Read Clay Pots and Bones Online
Authors: Lindsay Marshall
Our Nation World
My eyes are wet
with the tears
of our loss.
As I stand alone
on the shore, on
top of these blue
rocks, I think back
to a time when all
voices heard were
in our language.
The very same that
Kluskap used to
teach the Mi'kmaq
about the ways of
our Nation World.
Now as I stand here,
the salt spray
washes away any
trace of my sadness.
I know now that
I will hear those
voices again as
I hear now the voices
of the Spirits who
speak to me through
Mother Earth.
The ready drum sounds like a crack
of thunder as you move as fast as light
around a sacred fire, with the smell of
sweetgrass and sage trailing
behind you like wisps of mist.
Dancer, you bring joy to the soul.
Magic Steps
Magic Steps
Dancer, you bring joy to the soul.
How you move as quiet as a cloud
casting shadows above it all,
hair the colour of a raven's wing,
leather and beads absorbing light,
dancing back in time when your
magical steps would be your mother's.
The silent drum held over a fire,
stretching, becoming taut while
you, dancer, recount the steps
your mother would have danced to.
The ready drum sounds like a crack
of thunder as you move as fast as light
around a sacred fire, with the smell of
sweetgrass and sage trailing
behind you like wisps of mist.
Dancer, you bring joy to the soul.
How you move across time, taking
me back to a time when your
steps would be your mother's.
The drum held by your father,
holding it over a fire, the same
way his father would have done,
stretching, making it taut,
waiting for the swish of
moccasin as it touches grass
made flat by others who dance
the magic steps of old.
A Ball of Blue
The elders stand quiet,
no words, just their presence
charging the misty morn.
Mi'kmaw drummers, their
leather-bound sticks
at the ready, tap a gentle
beat against leather,
bead and feather.
Flags fly with the slightest
of breezes caressing the faces
of the frozen dancers.
The sacred fire accepts
tokens of sage,
sweetgrass and gold-like tobacco.
Offerings and silent prayers
tossed into a fire which
lives for such favours.
The distant relations,
heads lowered, wait for a signal.
Then, at once the drum speaks,
snapping everyone back to the
present in time and in space.
The circle comes alive with
music and the fluidity of dance.
Smiles seen as broad as the mist-free
horizon with blues and whites
of sparse clouds dancing their
eternal dance around a ball of blue
we call home.
On the Shore of Bras d'Or
A storm with thunder and lightning,
an anomaly on a December day,
destroys a Chapel that stood alone
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Wooden pegs in place of nails,
house of God framed by hand on
an isle sacred to the People of the Dawn
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Touching sky as high as any
on Cape Breton Isle, a steeple that
cast a shadow in all directions
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Until a flash of fire ignited the cross,
yellow and orange flames danced
the day while an inferno roared
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
With waves as high as a man
breaking foam and fury over
the lone boat, unable to help
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Awestruck congregation, faces
wet from tears and elements,
witnessing an act of God
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
As each piece of timber trembled
and fell, a cry in unison heard
over the blare of the storm
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Chains of light last seen in
the heat of summer returned
in the cold of winter to lay waste
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Time came when ashes cooled,
soot and spark were raised by wind,
and fire an all-too-recent memory,
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
A bell forged from a distant
foundry, large, heavy and loud,
was nowhere to be found
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Some said an accident caused
by lack of foresight. Others said
a warning from our Grandmother who lives
on the shore of Bras d'Or.
Grey Skies, White Mist
Riding waves in an open boat of
blue on a morning with steady
rain coming down on an American
Day of Independence.
No parades today.
The wind blowing gently upon the
red faces of my brothers, one younger,
the other older.
Indulging in a common quest,
salmon.
Taking the time to make memories.
Grey skies, white mist,
net empty as our stomachs.
Maybe tomorrow, knives sharpened.
The trip back in drizzle,
washing faces, minds and
souls.
Progress
Handshakes, smiles all around. The
suits come into the band office
carrying their pens.
Fast polite chatter, wet palms
hiding papers piled like a pyre
inside leather boxes with brass locks.
Minions of the queen mentioning her
thorny hat, this and that and the Act.
Words spoken with no “ahs” or “ays.”
The counselled Council listens
to the Concord pitch, its pros and cons,
weighing each grain against each rock.
Four plaque-like walls holding their eyes,
seeing nothing new or different
since the last time.
Mouthpiece spinning spiels,
nods of non-comprehension,
feathers combed not ruffled,
patted not struck.
Sign here, initial there, witness here.
More handshakes,
dry palms wet again.
Saunter out of the old Indian Day School,
now band office, boxes go out with white
blisterless hands,
clutching pens like Cornwallis trophies.
Black ink slowly drying with red splatters
here, there...
From Wind and Prying Eyes
Almost hidden by a colluding maple
one hundred yards away, a man
with dun coloured hair moving
rhythmically to a primeval metre,
keeping time with another
unseen by eyes but his own.
A red skeleton of unknown
genus is being covered by the
workers continuing their role
as inattentive voyeurs.
Wind picks up, leaves begin to
shudder, their milky undersides
exposed to the harsh
judging tight. Wind foregoes
interest, calming, slowing.
Leaves green again, their verdant
veins once more concealed
from wind and prying eyes.