Voices in the Air

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Voices in the Air Page 2

by Naomi Shihab Nye


  bothering me again at school for the rest of our years.

  Invocation

  She wanted to be a window wherever she walked.

  Light of beauty might shine through,

  but also she felt the small animal cry—“trapped.”

  Someone else directing what to do.

  Maybe trucks roaring past in the rain

  held a clue in the spin of their wheels.

  We could never see what they carried,

  wasn’t that strange? All those trucks

  on the highways of the world, packed with secrets.

  Maybe the smallest thistle volunteering

  near the fence, growing unnoticed,

  or the person we’d never meet,

  who never heard of us either,

  walking in twilight on the beach at Sharjah,

  dipping burgundy cloth into a soaking vat at

  Mumbai,

  crying for what was gone from Aleppo,

  maybe they knew the best ways to survive.

  To be alive was a wall, as often as a door.

  But to live like a movable hinge . . .

  Bamboo Mind

  Popping profuselysmall shoots of glimmering

  interest

  can you feelthe inner nudge?

  Something wants to grow

  needs sunpressing up between blades of grass

  you thought

  were your real thoughts

  Cross the Sea

  A girl in Gaza

  speaks into a table microphone:

  Do you believe in infinity?

  If so, what does it look like to you?

  Not like a wall

  Not like a soldier with a gun

  Not like a ruined house

  bombed out of being

  Not like concrete wreckage

  of a school’s good hope

  a clinic’s best dream

  In fact not like anything

  imposed upon you and your family

  thus far

  in your precious thirteen years.

  My infinity would be

  the never-ending light

  you deserve

  every road opening up in front of you.

  Soberly she nods her head.

  In our timevoices cross the sea

  easily

  but sense is still difficult to come by.

  Next girl’s question:

  Were you ever shy?

  To Babies

  May polar bears welcome you

  to northern Manitoba, their lumbering grace

  marking the ice. May there still be ice.

  May giant trees lean over your path

  in warm places, brush your brow.

  So many details now disappeared . . .

  tiny toads in deserts, fireflies.

  Where are the open window screens,

  whispers of breeze against a sleeping cheek?

  If we stop poking holes in soil,

  watching onions grow,

  what will we know? If we no longer learn cursive,

  will our hand muscles disintegrate?

  You blink, beginning to focus.

  Where will the lost loops of handwritten “g’s”

  and “y’s” go?

  We dream you will have so much to admire.

  Songbook

  Tiny keyboard bearing the reverie of the past—

  press one button, we’re carried away

  on a country road,

  marching with saints,

  leaving the Red River Valley—

  here is every holiday you hated, every hard time,

  every steamy summer wish. You closed your eyes,

  leaned your head against a wall,

  knowing a bigger world

  loomed. It’s still out there, and it’s tucked

  in this keyboard too.

  Now we are an organ, now an oboe,

  now we are young or ancient,

  smelling the haunted wallpaper in the house

  our grandfather sold with every cabinet,

  table and doily included,

  but we are still adrift, floating,

  thrum-full of longing layers of sound.

  Unsung—on Finding

  From where this box of pink & purple yarns?

  Skeins not even tangled

  Recipes for baby jacketsbooties

  Saluting your good intentionsoh someone

  honoring your high hopes

  neatly packed in a box

  future promiseon a shelfin our shed

  (How did this get into our shed?)

  But give it awaybecause we know we will never

  on any dayof any future year

  do this

  Bundle

  Why didn’t you take a photograph

  out the window of every place you ever stayed?

  Clotheslines, balconies, food vendors,

  could have focused on any one thing.

  But I was lingering at the dock fascinated

  by a seagull with a hopping gait.

  Catching the breeze.

  Scrap of pink ribbon,

  yellow shovel half-buried in sand—

  Or a picture of every classroom you inhabited,

  even for an hour, the boy who said,

  “I’m afraid I’m in love with the word lyrical,”

  on a hundred-degree day,

  pencil swooping across page.

  He looked like the toughest customer in town

  till he said that.

  To wake with a wordBundle

  tucked between lips, and wonder all day

  what it means . . . bundle of joys, troubles . . .

  each day the single mystery-word could change.

  Veil. Forget. Abandon.

  And consider the people at any crossing walk,

  how you will never cross with them again,

  isn’t that enough to make a charm?

  Or the careful ways we arrange a desk

  wherever we stay,

  temporary landscape—pencils, sharpener,

  drifting moon of a cup over everything, silent and humble, bearing its own hope.

  Little Lady, Little Nugget Brooms

  Hey Baltimore, I’ll take one—

  do they exist anywhere

  but on this fading wall?

  Not all we love is gone, oh

  Hunter & Elsie’s Café!

  Find a ghost sign

  for proof. Every disappeared menu

  seeding your bones. Karam’s Mexican

  Restaurant, more like an oasis it was,

  west side San Antonio,

  giant palms in back garden,

  massive Aztec heads,

  Ralph Karam’s cozy dream

  wrecked for a Walgreen’s,

  but can you still taste

  the crackly corn chalupa

  distinctiveness? Did not taste

  like anywhere else.

  Kalamazoo,

  meandering around in you

  at dawn, on a street

  with real buildings older than

  my grandpa,

  were he still alive,

  the Michigan Newsstand was well-lit

  and ready to serve,

  thousands of pages of new reading matter,

  books, magazines,

  step right up, believe in me,

  and the whispery sign on the side of a building

  Rooms for Rent 1 dollar hot supper

  put my modern flying heart back in my body.

  Welcome What Comes

  1

  Bearing secrets

  underlying meanings

  parallel possibility

  hint of distance

  company for the journey

  doorstep treasure

  gift wrapped loosely in bandanna

  trail of ribbons

  no address attached

  traveling a long time over rocky terrain

  trusting you were
waiting

  2

  Some people grew up receiving no messages at all

  but from people right in front of them.

  Clean your roomWash your hands

  Homework!

  Black phone in hallway nook rang so rarely,

  it shocked us when it sang—

  Grandma on birthdays, lonely insurance salesman.

  No disembodied messages chirping up continuously

  see this, read that, don’t miss . . . how did we

  live?

  We knew what was going on.

  Always felt connected.

  Tonight I wanted to return

  to the days of someone telling me what to do.

  At least then I thought I knew.

  3

  My old friend writes a real letter in the mail

  I have not yet learned how to live, have you?

  Wind still whips around our chimneys

  Sunrises feel more precious

  A blind dog wanders all night through fields

  returning home next morning wet and exhausted

  to wrap his paws around his person’s neck

  What Happens Next

  Ferguson, no one ever heard of you.

  Unless they lived in Florissant, or Cool Valley,

  we said “St. Louis” when we went away because

  you were obscure, tucked in leafy green,

  lost to humidity.

  Sure, we could count on things—

  farmer Al in baggy overalls, boxing tomatoes,

  patient books lined at the library,

  Hermit Lady sunken into tilting house.

  Catholic pal said I could not step into his church

  to see the painted statues, God would not approve,

  I was not baptized, a drifter among

  Ferguson’s ditches and trees.

  We might have guessed your coming troubles,

  white teacher reading Langston with a

  throaty catch in her voice. The invisible line,

  Kinloch on the other side. See that word? Kin in it.

  Made no sense to kids. Only grown-ups saw the line.

  We loved your fragrances and musky soil—

  everyone so poor a dime or quarter could change a day,

  but filled with longing—how to spend our bounty?

  My Arab daddy always wanted to know more.

  Evenings we watered the grass, the trees.

  Driving slowly around “the other side,”

  he waved at everyone, people called him reckless,

  only Arab in town got away with curiosity.

  Something had to be better than

  the separations humans make—

  at four, I am climbing steep stairs

  of the house next door.

  If I sit quietly, the teenager who lives inside

  will emerge and brush my hair.

  She presses hard, down to the scalp.

  I belong to her too.

  Everything Changes the World

  Boys kicking a ball on a beach,

  women with cook pots,

  men bombing tender patches of mint.

  There is no righteous position.

  Only places where brown feet

  touch the earth.

  Maybe you call it yours.

  Maybe someone else runs it.

  What do you prefer?

  We who are far

  stagger under the mind blade.

  Every crushed home,

  every story worth telling.

  Think how much you’d need to say

  if that were your friend.

  If one of your people

  equals hundreds of ours,

  what does that say about people?

  Standing Back

  If this is the best you can do, citizens of the world,

  I resolve to become summer shadow,

  turtle adrift in a pool.

  Today a frog waited in a patch of jasmine

  for drizzles of wet before dawn.

  The proud way he rose when water

  touched his skin—

  his simple joy at another morning—

  compare this to bombing,

  shooting, wrecking,

  in more countries than we can count

  and ask yourself—human or frog?

  Three Hundred Goats

  In icy fields.

  Is water flowing in the tank?

  (Is it the year of the sheep or the goat?

  Chinese zodiac inconclusive . . . )

  Will they huddle together, warm bodies pressing?

  O lead them to a secluded corner,

  little ones toward bulkier mothers.

  Lead them to the brush, which cuts the wind.

  Another frigid night swooping down—

  Aren’t you worried about them, I ask my friend,

  who lives by herself on the ranch of goats,

  far from here near the town of Ozona.

  She shrugs, “Not really,

  they know what to do. They’re goats.”

  Lost People

  “The blue bird carries the sky on his back.”

  —Henry David Thoreau, unpublished works

  For years I looked for my lost friend. We did so much mischief together,

  made our own tiny language, wore overalls, walked twenty miles—

  when someone else’s mother said we would

  “get over” Henry David Thoreau,

  we knew it was not true.

  Finally—“Your previous letter arrived,

  but I kept it many months without answering

  so it seemed to get longer. Sorry—it grew too long to answer

  so I never . . . did.”

  Once we were dandelion fluff

  raggedy blue jeans

  quoting Henry under yellow bell esperanza trees.

  Everything already happening

  rushsizzlemiracle of becoming on

  earth & we would not miss one note.

  Steeped in quietudebuzzing joy

  that could never fall onto a

  to-do list

  dish soappaper clips

  Write her a short note now—

  only skybetween the words

  Broken

  What was precious—flexing.

  Fingers wrapping bottle, jar,

  fluent weave of tendon, bone, and nerve.

  To grip a handle, lift a bag of books,

  button simply, fold a card—

  I did not feel magnificent.

  Unthinking movement, come again.

  These days of slow reknitting,

  stoked with pain . . .

  “Revise the scene of injury in your mind,”

  suggested Kathleen, so then I did not

  snap against the root, but just became it.

  Thank your ankles, thank your wrists.

  How many gifts have we not named?

  Twilight

  Victor the taxi driver says

  I love this time of day

  This is when I say

  Never want to die

  want to be here forever

  Oh maybe it will be possible,

  in the shaggy heads of trees

  that barely felt us

  walking beneath them

  The corners we turned so often

  broken pavements

  cracks & signatures

  Daniel Lozano 1962

  All the days we entered thoughtlessly

  forgetting to turn our heads or bow

  to the vine finally making it over the fence

  dangling blossom

  orange cup of joy

  ephemeral as we were

  here

  imagining our deep roots

  VOICES IN THE AIR

  People do not pass away.

  They die

  and then they stay.

  For Aziz

  I had not noticed

  the delicate yellow flower

 
strikingly thin petals

  like a man with many hopes

  or a woman with many dreams

  the center almost a tiny hive

  ants could crawl in and out of

  if they wished

  Had not noticed the profusion

  of flowers on the path

  Had not stooped

  to absorb the silent glory

  of many-petaled yellow

  or remembered the freshness

  of my father’s collar

  for some years now

  the rush of anticipation

  circling his morning self

  despite so much hard history

  and searing news

  Who can help us?

  Yellow beam

  spiral sunshine

  legacy

  Sheep by the Sea

  a painting by Rosa Bonheur (1865)

  The calm of your wool, rounded resting postures,

  hooves tucked under.

  Behind you, roiling waves pound, whitecaps against

  stones.

  Your eyes have been closed for a hundred and

  forty-eight years.

  But you seem not to fear what is coming. You curl in

  repose,

  Pink velvet of your ears echoing the pink tips of the

  grasses.

  People have always been shepherds for sheep,

  but I’d like

  to let you lead. Quiet depth, a measured gentleness.

  Here in a museum in Washington, D. C.

  Emily

  What would you do if you knew

  that even during wartime

  scholars in Baghdad

  were translating your poems

  into Arabic

  still believing

  in the thing with feathers?

  You wouldn’t feel lonely

  That’s for sure.

  Words finding friends

  even if written on envelope flaps

  or left in a drawer.

  Warbler Woods

  For Peter Matthiessen

  Never too proud to tip his head back.

  To gaze, look beyond.

  Something nesting in leaves, unseen,

  presence on a boulder beside water,

  single strong leg.

  Fine if it took a long time to walk there.

  Better if it took time . . .

  He knew the names of every warbler,

  stitched inside his skin,

  the seven eagles, graceful cranes, he followed them

 

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