Two Poems by Ali Rowland

The Metaphor of Work

They say “She held down a steady job
for many years” as if it were a wrestling match:
the job floored (literally!) but fighting back,
refuses to submit, a sweating,
heavy body lying prone as someone
counts the seconds out, but very slowly,
for years, in fact, like an interminable
nightmare.

Or perhaps an arresting cop is astride
this occupation, yelling at it to put
its arms behind its back, cuffs at the ready,
jangling metal adding to the symphony
of the street, the crunch of boots on gravel,
the job face down, struggling not to taste the dirt
between its teeth, struggling to breathe at all.

In any case, it doesn’t sound quite right.
You almost start to feel sympathy for the job,
to empathise with its chafing wrists
or shoulders pinned down uncomfortably
on the ground. And the poor thing is steady too,
like your first reliable boyfriend,
or the progress of a large container ship,
or a lucky rock you cling on to
just on the point of drowning.

Something’s wrong, because it’s so often the job
that has you between its teeth, or on a short lead,
steady only in its domination,
always threatening to pitch you if you don’t behave,
whittling you down day by day and year by year
towards exhausted submission.

Better then to say: “It was a hefty job
that held her down for many years.”


Athena

Twice born: once from an insect and then
from your father’s head. It’s a strange start,
but when your pregnant mum was turned
into a beetle and consumed, then
you clearly needed to get birthed quick.

That must have been some journey from the swirling
gastric juices of Zeus to his complicated,
philandering grey matter. You made
some noise there, causing him a headache,
crashing your sword and shield together in his brain.
He called the blacksmith to axe his skull open
and there you were: full-grown and armoured,
ready to begin a life of strategy.

Despite all that, you were your dad’s favourite girl.
Protecting at first the hearth and home,
then diversifying into the arts of war,
but cleverly, not like that blood-thirsty Ares
with his shock and awe, you were far more canny.

No surprise then that you chose your favourites
carefully: Heracles who appreciated
help with thinking through his tasks; Jason favoured
with the Golden Fleece; Achilles who, after all,
despite the sulking, was so much more appealing
than Agamemnon; Odysseus with a cunning
to match your own; and the city, to which
you gave the silver-grey olive tree.

What a wise owl you turned out to be.




Ali Rowland is a poet and author from Northumberland. Her poetry is sometimes about her own mental health disability, and just as often about the world in general. She is assisted in her endeavours by a wonderful husband and a beautiful Border Terrier. Ali won the Hexham Poetry Competition in 2023 and was Runner Up in the Positive Images Poetry Competition. She has been published in Tabula Rasa: Poems by Women (Linen Press): Ten Poems of Kindness Vol. 2 (Candlestick Press), as well as a number of poetry magazines.

“Athena, Minding her Business” by Ellen Huang

Falling in love is their term for it
but I am not as careless as Zeus
desperate to spread himself thin,
spread his likeness on a fawning earth
with hyperpopulation. I do not depend
on the title of king of the gods
to get a yes and make an impression.

Aphrodite teases me for it
but many goddesses understand
what it is to find passion elsewhere
and be pleased so deeply, like offerings, like ambrosia,
with the humans with beautiful minds.

I lean against their head,
rest on their shoulders,
whisper in their ear,
play with their hair,
visit their dreams.
I inspire.

I listen to them, and let them listen to me.
Zeus knows nothing of such practice,
(Hades and Poseidon perhaps a little more)
and his type are bewildered at the mystery
of woman’s dangerous intuition.
Pity he remembers nothing from when
I was born of his mind, a warrior cry full-grown
from his skull. Pity he overlooks his brainchild
and returns to his endings and beginnings.

But with my most intimate followers,
I exchange words and philosophy,
lacing together a fully-clothed vulnerability
of the stars, an infinite space of knowing
and intimacy. I bring them fighting
spirit and maturity, and the patience
of immortal writers.
They will watch the world bloom.

I deliver and conceive much
as my brainchildren walk the earth,
born of great minds, adopted of great thinkers,
destined to meet their kin
and, for lack of genetics in the gods,
trace divine influence back to me
grey-eyed goddess who made them wise.




Ellen Huang holds a BA in Writing with a minor in Theatre from Point Loma Nazarene University. She is published in Royal Rose, X-Ray Lit, Three Drops from a Cauldron, Nymphs, Tealight Press, and Exhume Lit, among others. Follow her magic: worrydollsandfloatinglights.wordpress.com.