Thursday, March 11, 2010
NO
Yes that was me you saw shaking
with bravery,
with a government issued rifle on my back.
I'm sorry I could not greet you
as you deserved,
my relative.
No. They were not my tears.
I have a resevoir inside.
They will be cried by my sons, my daughters
if I can't learn how to turn tears to stone.
Yes, that was me standing in the back door
of the house in the alley, with a bowl of
beans in my hands for the neighbors,
a baby on my hip.
No. I did not foresee the flood of blood.
How they would forget our friendship,
would return to kill me and the baby.
Yes, that was me whirling on the dance floor.
We made such a racket with all that joy.
I loved the whole world in that silly music.
No. I did not realize the terrible dance
in the staccato of bullets.
Yes. I smelled the burning grease of corpses
after they were lit by the pages of our poems.
And like a fool I expected our words might
rise up and jam the artillery
in the hands of dictators.
No. We had to keep going.
Our songs of grief cleaned the air
of enemy spirits.
Yes, I did see the terrible black clouds
over the suburb as I cooked dinner.
And the messages of the dying spelled
there in the ashy sunset.
Every one addressed: “mother”.
No, there was nothing about it in the news.
Everything was the same.
Unemployment was up.
Another queen crowned with flowers.
Then there were the sports scores.
Yes, the distance was great
between your country and mine.
Yet our children played
in the path between our houses.
We had no quarrel with each other.
Joy Harjo 2003
Posted over on Poets Against the War
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment