Emily & Virginia
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About this ebook
This is a coming-of-age novel in which Emily Dickinson & Virginia Woolf return to this world and join forces to protect & assist a young woman artist, Lily, as she grows into her full power in love & work. Artfully written to appeal to adults and younger readers of serious literary fiction, the story takes place almost entirely in Ashland, Oregon and features appearances by several of the leg-endary Bloomsbury group, including Virginia's sister, Vanessa Bell and husband, Leonard, as well as Emily's sister Lavinia. The Mother Goddess of Ireland, Brigid, appears in an early segment. She grants Virginia's peti-tion to return to this realm to help Lily and it is she who also decides to send Emily Dickinson with her. Readers of Emily's poems and Virginia's To the Lighthouse, which this novel structurally mirrors, will discover added delight in echoes and allusions to the lives and works of these great writers.
Robert McDowell
Robert McDowell, The Poetry Mentor, believes that everyone is born with a soul-poem, the prayer-song that awakens each hero's journey, tells each person's unique story, and connects one to divinity. He navigates his life through poetry, and he teaches others to do the same. Author/editor/translator of ten books of poetry and prose, McDowell has said of his work, "I don't preach, promote one religion over another, psychoanalyze, prescribe drugs, or promise you wealth in (pick your number) easy steps. I can show you how writing poetry and journaling enriches your family life, relationships, and job performance. I can show you how fun writing can be. If you have a specific project you'd like to do (a book of poetry, stories, memoir, family history, essays), I can draw on my experience as a publisher and editor of 250 books to get it done. I teach workshops that benefit everyone--beginners and longtime authors. I'll read your poems and listen to your stories. I'll give honest feedback and compassionate encouragement. I'll stick with you." McDowell is a sought-after public speaker on a variety of topics from Neurotheology, the hero's journey, and the soul-poem of work to the guide of the spirit horse and living a life of integrity and awareness. He has led workshops at Esalen, Kripalu, Pine Manor Retreat Center, California Poets-in-the-Schools, and many universities and writing conferences here and abroad. He created the community outreach program, The Rural Readers Project, and was co-founder of Story Line Press, which he led as director and editor for twenty-two years.
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Emily & Virginia - Robert McDowell
EMILY & VIRGINIA
Virginia-book.jpg5091.jpgEMILY & VIRGINIA
A novel
Robert McDowell
HLP_logo.tifHomestead Lighthouse Press
Grants Pass, Oregon
5093.jpgEmily & Virginia © 2021 by Robert McDowell. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without the prior written permission of the publisher.
ISBN 978-1-950475-11-7
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020948240
Homestead Lighthouse Press
1668 NE Foothill Boulevard
Unit A
Grants Pass, OR 97526
www.homesteadlighthousepress.com
Distributed by Homestead Lighthouse Press, Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, Daedalus Distribution
Homestead Lighthouse Press gratefully acknowledges the generous support of its readers and patrons.
Book design by Ray Rhamey
Photographs by Alissa Lukara
Art by Jane Mary Katherine McDowell (Fox)
5095.jpgIs there not a sweet wolf within us that demands its food?
Emily Dickinson
fleuron.tifNow then is my chance to find out what is of great importance
and I must be careful and tell no lies.
Virginia Woolf
5097.jpg5099.jpgFor Jane Mary Katherine (Fox), who knows where the portals are and travels back and forth unafraid
5101.jpgPart One
The Portal
One
Lily Ramsay looked at the clock, its news a reproof as she slapped her colored pencil down on the table, abandoning once again the drawing of Inari the fox messenger of the Japanese fertility goddess; she could not finish and grabbed her jacket, the sage-colored one her mother wore when she hiked the Pacific Coast Wilderness Trail. If she waited any longer, she’d be late.
Lily and Shaya, best friends since they’d met as little girls at a horse-jumping lesson, walked up a wooded path from town into Ashland, Oregon’s Lithia Park at 6:00 a.m. Lily Ramsay, 25, not famous, yet developing what she hoped would become a successful career as a respected writer, artist and commercial illustrator, visited a special place in the park every year on this date, the anniversary of her parents’ death. Shaya, blonde, blue-eyed and also 25, would leave in a month for a year in England to work on a relative’s farm in Sussex. As they’d always done when they walked anywhere together, the young women held hands.
At the playground, they paused to read a newly posted sign warning about a cougar sighting, then veered to the right, crossing a small bridge spanning Ashland Creek. The creek burbled, pooled, swirled and raced on, big with snow melt and rain water. The girls turned left and continued on, passing the band shell where they had graduated from high school one sticky summer night in June (an especially lonely summer night for Lily who couldn’t help feeling that great grief and graduating were synonymous) then crossed a road and walked up a green embankment to the Japanese garden.
The garden featured a series of descending ponds connected by a walking path and tiny bridges, like the bridges one sees at a miniature golf course, though these were more stylish and ornate. Here and there the girls also admired small, spontaneous rock sculptures (one could see them throughout the park) created by…who knew? Lily and Shaya stopped at one of the middle ponds where lush lotuses feathered the surface.
The pond had an oval shape surrounded by Japanese maples and polished granite boulders. One of these was a flat rock, and it was here that Lily shed her backpack, opened it and took out a book by Courtney Weber about Brigid—Pagan Goddess and Catholic saint—two white candles and two red candles, a clump of sage, a writing tablet, a Blackwing pencil and a small brass bowl. She also laid out two more books, a slender volume of poems by Emily Dickinson, Selected Poems, and a well-read copy of Moments of Being, excerpts from Virginia Woolf’s diaries.
Shaya took from her backpack a woven mat the size of a large napkin and spread it out on the flat surface. Gold flecks in the turquoise-green of the mat sparkled in the early sun. Lily knelt by the pool and said a silent prayer to center herself and reach out to the Goddess, then dipped the brass bowl into the water and brought it up half-filled.
Wiping off the bottom of the bowl on her left palm, she placed it at the center of the mat. The friends silently divvied up the candles, two each, lit them and placed them on the four corners of the mat. A windless morning, Shaya thought; thank you for cooperating! Shaya produced from her bag a role of twine and a bundle of reeds the girls had collected the day before, and the two sat down on the stones. Together they unwrapped sixteen reeds, four small rubber bands, two scissors and began to make Brigid crosses.
Both were experts, and though they did not hurry, they made short work of the project. With two Brigid crosses completed and laid above and below the water bowl, Shaya and Lily stood on opposite sides of the mat.
Adjuva Brigitta! Adjuva Brigitta!
Lily cried, inviting the Goddess in. 365 days the sun traveled far away from that awful day when my mother and father were killed. The sun traveled far away and has come back again to that day—Adjuva Brigitta!.
Shaya opened the book of verse, and in a clear sweet voice read the Dickinson poem:
Because I could not stop for Death -
He kindly stopped for me -
The Carriage held but just Ourselves -
And Immortality.
We slowly drove - He knew no haste
And I had put away
My labor and my leisure too,
For His Civility -
We passed the School, where Children strove
At Recess - in the Ring -
We passed the Fields of Gazing Grain -
We passed the Setting Sun -
Shaya stopped there in mid-poem and lit the two red candles. Lily opened Moments of Being to one of Virginia Woolf’s most famous passages about marriage. Finding the passage, she gathered herself and read aloud. She recited the prose in a clear, quiet voice.
Arnold Bennett,
Woolf wrote, says that the horror of marriage lies in its ‘dailiness’. All acuteness of a relationship is rubbed away by this. The truth is more like this: life—say 4 days out of 7—becomes automatic; but on the 5th day a bead of sensation (between husband and wife) forms which is all the fuller and more sensitive because of the automatic customary unconscious days on either side. That is to say the year is marked by moments of great intensity. Hardy’s ‘moments of vision’. How can a relationship endure for any length of time except under these conditions?
Lily closed the book and lit the two white candles. Candles flickered above all four corners of the mat. Taking up the bundle of sage, Lily held it out so that Shaya could light the burnt end. The sweet, pungent scent of the smoldering sage wreathed around them and drifted away towards the stand of giant sequoias fifty yards away. Slowly, Lily circled the altar, speaking these words:
Queen of Ice, Queen of Stone,
Hear me from your Frozen Throne,
Be here, be here, be here now!
After two circles of the altar, Lily handed the sage to Shaya, who took it and walked her own slow circles saying:
Brigid has come! Brigid is welcome!
Brigid has come! Brigid is welcome!
Completing her second circle, Shaya ground out the sage on the side of the altar, placed it next to the brass bowl of water and crossing her legs, settled down on a stone bench. Across the small pond, across from Shaya, so did Lily. The two dropped into meditation as the candles flickered and the water bowl sparkled.
Lily? Lily! Come on, Lily, open your eyes. It’s me, Shaya! Come on, you’re scaring me.
Lily’s eyes fluttered open and squinted, as if the daylight were too much, too much. Getting used to the light as she sat up, Lily’s eyes opened wider and came into focus on Shaya. What. What?
Here. Drink some water,
said Shaya, raising a water bottle to Lily’s lips. Lily sipped a little and turned her head to one side. Have more,
said Shaya, but Lily shook her head no.
I…went somewhere
said Lily. What’s wrong?
Nothing’s wrong,
Shaya answered. It’s just that you seemed to disappear in your meditation. I mean, I stopped after ten minutes, like we said we would, but you kept going. I waited five minutes, ten, then I spoke to you, but you didn’t hear me. I spoke louder. Still, nothing. I thought you were kidding, but then realized you weren’t. So I got up and touched you. Still, nothing. That’s when I got rattled, I guess. What happened?
I’m not sure,
said Lily. I was climbing a green hill. I was crying for my parents, for my work. I was crying for purpose, I guess, and love. Yes, that’s it!
Lily’s eyes fired as she remembered. A face, yes, a woman with fiery red hair and milk-white skin came out of the earth and flew down the hill at me. I thought she was going to hit me, but she seemed to pass through me. I felt her everywhere inside me. The non-impact was so great I fell to the ground as if I’d been tackled or run over, but I was alone.
It was Brigid, Lily! You met her!
Her head clearing rapidly, Lily’s eyes brightened with greater focus.
Did she say anything? She must have or why would she appear to you like that?
Lily fixed on the candles, which had burned down half way since the two had lit them. A memory jolted her and passed on. She trembled. Someone’s coming,
she said.
Who?
said Shaya. Did you say someone’s coming, or did Brigid? Come on, Lily, don’t go catatonic on me again.
What?
said Lily. "Oh, I guess I said it. No, it must have been Brigid who said it. Why would I say that? Lily took a long drink of water on her own and cupping her hand, splashed a little on her face.
There was something else, too. A disturbance at the base of a dying oak, like that one up the trail we noticed last week."
Well, go on!
said Shaya. "What?"
For a moment,
Lily continued, the tree was, like, on fire and the ground shook. Then I saw two people—I think they were people—scramble out of the smoke. They seemed distressed. They looked wild and scared, like lost dogs or cats. Suddenly they made a grab for me, then they vanished and…and I heard your voice.
Well, there,
said Shaya. Are they the ones that are coming?
No!
said Lily, surprising herself with her swift and emphatic response. I’m sure of that! Someone else is coming. I don’t know whether to be frightened out of my mind or eager and excited,
she said.
Well,
Shaya said, since you aren’t sure which, why not settle for eager and excited?
Shaya could make her laugh, Lily thought, and as usual, she made a lot of sense. Yes,
said Lily, I’ll try that.
Again, they stood on either side of the altar, their hands pressed together at their chests. Shaya recited:
Oak! Open the door!
Brigid the Warrior, light the way!
Shine your fire into the shadow,
Truth shall prevail!
Shaya extinguished the red candles and packed them away. Lily spoke:
May her song be pure as water
May her light guide me
Wherever I go in this world
Or the next world.
Lily extinguished the white candles and wrapped them up. Shaya lifted the brass bowl to her lips, kissed it and sipped the water. Passing the bowl on, Lily did the same. She walked the bowl to the base of the maple tree nearest them and kneeling, poured out the water on the tree’s mossy base. Returning to the flat stone, Lily saw that Shaya had already rolled up the mat and packed it with the candles in Lily’s backpack. The sage, wrapped in linen, and the brass bowl followed. They had been in the garden for an hour. A doe and two spotted fawns emerged from the brush to munch on the green grass; the deer paid the women little mind as they passed by. It was a threshold morning, Lily thought, rife with memory yet promising discovery and adventure. Perhaps contentment, success and love would come, too.
On the Plaza, they stopped at Mix for coffee. Because the morning was bright and dry (so far, though it would certainly change), they took their cups to one of the wobbly iron tables out front and sat down to watch the other businesses waking up. I love it that we do this Brigid ritual every year,
said Shaya.
Me, too, and thank you,
said Lily. My mother kept an altar to her. I grew up with Brigid’s love and guidance.
She leaned over and kissed her friend on the cheek. You’re my sister forever,
she said. It means everything to me to do the ceremony with you. You were with me in the beginning and, I don’t know, it brings my mom and papa closer to me. Does that make sense?
Shaya nodded. Resting her arm across Lily’s shoulders, they people-watched and enjoyed the silence they made together.
I need somebody, Lily thought. I need someone now. She sat up in bed and switched on the nightstand lamp. She had already done so twice before, and now that it was just after 3 a.m., she gave up any hope of going back to sleep. She sat there, making effort at meditation, imploring intervention. I am hungry, Lily thought. I am ravenous, like an animal. She ran her tongue over her teeth. Were they longer? Sharper? Lily wondered, was there any meat in the refrigerator?
Lily got out of bed to check. Half-way down the hall, she remembered her new resolve to eat vegetarian; she had given away the frozen pot roast, the lamb cutlets, the lean luncheon meat to her neighbors in the building. What’s the point of going on? She thought, exaggerating as everyone does in the dark hours of early, early morning. Three steps onto the kitchen’s tile floor she drew back in pain, a shard of a broken flower vase having punctured the sole of her right foot. Once, weeks ago after an awful date, there had been lots of pieces on the floor. She thought she had swept them all up, but here was a lethal, stray fragment just waiting for her errant step. It found me, Lily thought and hopped to the bathroom where she sat on the edge of the tub to wash and bandage the wound.
"There, she said, exaggerating her limp as she staggered back to the kitchen;
I have done something useful." The kitchen, she thought, is a sacred place of usefulness and rejuvenation. Did she write that once? Did someone else? Where had she heard it? Not from one of those awful cooking shows, though secretly she liked some of them more than she’d ever admit. She stood alone in her kitchen, the room where days launch, where mid-days pause, where evenings arrive with their gauzy gold light, their changing bars of purple and blue and say, ‘rest; replenish your exhausted body and spirit with food, drink and talk’.
Yet, there was no one to talk to but herself, and that wild, undisciplined chatter wore on her. Like a physical body bumping into her in the street, knocking her off stride, the chatter upset not her equilibrium, which was already off, but the likelihood that she would be able to regain it any time soon. Besides, it was too familiar, this chatter, and she loathed it. She knew the voices, her parents pleading for their lives and the lives of other passengers, random, terrified voices consoling each other, the pirates terrorizing the ship’s crew, bullying and yelling orders, the mass confusion, the pistol and rifle shots, the bodies falling overboard, smacking the water.
Who loses their parents to pirates in this century?
Lily blurted out. She was kneeling when she said it; she was kneeling as if half-way to a prayer that was hung up somewhere, just beyond her. I need somebody. I need somebody now. Could Shaya be up at this hour? Could I call her? No, I won’t wake her for this again. I’ll go back to bed. I’ll read Emily; I’ll read Virginia.
But before she read, she punched up Brandi Carlile on her phone singing What Can I Say, her song of heartbreak and loss. Lily quietly sang along—Look to the clock on the wall/Hands hardly moving at all/I can’t stand the state that I’m in/Sometimes it feels like the walls closing in/Oh, Lord, what can I say/I’m so sad since you went away/Time, time ticking on me/Alone is the last place I wanted to be…As she sang, Lily’s mind raced through past relationships. There are healthier things to do through a sleepless night than play over a failed love life, Lily thought, yet reminiscing so at a terrible time is also oddly satisfying. It tells me I’ve lived a little, Lily thought. Now that she had started, she followed the thread leading to a night that summed up, for her, the Nothing she had so far achieved in her love life.
She thought of a dinner that began late because Reuben, the man she was seeing, had been delayed and did not call. Men were often delayed and did not call, Lily thought. So, the dinner began badly and got worse. When he finally arrived, they tried to talk their way out of their agitation; hoped that words would smooth out their scratchiness, and though this should work every time, how often it fails! But something clawed to get out of them, Lily remembered, something between them, something between them and so many others wanted out into the space between them. They tried. They talked, unsuccessfully, probably going on too long for Rueben’s poor male brain to keep up. The soup’s cold,
he’d scolded. The country-green salad is brown-tipped and wilted and you’re shaking your head and rolling your eyes at me!
By the time the river trout arrived, neither could eat another bite. Even worse, both forgot the To-Go boxes on the table and did not think of them until they arrived at Lily’s door. This despite the utter silence in which they drove. All that food gone to waste,
Lily had grumbled.
Back in Lily’s apartment, they’d found agreement on one thing: sex, and neither wanted any of it. Even so, though she thought she did not want him to, Lily also thought of how she had half-waited for this man to put his arms around her and kiss her, to exercise that male magic that irritates and excites women. She had wanted him to turn the entire unsatisfactory evening on its ear, but probably he was wondering how he could extricate himself from the encounter without making matters even worse. She knew that his male brain, shut down and numb as it was, could not think of intimacy with Lily or anyone. So he plopped on her sofa in his miserable man’s truth, defeated, murmuring platitudes like ‘I really like you’ and ‘why can’t we just have some fun?’ Inadequate to maneuver in or out of what was happening to them and trying not to show it, he managed to call down a spotlight on his foibles, his insecurity and imbalance. He even sat scrunched up to one side as if he could not wait to get out of his body.
She knew, of course. Like all women, she knew. Lily thought of how she was at least one or two thoughts ahead of that man, any man, but she, in her own way, was also paralyzed. She could turn him around like that! Lily thought of how she’d imagined snapping her fingers and a transforming puff of smoke would rise out of the man’s head. Instantly, he would be changed. He’d stand up, become animated, walk around the room with a bounce to his step, asking his puppet master questions about her day, what she thought, how she felt about the plight of the tiger, the missing airliner, the new puppy she hoped to find soon. Oh, yes! Now she yearned to feel his arms around her. But the smoke and his enlightened transformation had only occurred in her head. Instead of standing up changed for the better, the man put on his jacket with the threadbare elbow patches and headed to the door. I’m sorry,
he stammered, pulling the door back and hesitating in the opening, in the space they shared before the door closed and isolated each of them, one from the other, even more. I’m sorry,
he’d repeated, though it was clear to both that he wasn’t sure what he was sorry for. His sorry had been a General Sorry—a ranking officer in the familiar army of Sorry, Confused, Disappointing and Inadequate Men.
In that evening’s closing gloom, Lily had stood alone in her kitchen; her anger bubbling and sizzling. She had wanted to throw something, had wanted to hear the sound of anything breaking. She had wanted nothing so much as to shatter the empty flower vase on the counter. The vase was in and out of her hands in a heartbeat, and there were hundreds of shards and pieces all over the floor that would take weeks to clean up. She had felt her anger flatten and go out of her. Exhausted, she’d shuffled into the bedroom, kicked off her shoes and fallen like a knocked-over lamp onto the bed. She would begin to clean up the mess in the morning.
So, that’s my love life,
Lily, back in the present, said aloud, as if hearing herself say it might make a joke of it that even she could laugh at, as if saying it would make it almost bearable. Propped up in bed, feeling fragile in the small light of a reading lamp, Lily put aside her ramble through dating and no sex and brought herself back to Emily, to Virginia. She read aloud Emily Dickinson’s poem that begins, After great pain, a formal feeling comes. She read it aloud, her voice sounding otherworldly to her—and as always happened when she read the poem silently or aloud, she wept. She remembered sitting on her mother’s lap listening to this poem and looking up, she saw her father leaning in a doorway, also listening, with tears in his eyes. Sliding down a little in bed, she laid aside Emily’s poems and opened her mother’s well-used paperback of Virginia Woolf’s The Waves. It had been her mother’s favorite novel and Lily remembered having the first section read to her over and over when she was a child. Now she opened the book and pressed the pages to her face, imagining she could still catch her mother’s delicious Jo Malone tobacco and Mandarin scent. As Lily got older, she enjoyed reading passages to Shaya on sleepovers. Now she read aloud to herself, loving the voices of the six children that are introduced as the novel begins and somewhere in the middle of a