Dale Pendell
(compiled from pharmakognosis's chapter on
teonanacatl)
hello, spirit, welcome, dear spirit,
my cougar, my puma, my snarling lover,
bring me words, I know you.
And now I see your wound,
and now I see your death,
and wailing is my only song.
come in, you orphans,
come in, bear, twin bear cubs,
with beads you come,
dressed in woven beads you come,
in patterns in the patterns we weave,
turquoise beads, beads of yellow ochre,
with black beads and red beads woven
on your back, my lizard, my writhing one,
you come bearing grief,
and now i know what
keening is.
bring me words, my panther wife,
blinded by brilliance we are.
we, the clever ones, the peacocks,
blinded by brilliance we are,
the beads, the beautiful beads,
the beads in patterns, the turquoise beads,
the beads we weave,
they blind us, O mother
and now i know, i too, know,
i who have heard your cry,
i who have voiced your wailing,
now i know where words come from,
now i know where language begins,
now i know what real words sound like,
and now i know what keening is
and now i know why we walk upright
and why we leave offerings
i know the panther's cry
and now i know what keening is
and now i know,
i, slowest of your sons, O mother,
now i too know why we decorate ourselves
and why we sing the song of the water-jug,
and now i know what keening is
and now i know, i too, know,
why we walk in beauty in the sunlight
why we wear woven threads, yes,
why we sing songs of woven threads
you have entered, graceful snarler,
my predator who won't be tamed,
the dogs are howling.
you bring me words, you bring me wailing
and now i know what
keening is
for now i have seen beauty, i have seen courage,
and i know why we walk upright.
stand tall dear daughters, O sons,
walk in grace and beauty,
you who have heard the cougars call,
we who know what keening
is
-~--~-~--~~-~--~~~-~-~~-~---~-~---~-~--~~-~-
although the gods have the power of speech
sometimes they prefer a flower or a plant
elder leaves pressed on a blotter
or spring buds emerging from a winter stem
these messages they send
so ordinary we often them
an easy laughter and lightness
or legs casually crossed and touching
the way a serpentine dike blends seamlessly into bedrock
or the way two lovers move
starting and stopping, passing and pausing
on an April trail
the subtlest oracles are always the most obvious
seeing what is right in front of us the most difficult
a butterfly hatching from a ruptured dream
or splintered tree rooting in the soil where it fell
that those we've left endure or falter
does not mean that we must also
the poison that bit us is also our medicine
it is well to name things as they are
like that swampy Cree girl they called "Dry's Things Out"
when they found her sitting by the stream
a dragonfly on each palm
all three drying together in the sun
the gods' whispers are never commands
more like the place a steep trail has collapsed
and sunlight offers the understory
a second chance
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