Again the Far Morning

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Again the Far Morning Page 5

by N. Scott Momaday


  And surpassing in their touch.

  What masterpieces they wrought,

  Images that leapt through time,

  Engulfed in the perfect night

  Of millennia and cold,

  Skeletal stillness, pending,

  Closer than the walls around.

  How did they reckon future,

  Indeed immortality?

  The primal forms they imaged

  Yet proceed from some beyond.

  They remain, undivided

  From the dead and present hand.

  A Sloven

  A sloven entered the parade,

  Was out of step and wanted aid

  To fashion well a bold charade.

  “I am the Emperor Norton.”

  His cry was heard by everyone,

  From Candlestick to Tiburon.

  None questioned his high majesty

  Nor did gainsay his sovereignty.

  His subjects set his spirit free.

  The sloven tarried and held sway

  Until at last he passed away

  And into legend by the Bay.

  Far in the Flaxen Fields

  In the mute morning

  The reaper walked to the west,

  Shifting from time to time

  The shimmering scythe

  That swung like a pendulum

  From the ascending sun.

  At Midday he had got

  Far in the flaxen fields.

  Striding then in the tapered shade

  He seemed to cleave the day

  Downward from the blind meridian.

  And in the soft sight of a bear,

  He merged with the wall of woods

  And the green pale of genesis.

  The New River Northward

  The river runs steadily northward,

  Clear and intricate with shade.

  On the near bank stands a great tree,

  The branches white and stark just now,

  Not yet greening into spring.

  Ten years ago I placed an offering

  In the narrow fork of the tree,

  And I said a rude, immediate prayer.

  Now the softest echoes of the words

  Run slowly northward, year after year,

  And the river flows beneath facets

  Of green and gray light northward.

  From the River House I see the tree,

  And I am moved to regard it with respect.

  It stands in the presence of my mind,

  After all, aging as I age, involving me

  In the keeping of the river and the land.

  The river runs northward through time,

  And we stay, the tree and I, marking

  The passage of drift and dreams.

  The Snow Mare

  In my dream, a blue mare loping,

  Pewter on a porcelain field, away.

  There are bursts of soft commotion

  Where her hooves drive in the drifts,

  And as dusk ebbs on the plane of night,

  She shears the web of winter,

  And on the far, blind side

  She is no more. I behold nothing,

  Wherein the mare dissolves in memory,

  Beyond the burden of being.

  Blood Memory

  Palo Duro Canyon

  Forever are those days within my reach,

  The days of devastation, each by each.

  My ghosts recount them in their broken speech.

  Meadows of Brit

  Are we to live

  In precincts of the sun?

  Are we to give

  Allegiance to the One,

  The Lord of light

  Who ranges on the sky,

  And in the night

  Lies low and does not die.

  Are we to burn

  In waves of solar seas?

  Then let us learn

  To be and to believe.

  Broken Drum’s Coup Song

  You would do well to turn and run.

  I am descended from the sun.

  Announce me then and have it done.

  Say to your chiefs I am the one.

  Beware my father’s burning breath;

  It is an omen of your death.

  I am descended from the sun.

  Say to your chiefs I am the one.

  Now to Believe

  Now to believe that we shall be

  Careless again in Brittany,

  And married in a chapel there,

  And on to sleep in County Clare.

  We kissed in rings of standing stones

  And breakfasted on tea and scones.

  Musicians played for our delight,

  And Druids chanted in the night.

  In those high moments were we come

  To all that we could dream, then some.

  And in dimensions of the spheres

  We have invested precious years.

  The Cave Children

  These are the animal’s envoys,

  The feral girls and bestial boys

  Who cull a language from mere noise.

  The Bloom of Appearances

  Around a nucleus of reality

  There is the vacancy of clouds.

  Nearly opaque the massive forms,

  But they are vagrant and beyond.

  There is no substance, only show,

  A blooming of appearances.

  Rain falls in the troughs of oceans,

  And light, as through a prism,

  Imposes arcs of color

  On the unreality of clouds.

  One sees them, and they sail

  In sterile, steady winds. And there,

  In the vague dimension of illusion,

  They cast empty shadows on the earth.

  Perfect, More or Less

  Nothing is perfect, so you said,

  And yet I’ve measured you in bed.

  I know perfection when it comes.

  I know your parts, indeed your sums.

  More nearly perfect you are not

  For more and nearly miss the spot.

  The sweet spot that I’ve come to know

  Is more than nearly perfect, oh!

  Dear Cousin Em

  She is one of those who

  Still write letters. She informs

  Each stroke of the pen

  With love. “Dear cousin Em.”

  There are four pages in all,

  A number she deems proper.

  She tells of the coming of spring,

  The neighbor’s yard sale, etc.

  And in a postscript, in another hand,

  The death of her dog Hendrix.

  She sends by and large the same letter

  To eight other people. It is an all-day

  Occupation, taken seriously,

  Taken to heart.

  Une Artiste

  She fixed my heart in a collage

  And signed me off, Coeur et courage!

  Red Square

  On a mid-winter evening

  The brisk changing of the guard,

  The long queue at Lenin’s tomb,

  The glory of St. Basil’s,

  Now and then a limousine

  Speeding into the Kremlin,

  Above all, the swirling snow

  In the reflection of lights

  Like a speckled northern moon,

  These images I would send

  “With love, and wish you were here.”

  Arctic Sketchpad

  A young fox scampers

  At the near wall of a pine wood,

  Just full of himself.

  A raven comes at dusk to play

  Hide and seek.

  She rides on runners

  Into the sheer, glistening wind.

  The dogs are joyful,

  The sky blushes above snow fields,

  And she laughs.

  The mountain appears,

  Silver and pink in the dawn.

  The tracks of a lynx<
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  Are drawn straight on the blue slope,

  A long slant.

  The Telling

  We will be gone,

  But we will have seen

  Eternity in the sunrise

  And the image of God

  In clouds on the mountain.

  On the breast of the earth

  We will be told of again

  In the story of Creation.

  In a quiet and seemly way

  We will take our places

  And be true to the telling.

  TG

  You brought the essence of a former age

  Intact and skillfully upon our stage.

  Elizabethans would have honored you

  And stirred your passion in their verbal stew.

  Then mindful of the present, you brought home

  The din of biker bars where vagrants roam,

  The blare of bugles in the jazzy night,

  Young men dying in the dying light.

  And in the workings of your poet’s mind,

  You struck a balance of delicate kind.

  You strove to bring intelligence to bear

  Upon inheritance, true, rich, and rare.

  The Kiowa No-Face Doll

  Kiowa Boarding School, Anadarko

  They see how you hold your doll

  With love and desperation.

  Are they to imagine expression

  On the bare, impenetrable mask?

  There is nothing to reflect

  The face of a child, glad or sad,

  Who see upon this sere surface

  Anonymity only, a random

  Fetish of precise uniformity.

  For those who brought you here,

  You are the image of your doll.

  For those who relegated you

  To military sameness, you bear

  The visage of a faceless race.

  For Bernard Pomerance, in Memory of John Merrick

  I am Merrick. Here is my card.

  I am with the mutations cross the road.

  —THE ELEPHANT MAN

  In words you have distilled him into pain

  Whose every moment, where his head has lain,

  Was grave and sinister and full of strain,

  A struggle merely to exist in vain.

  Summer Song

  sweetgrass

  a braid burning

  smoke

  cupped in the hand

  drawn

  to the heart

  beyond

  summer turns

  simmering

  gathering on the curls

  of rivers and the lees

  of hummocks

  horses

  appear on the skyline

  there is no prairie sky

  without them

  they fasten rain to the earth

  autumn stands close by

  where the grasses are burned

  at evening

  thunder rolls in the gullies

  red earth becomes pipestone

  the scent of weather,

  like sweetgrass, brings the good of dreams

  and thanksgiving

  a summer song

  A Sighting

  A blue butterfly alighted

  On a green leaf beside my hand.

  Four times it fluttered away

  And returned. That is all.

  A Silence Like Frost

  A silence like frost hovers here.

  I look for the promise of being,

  But only the bare presence of death appears.

  I think of who I am and do not know.

  The God in whom I scarcely believe

  Is smug with me, tendering forgiveness,

  But as much as I, he is culpable.

  Here in these words is no silence broken,

  But silence lays a rime upon them,

  And, burdened with cold, they die away.

  On the wall across from my window

  A scarlet leaf spins slowly down,

  Touching here and there those that cling

  To the dark tangle of their waning life.

  It catches the bare edges of light

  And rocks into the drift and scatter below.

  The Soprano

  Untimely was this diva’s death.

  She found her voice and lost her breath.

  Hey

  Hey, all you people come together, you hear?

  Not for God’s sake but for your own.

  So you don’t all look alike, or dress alike,

  Or speak the same language, or have the same religion.

  What you do have, all of you, is your human being.

  It is the best thing you have or will ever have.

  To be human is to be blessed among all creatures,

  Free in your spirit and noble in your minds.

  Your children come into the world with love,

  Love for the plants and animals, for each other.

  Do not teach them hatred and violence. Give them

  The chance to know and cherish the earth,

  The ocean, the dawn, the desert and dusk—

  The stories of the world, the mysteries of origin.

  Come together and weave the strands of peace

  Into an everlasting tapestry of human being.

  Bitter Creek Song

  Will you go to Bitter Creek tonight?

  Will you go to Bitter Creek?

  Will you wear the white and yellow dress?

  Will your blanket be blue, blue, blue?

  There will be dancing by the water.

  There will be the courting songs.

  Oh, be shy with me tonight, be shy.

  But, oh, have eyes for me, for me, for me.

  Let your heart whisper to me.

  I will breathe the sweetness of your skin.

  Will you go to Bitter Creek tonight?

  Will you go to Bitter Creek?

  An Aspect of Condition

  We contemplate the urgency

  And engine of our fantasy,

  The stars vibrating far and wide,

  Abiding on the other side

  Of time and distance and remorse.

  We would have trade with them of course

  And be the ones who dance and play

  On silk roads of the Milky Way,

  Until we splinter on the bone

  And murmur this: we are alone.

  Two Figures

  These figures moving in my rhyme

  Who are they? Death and Death’s dog, Time.

  Idée Fixe

  She harped upon the afterlife

  And was therefore a wanting wife.

  The here and now were not her wont.

  Bemoan her loss; her husband don’t.

  R.I.P.

  He was a sinner and a saint,

  And went both ways without restraint.

  His mind was said to be chaotic.

  Obscure, untidy, and neurotic.

  The Mute Intensity of Love

  For Barbara

  If only I could tell you what you are

  And mean to me, I would as well be done

  With speech. My urgent words would carry far

  Beyond intent and purpose. Only one

  Expression would endure therefore, a sigh

  And silence all but inarticulate.

  The ancient languages of wind comply

  With this communion, this profound estate.

  For every syllable the heart disdains,

  The mute intensity of love remains.

  For a Woman Unadorned

  It was as if the moon appeared

  On a headland of black, bristling trees

  Flooding light upon waters below, and

  Like the tides beyond, I was summoned

  By the gravity of your flesh as it lay,

  A fragile suggestion of blood and bone

  And all origins of beauty and lust.

  You strummed the silver strings of the sea

>   And made ancient vibrations of music in me.

  But, what the hell, you knew that.

  The Gardener

  The matron of a modern sect,

  Here lies a landscape architect.

  She bought the farm and now reposes

  Among celestial ferns and roses.

  God knows a certain air belies her;

  Her life was mould and fertilizer.

  The Man Who Lost Himself

  There was a man who went far away from the town, looking for salt. On the fourth day of his journey, he suffered great thirst, and he sat in the shade of a huge rock. In answer to his prayer, it began to rain. The rain was gentle at first, and the man’s thirst was quenched. But the rain grew hard, and there was loud thunder and bright lightning. A bolt of lightning struck the man and wrecked great harm upon him. The man was blind, and his body was burned and deformed. Somehow he found his way back home. When the people saw him, they greeted him with pity and ridicule. He was ashamed of his blindness and his deformity. In the night he entered into a holy place and painted stripes on his body and put on a helmet with horns. The next morning he appeared in the plaza and all the people were amazed. “Who are you?” they asked. “I am koshare,” he said. “Formerly I was a blind, crippled man. But I lost myself behind this mask. I am now the being you see before you, none other. I have brought you salt.”

  The Artist of Altamira

  Another day

  The season turned,

  The weather burned.

  I walked in testaments

  Of ancient time.

  Another year

  The torches blazed,

  The bison grazed.

  I dwelt in artistry

  And paradigm.

  Another age,

  And darkness rose,

  And in repose

  My animals remained,

  Rude and sublime.

  The Modesty of Relics

 

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