Read Clay Pots and Bones Online
Authors: Lindsay Marshall
Good Creator
Good Creator,
I bring sad news.
Let me sit closer to
the fire to warm
my aching bones.
Where shall I begin?
As you instructed us,
we fulfilled our bargain.
These woods, hills
and mountains echoed
the sounds of many
villages.
The animals you sent
were plenty
and we treated them
with respect.
We took no more
than we needed,
until...
Good Creator,
all this changed upon
the arrival of the ghost maker,
the pale one.
With his help, our
numbers shrivelled and died.
Now you must walk for days
to see other brown faces,
and they are but pale shadows
of the ones who have gone
forever.
Good Creator,
our robes are in tatters,
our stomachs like empty
seashells. Sand
and dust.
Good Creator,
my hands are the hands
of a disrespectful child
who has taken too much.
The woods are empty now,
devoid of sound,
like a sunset or a passing cloud.
Good Creator,
I seek your counsel.
Is it too late?
For you I say keep your skin
the colour of earth and your
grandchildren like eagle wings.
Teach the ear so it hears
your young speak our words.
Now It's Your Turn
Now It's Your Turn
Look. Just look at it now
My grandfather's grandfather could
walk for two days before seeing
the ones with wanting eyes.
Now today I can't walk more
than fifteen minutes and I am
reminded by a sign that this
land is no longer ours to do
with as we see fit.
I yearn for those days when
I caught all the fish I could eat,
the rest shared with others.
My canoe would be filled to
the gunwales, her ribs bulging
as she strained to take me
home with salmon.
The trees offer little shade now.
Do you know why?
They have been cut so much
they don't get a chance
to grow. When I was young
I saw a tree so big
ten men could stand on it.
Grandson, listen to me.
Make me a promise that you will
not let us lose any more.
The land that is gone stays gone.
The fish will be wary and may
never come back.
The trees may grow back,
if left alone.
For you I say keep your skin
the colour of earth and your
grandchildren like eagle's wings.
Teach the ear so it hears
your young speak our words.
My eyes have seen many things,
now it's your turn.
Taho.
Questions for Great Grandfather
Have you ever felt the kiss
of a tanned hide cured by
your hands?
Do you remember how
balsam wood smelled after
a summer rain?
Tell me how supple birch
bark becomes while wet
outside your canoe.
Has your hand fought with
a salmon at the end of your
bone-tipped spear?
When was the last time you
sat with bare back against
a bleached stump?
How many times have you
shaped your hair with black
bear grease?
How long did you lie on the
green grass, belly down, before
the sun reminded you?
What happened to your bare
feet when you walked across
a boggy swamp?
Has your tongue ever tasted the
ocean from an oyster eaten
fresh from the shore?
Were you able to tell which bird
sang the loudest on the morning
of the solstice?
When you lay down under the stars
did you find where Great Bear
hid from Chickadee?
Great Grandfather, I have seen things,
faces that turned scarlet when struck
with venomous words.
I heard the sound of glass falling
onto an unkempt green blanket.
Ask me about the sound of bone
breaking again,
the sound of a door slamming, locked,
not meant for elements.
Spoken words meaning less, foreign
with each syllable.
Stolen childhoods, crushed ideas,
frozen gazes.
Great Grandfather, I have also heard
words whispered at dawn,
seen the flash of fire in the
eyes of those who survive.
Stood with those rich with
pockets bare as their feet.
Heard the drum beat louder,
so loud it shakes the inside.
Songs of times gone by
in the mouths of the young.
Great Grandfather, from a
cupped hand over battered
chest,
I release you.
Matuesuey Kmtin
(Porcupine Mountain)
A plume of grey rises from the
heights of Matuesuey Kmtin.
A shudder felt, muffled sounds
escape as each new charge
catches current, releasing rock.
With each passing day Kmtin
dwindles, a fading shadow,
yet still dwarfing bulk carriers that
come seeking cargo to cover
the green with slabs of grey
in cities south and west,
in lands intent on concealing
silent footpaths of those who roamed.
Across the man-made road
of rock, over the once fluid
now semi-stagnant bluish
green-grey highway
of whales and tuna,
a message is posted:
Turn Off All Radios
Danger
Blasting Area.
What if I left my radio on?
Would they leave Matuesuey
Kmtin alone?
The owners of this shrinking hill
will leave only when Matuesuey
Kmtin is a memory found in
obscure poems by an obscure
poet who lacked the resolve to
play his radio and sing along
momentarily preventing its
determined demise.
Learned Elder
Learned Elder, share with me
the universal truths that you
harbour deep within your soul.
Take me by the hand to that
special place.
Lead the way so that I may
see the prints on Mother Earth.
Give me guidance, teach me
to ask and not to demand.
Sing to me the chants of old so I
may keep them alive.
Take out your drum and let the
sound reverberate inside.
Show the steps of the sacred fire,
offer tobacco and sweetgrass.
Unclench your hand and soak the
birch bark and shape a wi'kuom.
Hone your knife and scrape the fat
from the fresh hide of the kopit.
Use your ancient axe and bring
down the straight and true ash.
Weave your baskets to hold the
summer bounty of berries.
Polish that special rock to
make your dream stone.
Share the stories of my clan,
give me my history for safe keeping
until the time comes when I
become the Learned Elder.
Fires of the Ancients
Stand together as one.
Speak together as one.
Use all fifty-two languages
in this land of the maple.
How can they not hear us
when we speak so powerfully
revealing ugliness so beautifully?
Wise words of ancestors.
A voice alone is like a
solitary morning dew drop.
Voices together become rivers
of dreams, destinies and aspirations.
Let's do what we say.
Let's say what we do.
Speak the words spoken around
fires of the ancients.
A single shout becomes a
chorus that no one
dare drown.