Thursday, September 8, 2016

Janette Hoppe #39 Lost Word (2)

the age old tradition
of oral history
handed down from
generation to generation
is slowly disappearing

they tell me not to plagiarise
as though these words
are not my own
my grandmother's words are my words
they are not owned by me
they belong to me
they belong to my grandmother,
my mother, my children,
my mountain and my river

language is our oxygen
we drink it through the skin
we breathe
the language of the land

our stories woven across land and sea
river and mountain

when language becomes forgotten
so will be the land
and as the river bed dies
so too does man

we are not separate
language, land and life
we are one
generation to generation
mountain, river, ocean.

4 comments:

  1. this is really vital business ...
    the contradictions involved in how -
    we know who to be
    how we get to be
    whomever we are

    they all tangle back
    into a past of lost words
    they all point forwards
    into words that will be lost beyond us

    the only healthy way to live for a poet
    is to be obsessed with this

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. tis true. Our words are us, and we have the honour also to use them.

      Delete
    2. I know it's difficult though sometimes when I'm writing new poems I start thinking is this plagiarism???

      Delete

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