Search
Close this search box.

TO JOHN RIDLAND IN HEAVEN

Author

1

Six foot six, the both of us,
the two tallest poets
in Santa Barbara,
though you had thirty
years on me and a superior
sense of song—not to
mention that long patrician
nose,
an eyebrow that
arched at someone’s
balderdash, and a
voice cultivated
by higher education,
soothing even when it
faltered as you searched for a
bon mot.

2

Frost was your ‘subject’,
but John Frederick Nims
was the poet you most
called to mind—witty,
eager
for a clever rhyme.
Your ear was an exquisite
instrument, fine-tuned
to philology. You’d clap once—
‘Just so!’—when a friend nailed
a metaphor,
and scan our lines
with the rigor of a dance
master keeping time
for his awkward charges.

3

Not content to craft
your own poems
merely, you dove into
translation like an
Olympic freestyle
champ. A folk epic
in Hungarian,
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,
The Pearl—in this century
who would think to translate
The Pearl? In your mid-
eighties, you embarked on
Homer, undertaking that long
journey from Ithaca
out into the wine-dark sea.

4

The end came as swiftly
as one of your concluding
lines, a sideswipe out of
nowhere.
In December, an email
began, ‘Encouraging
words I’ve heard…’
The next month was your
last. Your memorial service,
mid-March, was the final
event I attended
pre-pandemic, a
bouquet of lilies,
mourners
spaced two chairs apart,
masked friends serving
lemonade.

5

This poem’s title
references Heaney—
you’d have appreciated
that gesture, John: homage
to an elegy. We both
borrowed from our betters,
too much perhaps, but only
because poetry feels
more vivid than humdrum life.
Or am I wrong? I see
you now, rubbing your
broad forehead,
fiddling
with your glasses,
preparing to form your
words.

Most recent

Newsletter signup

Like it ? Share it !

More
articles

AN INTERNMENT CAMP COMMANDER’S STRUGGLE

The Story of István VasdényeyPart II ‘The train departed a second time.’1The title of István Lengyel’s conversation with the poet Erzsi Szenes, an inmate of the Kistarcsacamp. See: István Lengyel,

Nation Building in Central Europe

On the Relationship between Religious and National Identity The purpose of this study is to outline the cooperation between Slovak, Czech, and Polish national movements and the Christian denominations that

Separation of Powers
and Sovereignty

The Question of External Executive Power The title István Bibó gave to his academic inaugural address on 16 January 1947 was ‘Separation of Powers, Then and Now’. 1István Bibó, Az

Religious Conflict in Poland

An Interim Report Even though Christianity is perhaps the most persecuted religion in the world, and the severity of the living conditions of oppressed Christians is getting worse by the