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April 22, 2018 by maud

Mystic Mother/Modern Martyr: A review of Marie Howe’s Magdalene

Beginning with the woman:

                                                        the body;

                                           a litany of penises,

                                       a private-diary song,

                                  sung like the marginalia

                             of Pre-Algebra homework;

                            addiction: to touch, to pills,

           to the many great spaces of silences;

             men of many kinds, and a daughter,

                                                                    too.

imagines the biblical figure—

a mother                                     on the couch

                                           down the sidewalk

   in the sea during “Low Tide, Late August”

“I rested my chin on his shoulder looking toward the shore

As he must have been looking over my shoulder, to where the water deepened

and the small boats tugged on their anchors.”

—of Mary Magdalene—

a martyr                                 breaking plates;

                                     hitting nameless men;

      sleeping with someone who’s supposed

to be the son of God, I think, in “What I Did Wrong”

“Slapped the man’s face, then slapped it again,

broke the plate, broke the glass, pushed the cat

from the couch with my feet.”

—as a woman who embodies the spiritual and the sensual, alive in a contemporary landscape…

this “contemporary landscape” (city, living room, etc.) borne

on the back of a ravenous “I,” which begins with the beginning that has no start,

asking of: identity, and belonging, and demanding answers with

stigmatic hands, and the righteous redemption and/or blasphemous joy of sex

with the holy trinity, and funeral manners, and channel surfing

with mothers with daughters:

“Before the Beginning”

Was I ever virgin?

Did someone touch me before I could speak?

(Howe wonders who and why and where the Fallen Woman is,

assigned a role impossible to play when skin is always already

played with by someone who wants to be the first to touch, to have, to soil.

Howe prefigures the image before language, establishes the ontological

over the linguistic in missionary position.)

Who had me before I knew I was an I?

(Birth and belonging, sex and sense of self—Howe

takes Lacan to task, before Lacan even knew what it meant

to be taken at all, before there was a(n) (m)other. The first poem raises

every question necessary for the rest of the collection: giving her words

a place to go, to return, to beg for answers, even if none are delivered.)

So that I wanted that touch again and again

without ever knowing who or why or from whence it came?

(Again, “Before the Beginning” sets

itself up as the touchstone of the collection,

asking: who? why? where? I?)

…the subject of her own life, fully human and alive to the scared in the mortal world.

Ending with silence:

                        which was thrust onto woman

                            so Magdalene wrapped her

      bare skin up in “it” and called “it” an “I,”

                                cloth to cover up herself;

                                                               space;

                         the Theopoetics Conference;

                    “One Day,” where Walt Whitman

                 fingers I, thumbing I in his pocket,

                      spending and spent for a soda,

          “to be spent for something somebody wanted and drank and found delicious.”

                                                        Revelations not of the extraordinary, but the painful

                                                        and awkward and banal made almost sacred.

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Could Have Sworn

Could Have Sworn is a literary magazine dedicated to the present: we publish a range of works across a variety of media: we are unapologetically eclectic.

Recent Posts

Summer Reading List!~!June 7, 2018
Personal Summer Reading List- Polly AlarconJune 7, 2018
Things I May or May Not Read This SummerJune 7, 2018

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