The Pebble Culture, by James Ragan
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When in Greenland the ice had slid
its one broad shelf across the plains,
pushing past the rise of stone and lava,
and arctic ferns had split their roots
between the tarn and tundra
not knowing which, the thorn or reedbuck,
they had fed or fathered, one stone struck
steep against the other, chips flaking
off the white spurs of fire,
and a girl in her Choukoutien cave
of burnt bones and antlers, carved
her bowl into a hollow, the rough shape
incised into the curvature of a breast,
now mothering, now flowered, and the boy,
who saved the razor edge of the glacier flake
for his own picking, grazed the Abbevillian ax
against the wall, a shower of pebbles
forming in their meteoric light
frenzied points of departure, spoons into knives,
flint into spears, violence into culture.
From “Lusions” by James Ragan (Grove: 86 pp., $20). Ragan will read his poems at the Festival of Books, Saturday at 11:30 a.m.
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