Nets
you stand on the shore
of the Winnipeg River
and watch the old men smoking
laughing and mending nets
their hands moving
almost by themselves
and when they look up
and see you there
they smile
their hands continuing
the dance they've learned
by touch
this is what it means
to be Indian, you say, Ojibway
the effortless, almost mindless
mending of the nets
we cast across
the currents of time
Powwow
See them dance
against the slow
and even movement of the sky
so that to the eye
colours shift against
the grass and the drum
and the rattle of elk teeth
the swish of shawl, and the clatter
of bells on leggings becoming
the smile on young kids' faces
and the wistful grins of the old ones
sitting back in wheelchairs now
wishing they might dance again
to join the whirling, swirling, stomping, glee
of this great wheel of regalia danced
so that energies might become a blessing
and a prayer bestowed upon this sacred earth
where a simple song sung with drums
sends waves of light across
the universe to that spiritual place
where we all began our journeys
toward this place
where it all comes together
like a vision that travels in
a circle of prayer
to encircle all who
come
here
now
Trickster Dream
Crow came to my room last night
dressed in a checkered western shirt
and boots and jeans too tight in the rump
so that he squawked soprano
and groused vociferously
about the lack of a proper avian line
he's hip to things like that
Crow gets around, you know
him and Coyote, well
they've been known to carouse
something awful in the streets of Milan
and even though no one likes
a knock-down loaded Trickster much
they've got a fashion sense to die for
all that fur and feather accessorizing
to go with the Pucci (Coyote's call) scarves
and the Salvatore Ferragamo calf-skin
bag that Crow adores because he
can't hack the shoes
(they don't call them crow's feet for nothing
is how he says it)
anyhow, Crow was on the lookout for Raven
whom he'd heard had been seen
in the vicinity and needed
some advice on metaphor or allegory
aphorism or some such Trickster trick
because he had a gig in Kasabonika Lake
and them Oji-Crees up there
had heard all his schtick before
and the kids were even using
his best lines in the schoolyard now
Crow was after belly laughs
and Coyote couldn't help much with that
on account of he always wanted
to make them howl
although he did have some of the
snappiest zingers in the Trickster biz
and Crow himself had busted a gut
every now and then when Coyote
let loose with those moonlight
prowl stories of his
Raven knew the ins and outs of Trickster-ism
he'd even hung with the big guys
Nanabush and Wesakechak
creating mayhem in a tamarack bog
and driving the local Cree kids wacko
just before they drove south in
a battered '57Â Chevy
to dig the crazy Cajun food
in N'aw Lins before Katrina
so he knew a thing or two
Crow hopped from the dresser
to the window ledge and fluffed
his inky feathers in the moonlight
and laid the full force of his
beady obsidian eyes on me
and cackled and croaked
and wondered if we had
any jalapeno-stuffed olives in the house
or the new Black Crowes CD
because Tricksters gotta stay hip
you know
it's where the best bits come from
so I told him that this wasn't
really Raven country but that
there were a lot of crows around
if he wanted to ask
“any nesting in the sunshine?” he asked
I asked him why and he wriggled his shoulders
in the red-checkered shirt
and hiked the jeans up some
“always on the lookout for a hot black chick,”
he said and mimicked a rim shot
and a cymbal crash
he was right
he was in desperate need of schtick
Mountain Morning
it's so still you can feel
the boundaries of things shimmer
with the effort it takes
to hold themselves in
even the birds are hushed
and in this perfect silence
where not even a faint breeze strays
the idea of manitous
hovered over everything
becomes the first wavered light
of the sun through the clouds
and the storm that gathers to the west
announces itself
in a fanfare of silence
small wonder, you say
that there's no word
for “power” in your language
only
spirit
only
medicine
but then
there's no word for “obvious”
either
On Battle Bluffs
for Jennifer and Ron Ste. Marie
they say that in the old days
the scouts would come to sit and watch
for any sign of enemies coming
out of the purple mountains
or across the hard iridescent platter
of the lake
from this height the land
stretches out across the territory
of the Secwepemc, the Shuswap
as it's said in the settler talk
and there's history in the sudden flare
of space, the country below us reduced
to angle and a narrowing where the lake
pulls our focus forward into the hard vee
of its disappearing
so that it becomes like time, really
wending, winding, curving in upon itself
turning into something else completely
while we breathe the exhalations
of the breath of those who came
and went before
wind on stone
the clock of us ticking
relentlessly
I can hear the cries of battle rising
upward on drafts of air
just as I feel the solemn peace
that fell over young men who sat for days here
praying, fasting, seeking the vision
that would lead them into manhood
perhaps becoming one of those who fell
beneath the hammered blows of conflict
amidst the clumps of medicine sage
on the sere grasslands below
it's a sacred place because of that
this place of becoming and leaving
this warrior place where the spirit of a people
resides in wafts of air
risen from their territory to climb beyond
here to the place of old voices
whose home is the wind
eagle wings skimming
silently across
this hallowed blue
lying against the ancient rock
feeling the push of it on my back
the sun bakes everything in radiant waves
that shimmer and dance
so that looking out across the battlefields below
the land itself weaves into motion
the sun dance maybe
or another act of being
I don't know why places like this
affect me so
only that the search for a sense
of my own history involves many histories
the sum of us lodged within these sheer bluffs
so that coming here becomes a pilgrimage of sorts
a deliberate marching, plodding, shuffling forward
and backwards at the same time
to reclaim a piece of me
I didn't know existed
this rock a vertebrae
in the great spine of story
of our time here
together
songs rise higher
borne on air
returning
Papers
for Debra
I walk by with another armload and watch you scanning
papers for signs of life. This life that passed. It's funny how
something like a postcard scribbled against the gunwales of
a sloop off Wanganui can come to mean so much. Vague
hieroglyphics cast from the hands of an unknown people,
place and time and distance referenced by what's implied and
not by what you know, a connection you feel as paper in the
hands. Still, you plumb each line and image like a sounder
reading the depth of unknown waters, breathless for the tale
born by echo. There's a lifetime in these boxes, and in their
faded inks and snapshots running to opaque your father's
world fills itself in hint by hint, line by line, detail by detail,
until finally, as the boxes disappear you assemble a keepsake,
a shrine they so inelegantly call a “scrap” book â the only
treasure you can take away. They are the sum of us the things
we keep and in the hands of loved ones once we're gone,
those paper trails of living retain their sense of self, sit there
squarely in the palm, crooning old jazz ballads, moaning a
particular blues, singing their histories.
Getting Supper
there's nothing too traditional
about a tuna steak fashioned
into burgers to someone
with sturgeon as a totem
but you could make the case
that
wasabi
is an Ojibway word
if you said it slow enough
still I've learned to brandish a knife
and I can mince without too much
damage to my manliness
and now that I know there's things to skin
I can retain a savage decorum
even if it's just an onion
and I face the whole
slice and dice thing
like a cavalry charge
over a battlefield of lettuce
but there's something elemental in
the hunkering over a stove or a grill
that hearkens back to fires
glowing orange in the night
and the smell of meat roasting on a stick
so that this whole getting supper thing
has its merits in a purely
cross-cultural way
even if I flunk the miso tuna burger test
the hunter prowls Safeway aisles now
the gatherer chases bargains
in the produce section and hey
shiitake
is a ceremonial word you know
honest