ROBYN ROWLAND / LINE OF DRIFT & MOSAICS FROM THE MAP
(click to view cover)
Mosaics from the Map
By Robyn Rowland
2018 / 80 pages / €12
ISBN: 978-1-907682-62-9
Cover art: Lynda Burke
(click to view cover)
Line of Drift
By Robyn Rowland
2015 / 112 pages / €10 (marked down from €12)
ISBN: 978-1-907682-39-1
Cover art: Vera Gaffney

ROBYN ROWLAND has nine books of poetry, most recently This Intimate War: Gallipoli/Canakkale 1915 (Five Islands Press, 2015) and Line of Drift (Doire Press, 2015). Irish-Australian, Robyn lives half-time in Connemara. Her work has appeared in forty anthologies and journals, and in Best Australian Poems, 2014, 2013, 2010, 2009, 2005 and 2004 (Black Inc). Robyn won the Catalpa Poetry/Writers Prizes from Australian-Irish Heritage Association, Jean Stone Poetry Prize, Poetica Christi Poetry Prize, Writing Spirit Poetry Award (Ireland); was shortlisted for the Newcastle Poetry Prize, 2013 and the ACT Judith Wright Poetry Prize, 2007.
SAMPLE POEMS FROM MOSAICS FROM THE MAP
Capture
The wind is wild through the olive trees,
through the windows of the fast minibus,
through my hair. Like on his motorbike,
gripping him tight, engine revving uphill —
I am a wind-vane in chaos.
We head for Ezine and my long trip home,
that intangible place, a shifting focus,
a moving heart, a soul gripped and ungripped by love.
I have taken off the shell ring he gave me
from the beach, packed it carefully away,
shelved like the too-many years between us.
Cut by shore-rocks, worn by sea and its tumble,
its beauty is in its worn nature.
Passengers are crushed to each other.
I feel bonded to their journey, cocooned in
the soft rumble of Turkish voices. His eyes alive,
he talks broken words into patterns that make it work,
this companionship, this shared friendship. Young man,
older woman, we muse on parting again, speeding
toward the same bus that last time took me away confused,
trying to find a word for this. Do you remember? he asks.
Of course. Warm, suntanned and sea-salted, my body
is fluid, heart softened by his attention, his smooth hands
protective. Shielding me, he has taken charge.
I could travel like this forever, his leg pressed on mine,
ethereal happiness suddenly pausing here.
False heaven, he muses. Perhaps. But heaven anyway.
Moon Dreaming
Bone white, the full moon
threads itself round curtain cracks,
through the lace cloth of my heart,
the same moon that lays itself
on your sheet of water
harboured below your window,
far away in space, in time,
both of us on islands, decades apart.
You placed a shell ring on my finger.
The sea gave it to you for me.
Solid twist knotted where a gem might be,
its interior is softly polished, the inside
of an oyster, from which the pearl fell.Bone white, the full moon
threads itself round curtain cracks,
through the lace cloth of my heart,
the same moon that lays itself
on your sheet of water
harboured below your window,
far away in space, in time,
both of us on islands, decades apart.
You placed a shell ring on my finger.
The sea gave it to you for me.
Solid twist knotted where a gem might be,
its interior is softly polished, the inside
of an oyster, from which the pearl fell.Bone white, the full moon
threads itself round curtain cracks,
through the lace cloth of my heart,
the same moon that lays itself
on your sheet of water
harboured below your window,
far away in space, in time,
both of us on islands, decades apart.
You placed a shell ring on my finger.
The sea gave it to you for me.
Solid twist knotted where a gem might be,
its interior is softly polished, the inside
of an oyster, from which the pearl fell.
SAMPLE POEMS FROM LINE OF DRIFT
Lunar Lullaby
Shellharbour, NSW
Breast-white, a blue-veined
moon is bulging over-full
against its girdle of black,
the sea’s crush of waves
blowsy in its lush cadence.
Beneath, a deeper thrum,
an engine imagined that
drives the whirling globe round.
At midnight, white water
is high and busy on the beach
and way out half-way to the horizon
it still churns, shattered light
all across the sea now,
waves and flat acres alike
silvered as if blue forgotten,
green a memory,
and only the gilt skin moving
toward this house,
all slick and salt wet.
I turn to sleep in the crease of
sarong on a hot night
suddenly soothing cool,
and the silvered sound
of waves-made-moonlight
calms the heated heart.
Shock
ghazal in Istanbul
waking, our distant country seems strange my love to me
mountains stand jagged where flower fields would be
rough river and wide with no boatman in sight
beyond, a stretched desert frost-burned of verdancy
familiar old country I know without maps
tattoos of loss score my bones’ history
I re-read your words absent honour, bereft of care,
love leaving, sword-edge-sharp, carves a swift vacancy
in darkness, a thief, your words crept in abrupt,
rejoicing in decision you seem thrilled to be free
on crumbled ruins of our future, abandoned, I grieve the
bright world we would sail, compass wrecked at sea
you have another woman before days have time to heal,
shock inks its solitary script, no embellished calligraphy
diminished, Beloved, you made yourself Stranger to me,
cruel as a lion’s claw you rake your heart free
LINKS TO ARTICLES, INTERVIEWS & REVIEWS
Author websiteArticle on Live Encounters
Review in the San Diego Book Review
Review in the Galway Advertiser
Interview in Surf Coast Times
Article in the Galway Advertiser
Review in The Australian
Interview with Melbourne Poets Union
Introducing her work for the Irish Poetry Reading Archive at UCD
Reading a poem for the Irish Poetry Reading Archive at UCD
Review in Transnational Literature
Review on Plumwood Mountain
Article in the Limerick Leader
Review in Mascara Literary Review
Profile in Rockford Street Review
Launch speech in Communion
Review of Mosaics from the Map in Poetry Salzburg Review
Review of Mosaics from the Map in Rockford Street Review