four fine children who, being smarter than most, fled the farm when they were grown. Thanks for the poems and pix, Robert, and don’t be a stranger! (Our thanks also to James Lee Jobe for steering this farmer’s tractor our way!)
For more about the Ragnarok, go to norse-mythology.org/tales/ragnarok/.
If I still lived in Pollock Pines, this current wildfire would probably have us evacuated and maybe even homeless. All our thoughts are with wildfire victims, not just in California, but everywhere this season. It's a rough one...
__________________
—Medusa
Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.
Would you like to be a SnakePal?
All you have to do is send poetry and/or
photos and artwork to
kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post
work from all over the world, including
that which was previously-published.
Just remember:
the snakes of Medusa are always hungry—
for poetry, of course!