Raven’s Spring

Raven rides the windy winter sky searching for a place to rest.

Below him underneath a cape of snow the forest sleeps in silence.

He sees a single leafless oak in the middle of a meadow at the

edge of the wood and thinks he hears the sound of a piano.

In a veil of whirling snow, he drops out of the clouds to settle on

a branch and watches with intense curiosity a man and woman dancing around the tree to the sound of music they think only they can hear.

The sound is tinny and archaic, like a waltz played in a music hall

in Paris by Ravel or Debussy in the weeks before the hollow drumbeats

of the First Great War.

 

the ribbon of the river becomes a ribbon of butterflies

 

the crust of ice on the lake buckles and cracks and

islands of ice the size of freight cars break apart from

the mother continent of winter and begin to flow south towards the sun.

being rapped out with tiny mallets on ice sickles

Her eyes are closed as her partner lifts her off the ground as if she weighed no more than an armful of leaves, but she smiles when he bends over her sleeping form to unbutton her blouse with his lips

Raven wonders at the strangeness of humans as he watches

Raven rides the wide windy sky searching for a place to rest.

Raven’s Song

It’s twilight and the Cat is tired. She and Raven played all day

in the wide, windy sky and danced the rumba in the treetops.

He tucks her into bed with a blanket he has made of leaves

and wants to sing a lullaby, but is afraid because his

voice sounds rough and raspy.

And yet when he begins to sing

Slumber my darling

Your Raven is near

Guarding your dreams

From terror and fear….

even the mice and the crickets of the forest become silent.

The Cat is too sleepy to understand his words.

She feels instead a longing in his voice.

And as she falls into her world of dreams,

his song coils around her in a ribbon of

saffron-colored petals.

©2010 J.M. Keating

Three Postcards from Spain: La Costa de Azajar

Wind

A desert wind from Morocco has blown all through the night since we arrived from Valencia at twilight yesterday. In the morning, the skies are empty and blue. From the balcony we scan the landscape, from the ridge of mountains in the west to the lighthouse on the brow of the cliff at the end of the cape across the bay. New homes cluster on the hillside above the town. The finished ones are painted white, with red-tiled roofs; those still being built remain gray, like blocks of dust. On top of the ridge above the houses, a jagged row of towers look like ancient fortifications. “No,” say my friends: “they are the ruins of old windmills. We can visit them later, if you’d like.”

The Mediterranean is the darkest of blues, laced with green veins, like patterns in marble. In the bay below us, a small boat cuts through the water. Its red sails catch and hold the light as it turns and tacks in the wind. Farther out against the cliffs near the end of the cape, an expensive motor launch chugs out to sea. Slowly, it grows smaller and the blue waters curl over the froth of its wake as if it had never passed by here.

It’s nearly silent on the balcony, except for the breathing of the wind and the chatter of birds hidden in the pines and the soft murmur of the voices of friends. The embrace of their arms. Our moments of peace.

Ruins

At twilight we walk along the spine of the cliffs high above the sea. From the lighthouse at the far end of the ridge, a pulse of pale green light arcs through the gathering dusk—light, dark, light— every twenty seconds. In the west, the sun has disappeared behind the mountains, but above them, a wall of clouds streaked with red still lingers. A full moon rises in the east and below us in the blue water, the last sailboat of the day returns to its home in the harbor. The lights of Jávea flicker along the shoreline that curls away from us to the southern end of the bay—an arm of lights embracing this small edge of the Coast of the Orange Blossom.

There are eleven windmills. The round towers made of ochre-colored stones loom above us in the fading light. The wind fills the air with the fragrance of pine and sage and bats dart around the towers. Slowly, the ochre stones turn to pale blonde as the moon rises higher.

No one speaks. We dance with the bats in the murmur of the wind, balanced between sea and sky, between sunset and moonrise, here, now, on these cliffs. The heat and noise of Valencia is only an echo from a place far away. Not one of us wants to leave this peace.

Little One

The street that curves along the coastline is full of cars and motorcycles, but a block away, at the end of a narrow alley, a small café is quiet and full of shadows. A tanned young couple passes by the open windows on their way to the beach and then a few tourists with maps and cameras. Then three workers in blue overalls covered with dust. Then a young woman– red dress, blonde hair—pushing a dark blue pram with white wheels.

In the café, six strangers ignore each other to concentrate on their laptops. The blue pram slides up against the wall and the woman in red sits down at the table next to mine. The rhythm of clicking keyboards is interrupted by gurgling sounds— a baby. The woman opens her laptop and the bright-eyed one—a girl— gradually draws the six strangers into her orbit. The mother allows one of us to hold the baby and soon we pass her tiny body around from stranger to stranger. We nuzzle her and coo, “Mi vida,” “hija mia.” She drools and tugs at my beard. “Mi amor.”

Then she’s returned to her pram and we turn back to our computers. Suddenly, a scream. Her mother rocks her but she will not be consoled. The little one snuggles into the curl of her mother’s arm. A breast appears. The baby dines. Slowly, with her free hand, mother checks her emails. Peace in this quiet little world.

© 2004 J.M. Keating

Jávea, Spain