James Ragan is an award-winning poet, playwright, essayist, and screenwriter. Translated into 10 languages, he has authored 8 books of poetry including In the Talking Hours, Womb-Weary, The Hunger Wall, Lusions, Selected Poetry, The World Shouldering I, Too Long a Solitude, and co-editor of Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Collected Poems. He has read for six heads of state, including Mikhail Gorbachev and Vaclav Klaus and for audiences in China, Japan, England, France, Sweden, Brazil, and the Czech Republic, among others. In 1985, he was one of four poets, including Seamus Heaney, Robert Bly, and Bob Dylan, invited to perform at the First International Poetry Festival in Moscow. Ragan’s honors include three Fulbright Professorships, two Honorary Doctorates, the Emerson Poetry Prize, 8 Pushcart Prize nominations, a Poetry Society of America Citation and the Swan Foundation Humanitarian Award. Ragan’s plays, The Landlord and Commedia, have been staged in the U.S., China, Greece, and the Soviet Union. He has worked as a screenwriter at Paramount Pictures and later in various production capacities during the making of THE BORDER, THE HOUSE, and the Academy Award winners THE GODFATHER and THE DEER HUNTER. He has a Ph.D. and served for 25 years as the Director of USC’s Professional Writing Program. In 1996, BUZZ Magazine named Ragan one of the “100 Coolest People in Los Angeles: Those Who Make a Difference”.
James Ragan’s poems are satisfying and distinctive, full of arresting collocations and striking phrases.
-U.S. Poet Laureate, Richard Wilbur
James Ragan dominates the art of image, the art of poetic line, and the art of poetic narration with insight that marks major poets. -Nobel Prize Nominee, Miroslav Holub
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If For Each of Us
a rope could swing us long and light across a widening trough of all that fails us in our lives, I would want to land upon the Isle of Echo, lush with repetition, green with being original in birth and twice the twin a wave might dance along the skerry. I would want a canyon tall for hawks to carry long the deep tattoo of voices on the air. I would want an ear to hear what words to read again to memory, what verse to carol, thoughts to root before the sparrow’s flight the mind has taken comes to rest on truth. I would want to hear a vowel repeat in consonance with alliteration’s frothy throat. And should the landing fail its footing, I would want to know what inspiration in shorter flight one syllable might repeat as in the swash the flat-stone makes to skip across the light in water or the voice a wind gives to birch and linden. I would want the distance to all understanding to narrow just enough to fail at failure. I would want a melody of chances to learn to love again what first I dreamed, free as wonder, soft as touch, and of all things simple to care again for them as much.
Published in Poetry Magazine
A Good Sky
I show you a good sky. It could hold a fleet of geese above a kite, sipping in a breeze, or foliate the wind with leaves of cherry wood and hedge.
Look. It will blanket your sleep with mirrors of stars in the soft undressing of night.
It will love you, solely, through the Venus dawn, rubbing your eyes awake a moment before the day’s light hangs its spars.
I show you a good sky. It will rain its reflection on your one troubled eye, the one that blinks each time a hawk rants by.
I am no one’s romantic. No. I am the sky’s shadow-wish writing this only to breathe its light.
I show you a falling sun, passing like a lover, to be near you, allowing no star, no bulb on a corner lamp to possess you as you are.
Look. Here I am, the sky’s moon down. I will shave a horizon out of peaks like none your memory has ever carved.
I show you a good sky, its broad blue ribbon will wrap its mind around your eyes’ imagination and tease you into smiles— Now, be patient, let your grieving rest awhile. |