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Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

THE COST OF MAGIC

by Brian O'Sullivan




Union leaders say the traditionally high status of teachers in Ireland is under threat due to a combination of issues such as pay, workload, limited promotional posts and the growing complexity of the job. So, is teaching still an attractive profession? We asked delegates at teachers’ unions annual gatherings. —“Is Teaching Still an Attractive Profession?” The Irish Times, April 11, 2023


Orla Ryng told The Irish Times that “that magic
of being in the classroom is still there.” That magic

turns a student’s face from the cell phone’s dim light
to the brightness of a peer and an idea. That magic

turns some paper mache into a volcano,  and it
turns jumbled numbers into that kind of magic

spell mathematicians call a formula, and it even turns
the mangled words of social media into that magic

that I—and you, I bet?—value just about the most:
Words that leap and love and shout that magic,

which is to say poetry, will never die. And it’s with words
and letters that teachers are rewarded—like that magic

“N.T.” that got dangled off the ends of National Teachers’ names
in Ireland. My dad, being Irish, seemed to believe in that magic;

he asked, as I trudged through grad school, when I’d
be getting “the letters after [my] name,” that magic

“Ph.D.,” and I thought he was just teasing me, but later
I knew that even he, a practical guy, valued that magic

of letters. But letters don’t pay rent, and so Sean
Maher lives with his parents, still valuing that magic

That devalues him. Economists may
say that if you get good money and you also get that magic,

then you’ve been paid twice. ‘No one goes into teaching
expecting huge wages,” says Eoin Fenton; that magic

serves in place of huge wages, and asking for both money and magic
might be hubris. But would it, in the end, be all that tragic?


Brian O'Sullivan teaches literature and rhetoric in southern Maryland. He has had creative writing published in ONE ART, The Galway Review, The Ekphrastic Review, Verse Virtual, and Every Day Fiction.

Sunday, March 05, 2023

HOMAGE TO WAYNE (AND MY FATHER)

by Dick Altman




In a 2014 interview, the saxophonist Wayne Shorter was asked how often his working quartet rehearsed. His reply was evasive and illuminating: “How do you rehearse the future?” This was classic Shorter—gnomic, gnostic, mischievous, wise. It was a bit of a humblebrag too. For more than six decades, he conjured the future of music into being, with or without the benefit of rehearsal. Shorter, who died yesterday at 89, was a giant of jazz as an improviser, bandleader, and thinker, but above all as a composer—arguably the greatest in jazz since Thelonious Monk, and inarguably one of the greatest the genre, and the United States, has ever produced. —David A. Graham, The Atlantic, March 3, 2023


                               “All or nothing at all
                                 Half a love, never appealed to me
                                 If your heart, it never could yield to me
                                Then I'd rather, rather have nothing at all…”
 
Wayne—I once thought Sinatra’s voice was the best one alive
to interpret the ballad that launched his career into the musical
stratosphere—until I heard yours—heard your sax—above
a hundred-and-fifty other memorable voices—wrap its breath
around my soul—your intimate—languid purr—as if stroking—
rather than playing—the notes—imbues “longing” with the blade
of desire unshared—I imagine us conversing at The Five Spot—
Greenwich Village’s storied jazz dive—your “All or Nothing at All”
doing all the talking—softly—soothingly—trying to mend
a twentyish broken heart—you keep it low and slow—no evidence
of Sinatra’s signature swing—you’re standing at the other side
of the table—answering the sadness you see in my eyes—my face—
so very you to sing as if I were the only person in the room—
 
                                 I said all, or nothing at all
                                 If it's love, there ain't no in between
                                 Why begin then cry, for something
                                 that might have been
                                 No I'd rather, rather have nothing at all
 
Your sax bewitchingly mouths the words—shares their ache—
this is your magic—to get beneath the skin of the music—to find
the pulse—to release its essence—I close my eyes—draw into me
the air filled with your genius—wonder if there will ever be another
like you—like her
 

Note: The poet’s father Arthur Altman composed the music to “All or Nothing at All.” Lyrics used in the poem by permission.


Dick Altman writes in the high, thin, magical air of Santa Fe, NM, where, at 7,000 feet, reality and imagination often blur. He is published in Santa Fe Literary Review, American Journal of Poetry, riverSedge, Fredericksburg Literary Review, Foliate Oak, Blue Line, THE Magazine, Humana obscura, The Offbeat, Haunted Waters Press, Split Rock Review, The RavensPerch, Beyond Words, The New Verse News, Sky Island Journal, and others here and abroad. A poetry winner of Santa Fe New Mexican’s annual literary competition, he has in progress two collections of some 100 published poems. His work has been selected for the forthcoming first volume of The New Mexico Anthology of Poetry to be published by the New Mexico Museum Press.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

THE TRIED-AND-TRUE

by Richard Meyer




’Tis magic, magic that hath ravished me.
            — from Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe


Place your faith on the tried-and-true,
the wisdom that our forebears knew.
It worked for them in times before.

Nail a horseshoe to your door,
paint the lintel and the jamb
with blood of slaughtered goat or lamb.

Salt the threshold twice a day                      
to keep the pestilence at bay.
Hang up a cross and pentagram.                  

Burn sage and myrrh to cleanse the air,
light a candle, say a prayer.
Use magic to protect yourself.

Put amulets on every shelf:                                    
a hamsa hand, a Wiccan moon,
the Eye of Horus, Viking rune,

a witch’s knot, a scarab stone,
a totem turtle carved from bone.
Don’t trust in science coming through                                

to save the day and rescue you.
Keep superstition by your side.
The paranormal will provide.


Richard Meyer, a former English and humanities teacher, lives in Mankato, MN. He was awarded the 2012 Robert Frost Farm Prize for his poem “Fieldstone” and was the recipient of the 2014 String Poet Prize for his poem “The Autumn Way.” A book of his collected poems, Orbital Paths, was a silver medalist winner in the 2016 IBPA Benjamin Franklin Awards.