Please help the Black Earth Institute continue to make art and grow community so needed for our time. Donate now »

a literary journal published by the Black Earth Institute dedicated to re-forging the links between art and spirit, earth and society

Linda Mills Woolsey


Spin

As words whirl, “fake” and “real” change places again and again

in a complicated reel. In February, flowers in full bloom

line the neighbors’ walk—no Latin name, no roots,

just green wire lifting elaborate ruffles of plastic—

mustard yellow, crayon red, panty pink—stiff

as the slogans in your last post.

 

Scroll down the oil and water stories, see how they all refuse

to emulsify, no matter how hard you stir. Even at home

no two of us recall the same ornaments, condiments,

arguments—who started the damn quarrel, who stole

the show, who pried open every cupboard to expose

our patched notions and puzzle bones.

 

Each picture’s worth a thousand lies. In our photoshopped

exchange you can overlay any scene with Armageddon.

Who notices the stock shots of another day or decade,

another city? You get so dizzy looking, you just

can’t turn away. We’re still the same

gullible kids we were

 

whirling on the playground, our jackets billowing—red,

blue, yellow—opening petals of the nonsense garden

where you can’t make out whether it’s you

or the world that spins,

shaky as a top.


Morning After the Election

The teakettle whistles the same tune as always

& the cats purr over their kibbles while

three finches in olive drab cling to a feeder

tilting crazily in the wind.

 

After the steady drip, drip, drip of slogans,

the shouted argumentum ad hominem

ad nauseum, we take the sign down, stow it

in the basement with

 

everything else we keep meaning to deal with.

Neighbors hoist new banners proclaiming

that anger never falters. Plus ça change, plus

c’est la même chose.

 

Still the wind has shifted since all the guitars

chanted we shall overcome. I’m craving

the nostos of the back catalog, some

new old rhythm

 

to shake loose this dread. I’d settle for

Dylan on vinyl in some pine-paneled

basement, back when our hangovers

were not political.

 

But morning after angels, cynical and sleek,

slouch in doorways, marking every lintel

with spit as we flip through the choices

left us—each crass

 

callous, coarse—a quest for some fool thing

we thought was more important than this,

our one frail life. Death will ring us up again—

matter of fact, insistent.

 

We’ll want to hang up, but we can’t. We’ve

cast our ballots. What’s done is done.

Influencers assure us we still have time,

can still save big, the climate’s

 

not so bad, every headline has its silver

bullet lining.

Share: 


Linda Mills Woolsey (she/her) is a Western Pennsylvania native who has lived near the Appalachian Mountains south and north most of her life. Being hearing impaired since birth has given her a taste of being on the margins in any conversation. She’s also a retired English professor who has lived long enough to watch the rapid unscheduled disassembly of many hard-won rights for people on all sorts of margins. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Northern Appalachia Review, Wild Roof, River Heron Review, Quartet, and other journals.


©2024 Black Earth Institute. All rights reserved.  |  ISSN# 2327-784X  |  Site Admin