To My Elders
Please be there when I go.
I want you there in rows and rows.
I want you gathered in a place
Like together on the face
Of this land you all once were.
I remember that so well.
You were all gathered like a clan,
A tribe, a people set aside
From town and country.
Now there you should be collecting
As if you were fireflies in the night
Sent to render me sight.
I want you all on the wing,
And then I want to hear you sing.
Sing, you all. Tell the truth!
I’m deceived by my memories of you.
I’ve lost what you left to me.
You be there! You be there all
So that I can ask you
As I move on,
Stripping away my relations,
Shedding skin of land I love,
Of life lived in stations.
Take me to you, show me my home.
Give back my integrity.
Validate my existence
With reasons I can believe in.
Come to me restless to give me sight.
Come regretful. Say I was right.
Tell me what mattered. Disclose what was real.
Wait for me in file.
I’ll be just a while,
Then I should know – I, myself, should know,
Only be there when I go.
Saturday, May 7, 2011
The Ghost of Mary Rose
The ghost of Mary Rose
Haunts the balding hill
The old and balding hill
Where lately her house came down
The trees were tall and full
She knew them all so well
And loved them all so well
Out here, far from town
The love of Mary Rose
was home up on the hill
‘cross stream and up the hill
Al built her house up there
Al Labrador would walk
The road back into town
He much preferred the town
The people and the lights
He’d sit out by the road
As strangers took the bus
He’d sometimes take that bus
Down on the road to town
And Mary loved the trees
Old Al could walk the leaves
The trees shed, drying leaves
And you’d never hear a sound
The ghost of Mary Rose
Makes a high and keening sound
Keens a high, lamenting sound
Among those fallen leaves.
Now, the ghost of Mary goes
As her children fell the trees
All the ancient living trees
On the old and balding hill.
Haunts the balding hill
The old and balding hill
Where lately her house came down
The trees were tall and full
She knew them all so well
And loved them all so well
Out here, far from town
The love of Mary Rose
was home up on the hill
‘cross stream and up the hill
Al built her house up there
Al Labrador would walk
The road back into town
He much preferred the town
The people and the lights
He’d sit out by the road
As strangers took the bus
He’d sometimes take that bus
Down on the road to town
And Mary loved the trees
Old Al could walk the leaves
The trees shed, drying leaves
And you’d never hear a sound
The ghost of Mary Rose
Makes a high and keening sound
Keens a high, lamenting sound
Among those fallen leaves.
Now, the ghost of Mary goes
As her children fell the trees
All the ancient living trees
On the old and balding hill.
Death of Our Elders
The Death of our Elders
I sit to talk of wind and fear,
death swelling in black clouds that hid the moonlight.
Old men sitting silently, bringing the firewood,
Stoking the fire and smoking their pipes
While aunts made way for the journey.
No strangers appeared then – no stories, no teaching,
Low whispers over firelight near the lamp light.
Outside where the young ones waited
Confusion formed on winds rising.
Go east, we heard them saying –
Old aunts weighted down with their praying
Sent the young ones through the darkness
Too near hollows filled with spirits
Who would not tell the young ones stories,
Only scar them with their nearness
On the dark, the endless journey
Through the forest with their news.
Sadel’s ghost blew up behind them
Touching heels and teasing shoulders
Breath so old they felt its passing
Could not dream of what she said.
It is wolf, old aunts cautioned
When they ran for home, afraid
In the wind that beats behind you
Your own fears that have found you
Hungry devils of your making.
Now we sisters keep the vigil
Call the old ones to be ready
Light the lamp and stoke the fire
Watching death, it comes completely
And then the bowl of sacred water
Meant to wash her, now to send her
Go east, we tell her, go to the east.
I sit to talk of wind and fear,
death swelling in black clouds that hid the moonlight.
Old men sitting silently, bringing the firewood,
Stoking the fire and smoking their pipes
While aunts made way for the journey.
No strangers appeared then – no stories, no teaching,
Low whispers over firelight near the lamp light.
Outside where the young ones waited
Confusion formed on winds rising.
Go east, we heard them saying –
Old aunts weighted down with their praying
Sent the young ones through the darkness
Too near hollows filled with spirits
Who would not tell the young ones stories,
Only scar them with their nearness
On the dark, the endless journey
Through the forest with their news.
Sadel’s ghost blew up behind them
Touching heels and teasing shoulders
Breath so old they felt its passing
Could not dream of what she said.
It is wolf, old aunts cautioned
When they ran for home, afraid
In the wind that beats behind you
Your own fears that have found you
Hungry devils of your making.
Now we sisters keep the vigil
Call the old ones to be ready
Light the lamp and stoke the fire
Watching death, it comes completely
And then the bowl of sacred water
Meant to wash her, now to send her
Go east, we tell her, go to the east.
Prisoner
We lucked out, the prisoner and I
It was a weighted world, and we just got by
In the wood men fed children with diseases
On the road the mad aunts gathered
They’ve left their poison in the road dust
And I manage rest on fences driven into earth
Last night I took myself back on the weathered stretches
Slowly lost my footing, when I saw your prisoner shackles
I fell across your ankles, heard the smothered sound of moaning
It was you, who I'd forgotten
You, who’ve been forsaken
Last night I bathed myself in road dust
Faced the elders who in that dust were whirling
And I think I might go crazy if they won’t let me sleep
Their eyes flash on fogs that blind me
They lay in hollows, judging
They sweep the air, dancing, just above my head
I thought we’d got away, I and my captive
Spreading out on the land to take it back, like a lover
But in unnamed ways they’ve bound the prisoner
And fouled what I knew of earth and brush and song
And I can’t go to sleep now the witnesses are gone
It was a weighted world, and we just got by
In the wood men fed children with diseases
On the road the mad aunts gathered
They’ve left their poison in the road dust
And I manage rest on fences driven into earth
Last night I took myself back on the weathered stretches
Slowly lost my footing, when I saw your prisoner shackles
I fell across your ankles, heard the smothered sound of moaning
It was you, who I'd forgotten
You, who’ve been forsaken
Last night I bathed myself in road dust
Faced the elders who in that dust were whirling
And I think I might go crazy if they won’t let me sleep
Their eyes flash on fogs that blind me
They lay in hollows, judging
They sweep the air, dancing, just above my head
I thought we’d got away, I and my captive
Spreading out on the land to take it back, like a lover
But in unnamed ways they’ve bound the prisoner
And fouled what I knew of earth and brush and song
And I can’t go to sleep now the witnesses are gone
On the Eve of the Death of the Land
On the eve of the death of the land
I said to those who came before me
Long, so long ago had grown here
Laid in waiting, then laid in passing
Said I to them “So glad I knew you
Glad to have these stories of you
Sad to now say goodbye to you
When now from this land you leave us
This land is dying, now you’ve left here
Waiting out eternal glory
You have gone thus, and now, I must
For I was but your Indian orphan
Parents gone, ancestors quiet
Devils pouncing on footpaths chasing
Goodbye to all you old ghosts and Gigus
Leaning into paths out to the gathering
Lighting old fires in long gone fire pits
I’m so glad to say I knew you
I knew the day would come when mother
Dressed in braids and going eastward
Leaving land and life she lived here
Would take the whole lot of you with her
Her going meant it all went with her
Now just three sisters left to remember
And a brother, the oldest, our brother.
I said to those who came before me
Long, so long ago had grown here
Laid in waiting, then laid in passing
Said I to them “So glad I knew you
Glad to have these stories of you
Sad to now say goodbye to you
When now from this land you leave us
This land is dying, now you’ve left here
Waiting out eternal glory
You have gone thus, and now, I must
For I was but your Indian orphan
Parents gone, ancestors quiet
Devils pouncing on footpaths chasing
Goodbye to all you old ghosts and Gigus
Leaning into paths out to the gathering
Lighting old fires in long gone fire pits
I’m so glad to say I knew you
I knew the day would come when mother
Dressed in braids and going eastward
Leaving land and life she lived here
Would take the whole lot of you with her
Her going meant it all went with her
Now just three sisters left to remember
And a brother, the oldest, our brother.
Gigu (Grandmother)
Gigu
After the leaves, cooked in the sun, fall in the backwoods
And all things past are eaten by the soil
I walk beaten trails lined with skeletons
Stark against the sky.
Others sleep here still, not I.
I remember the warmth inside
Gigu and her daughters ate here, and slept
Old Gigu moved the fire with her hands
And read the leaves when the tea was gone.
Emlsigtmat (her ghost) has taken the cabin walls for firewood.
Her hands move the fire, still, for me
Lighting my path through winter trees.
After the leaves, cooked in the sun, fall in the backwoods
And all things past are eaten by the soil
I walk beaten trails lined with skeletons
Stark against the sky.
Others sleep here still, not I.
I remember the warmth inside
Gigu and her daughters ate here, and slept
Old Gigu moved the fire with her hands
And read the leaves when the tea was gone.
Emlsigtmat (her ghost) has taken the cabin walls for firewood.
Her hands move the fire, still, for me
Lighting my path through winter trees.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
