Read Clay Pots and Bones Online
Authors: Lindsay Marshall
Hello and Welcome
We say in the Spirit of Mandela
At a sacred place where the tools
Of war remain buried
Stand the descendents
Of Henri Membertou.
For as long as the
Rivers flow free,
The winds caress the
Sea bound coast
Mi'kmaq have honoured
The Treaties with Monarchs;
Their successors and subjects.
In the Spirit of Jean Baptiste Cope
We open our arms like Eagle's wings
We raise our voices as songbirds
We walk with pride and purpose
On the grounds of Peace and Friendship
In the land of Mi'kmaq
We say, Kwe' aq Pjila'si
Translation courtesy of Bernie Francis
Kwe' aq Pjila'si
Teli-wtunkatmek wijey aq Wjijaqmijl Mandela
Sape'wik maqmikew ta'n pukmaqnn
Matntimkewe'l me'j etl-utqutasikl
Kaqmultiek wetapeksultiek
Anli Maupltuo'q.
Teli-pkijitk sipu'l,
Wju'snn munsa'matk qasqi-kjikm
Mi'kmaq kepmite'tmi'titl
Ankumkamkewe'l wejiaql Eleke'wa'ki;
Napune'kwi'tiji aq wunaqapemua.
Wjijaqmijk wejiaq Sa'n-Patist Kopo'q
Wnaqa'tunen npitnokominal staqe kitpu wnisqi'
Wenaqintu'tiek staqe sisipaq
Kepmleketaiek aq kjitmiw
Wjit wantaqo'ti aq witaptimkewey
Ula maqmikek Mi'kma'ki
Aq telua'tiek “Kwe'” aq “Pjila'si”
Demasduit, why did you die
sad and alone?
Did they prod, test and
measure your spirit?
Did you see your family
hide and flee?
Irony Invades the Few
Irony Invades the Few
Who were they
peering through the fog
from clandestine
locations among rocks,
sand and shale?
English sport of hounds and
horses, the blood-sport of the
transplants, who found game
in this new lost land.
Eastern rain cries their name,
lunar solstice tides wash
the Royal sins away.
Demasduit, why did you die
sad and alone?
Did they prod, test and
measure your spirit?
Did you see your family
hide and flee?
Does a voice lose its purpose,
or eyes the prophetic view?
The tribal curse lives on in
the eyes of descendants.
How they suffer and weep
for what is forever lost.
Irony invades the few
while their numbers decline
and flee the hunters of
misery.
Visitors
A white cloud appears on the blue horizon off the shore of Unama'ki.
Strangers are coming in strange vessels.
The vessels come nearer and stop.
A splash is heard as the strangers
throw something from the front of the ship,
looks like a tree trunk with a long gnarly root.
The strangers speak in a foreign tongue.
Their skin is pale as the ghosts that haunt our camps at night.
Faces hairy like dogs, yet they stand upright like us, the People of the Dawn,
the first people to greet and get blessings
from the sun
as it rises each morn to bless the rest
who live to the west.
How the strangers cower on the shore.
Surely they must think there is no one here.
Come my brothers, let's go away and tonight
we will return.
They have not ventured inland or moved
from the shore since morn.
Perhaps they have heard the spirits
who guard our sleep, protecting us.
It is time we made them welcome.
Let's build a great fire that overlooks
their camp.
It is a good fire, the flames are the first
to dance.
See how high they jump and kick.
Now the drumming starts,
how we dance and sing.
But wait, something is wrong.
They're leaving.
Wait! We welcome you.
Stop! We mean no harm.
They leave. We wonder if
they'll be back.
They have left strange markings
on a piece of wood.
If this man, now a child, could
answer, I would ask him,
“Matchee, where did you
get those brown shoelaces?”
Brown Shoelaces
Brown Shoelaces
Standing at attention Master Corporal Matchee
doesn't smile or say much anymore.
Didn't he know that he, a Red man,
in their Aryan eyes is the low man?
We saw him meticulously polish and
assemble his FNC-1 through an
unblinking eye on foreign soil while
we saw his comrades regurgitate
words and bravado against their
unknowing, unwilling charges.
Long before the pin hit the casing
the finger was working its way
down his back.
Where did Matchee get those
brown shoelaces for his
black combat boots?
Wasn't he under guard?
If this man, now a child, could
answer, I would ask him,
“Matchee, where did you
get those brown shoelaces?
Did someone help you onto a chair
so your new laces could make
you airborne forever?”
A final jump.
Silence from Master Corporal Matchee,
a temporary reprieve for those
higher up the totem with maroon
hats and hands that don't come clean.
Alexander Standing in Tall Grass on Chapel Island
Every summer since his youth
he would make his way across by boat.
A red apparition in blue water.
Carrying his lunch in one hand,
a scythe in the other, he would
walk like a man with a mission.
His purpose to cut the tall grass
for the many who would arrive
to their Mecca.
A resting figure standing alone
on the lonely isle,
leaning with his elbow on the scythe,
chin in hand.
The scent of newly cut hay everywhere,
the light breeze carrying it away.
A bead of sweat running down his face
past the turquoise blue eyes,
the Indian nose, through the white
stubble and falling finally, quickly
evaporating to the air before
hitting the ground.
The once proud tall grass would fall
easily from the steady measured
swings of his scythe,
the slain grass resurrected to
serve as bedding for the
wi'kuoml.
Bunches and bundles to serve as
fire starters for tea and
fourcents.
Nothing will be wasted this day.
Forth and Back...
After all these years
Leonard, Leonard.
He walks with state-issued shoes
doing Mandela-like paces
back and forth,
forth and back.
Vertical bars dissect his form,
seen only by the population.
Brown eyes peer through iron.
Air moves freely across his
leather-bound hair, his breath
escapes through nooks and crannies,
while his lungs remain rooted,
and not really suited to be inside,
a permanent guest.
Lesser men would have
worn their last necktie or
stood with one shoelace
still tied to the state-issued
shoe while the other...
elsewhere.
Leonard is a worthy cause.
If there is to be one worthy cause.
let the cause be for this man
to walk free and take his place
beside ones who are wise.
Injustices visit each and
every hair above their high
cheekbones and earthy skin tone.
Leonard, Leonard. He walks
back and forth,
forth and back...
A Man Who Drank Tea and Told Tales
Was he our Peter who stood
on the rock and laid the first
block to build
in his vision?
Just a man.
Kmtin, like Kmtin the mountain,
whose white assures us, calms us
with knowledge gained gazing
through silvery vapours
from intellectual heights.
Was he the air that surrounds us,
feeds us and eases us through
our journeys?
Our time continues
while his was then and is gone.
A man who saw beyond
to a time when his visions
would be fulfilled and forever
treasured by those who
called him a true Native Son,
Chapel Island's best.
A man who drank tea and told tales,
true meanings grasped
after the tea became cold.