Saturday, August 13, 2016

Linda Stevenson #13 August 13 Old Language



Old Language

Of course I don’t write
poetry; you write poetry.
I am the stumbling child
with undone shoelaces, the one
with inky fingers, blotches.

You are the flowering of your fathers,
anointed by their absence; ecstasy,
all wondrous poems
are invested in your knowing, all receive
the ardent admiration of your tribe.

But I did, I do, hear it...
the indefatigable music of the old language,
its hard cadence,
rites of passage, the inbred soul of it,
sweet as darkening honey,

its laments,
its generations of
corruption,
the crying pity of its loss,
its deep,
deep soundings.

3 comments:

  1. Dear Linda, That is such a beautiful poem. Balanced, stately and deep. I feel it retains something of the old language. Not too far from your branch on that tree, I hope, this old thing of mine...

    Many times did I slip through
    cave slot a just-delivered thought
    back bearings in the old dryness
    and I even once believed I'd stay
    in the thousand years of pain
    in animal bones & faint paintings
    ten thousand years fast in the rock
    a new shadow on old shadows
    living a little show of fire
    as I watched me dying.

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  2. So much indeed into this poem, the weight of history .. and even colonization ... and the status of languages ... and so on and so forth ... brilliant!

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