From a dream photograph that might have been taken
by A.L.Kroeber
The pages of the talking book are
thick
and floury to the touch. Blades of
shadow
in the old black-and-white plates
cut
Klamath landscapes into sourbread
slices.
The tree in the photo that draws me
spreads stocky bare limbs from a
headland.
Dark eagles roost, row on row.
Two women perch among them, second
row
on the right. Can this be a group
portrait?
The tree stands like a scaffold.
I must know more. I lean into the
picture
and find it is an open window.
Leaning through, I see the tree has
no roots;
strong native men hold it in place,
tensing their muscles against the
wind
that wants to sweep it out across
the bay.
Everything has been prepared by
man’s –
or woman’s – intention. Birds and
women
perch on cross-boughs tied
together.
Early ethnographers, Teutonic
ladies
of military mien, stand
bespectacled watch
but will not speak to the
interloper at the window.
I turn back to the book for help.
On the facing page is a Farewell
Song.
The book sings utterly foreign
words to me
full of long Es, full of keening,
and counsels me never to confuse
a terminal N with a final M.
I think this would be a sweet way
to go:
to leave the body in the scaffold
tree
to be picked clean by fastidious
carrion birds.
Better than moldering in the earth
or viler still, in an airtight cask
above it.
I will have my body burned to white
ash
when my spirit is done with it
because scaffold trees are
problematic
in places with health codes and too
many people.
Yet in my heart I would like to fly
off
with the sea-going eagles, rising
into beauty.
Comment: This poem is in my collection, Here, Everything Is Dreaming: Poems and Stories, published by Excelsion Editions/State University of New York Press. I am inspired to post it today because of discussion of the influence on Ursula LeGuin of her anthropologist father, A.L.Kroeber, who is mentioned here.
Graphic: Tree burial of the Oglala Sioux near Fort Laramie, Wyoming. American Indian Select List number 18, US Government Archives.
I deeply agree with the last stanza.
ReplyDeleteThis post strangely reminds me of the 1983 movie, "The Ballad of Narayama".
Thank you for the many beautiful posts.
Viola
I will never forget a video that I saw regarding a "sky burial".
ReplyDeleteA monk labored up a hill carrying a fellow monk who had died. The hill or mountain was rocky and I believe the location was Machu Pichu.
He laid the deceased down, uncovered him and sliced his skin open on his back. He then walked off about 20 feet or so and sat mourning. Soon the vultures swooped in and covered the body and in a short time there was nothing left but white bones. And then the birds flew up swirling into the blue sky. It was astonishing.
While it was very creepy to watch with Western eyes, it became beautiful in an strange and wild way.
Naomi Z