Authors: Frank X. Walker
âAfrican Proverb
I saw a medicine woman surrounded in smoke
turn a buffalo horn 'round
an use it to suck the illness an blood out
a sick body without so much as making a cut.
I watched a medicine man shake his bear claw
sing a healing song an cry for the evil spirit
that lived in a crippled man to leave him in peace.
In the middle a the night there come a great wind
an thundering hoofs that put our fire to sleep.
When the sun returned the man stood up an walked.
I ordered my boy York to dance. The Indians seem
amazed that a man so large is so light on his feet.
âWilliam Clark
Something like leaving happens
when I be ordered to dance.
Not the pack up camp an go kinda leave
but how things might be if my mind
weren't shackled inside my head
like dreaming but not being asleep.
I might take a puff a tobacco, tie on
a piece a red cloth an wave my hatchet
'round my head to get my mind right.
An once I gets good an loose, I starts
to feel lighter an lighter 'til soon
I hardly weighs nothing at all.
I spends as much time in the air
as on my feet an after a while it's like
my soul be dancing to drums that thunder
an I be a small child on the ground watching
my body follow the music, catch it
then leave it to make its own.
My captain think it make him look more powerful
to order a man such as me to dance
but the Indians see my body move by its own spirit
an not by a white man's hand
raise they voices, sing nothing but praises
an join me in the air.
I seen a flock a large birds
change direction at the same time
as if they be a the same mind
or listen to the same drum
like whirling dancers waiting for the break.
I seen more buffalo than trees
run full out 'cross a valley
shoulder to shoulder hoof to hoof
trample everything under foot
somehow spare a newborn deer
frozen in a wet ball alone
an hidden
among the high weeds.
Like our people, Indians believe
even the animals share a master drummer
but the captains think we the only ones
that know how to dance.
. . . the succession of curious adventures wore the
impression on my mind of enchantment.
âMeriwether Lewis, June 14th
, 1805
One day I separated from the rest a the party to follow
a group a buffalo that seem to call my name
an this angry low cloud swoop down over the river the way
that lion swoop down on the monkey's back in that story
a Ol' York's, only this lion is big an black like me
full a thunder an lightning, an throwing down iceballs
as big as my fist, so I whistles sharp an loud, gets low an
strokes the shells on the hunting shirt she gimme,
an it fly right over.
Before I can reflect on how lucky I be, it come to me that
Charbono's squaw an her lil' warrior, Jean Baptiste
is now right b'neath that lion's claws, so I stampedes back
for the rescue an finds they barely escapes a surprise flood
that washed away Capt. Clark's compass an Charbono's gun.
I think no more about it 'til I hear that before the cloud
swoop in a bear chased Capt. Lewis full out
the length ova cornfield.
Made him jump in the river to get away.
When he climb out the bear turn into a tyger cat
then into three big bull buffalo
that charge him and chase him away.
Only then do I begins to understand her power.
The half-breed Frenchmans was something else
an pulled they weight as well as any a the mens
but nobody could best Drewyer
when it come to making his hands talk.
Most white men look stiff when trying to speak
with they hands instead a they lips
but he had a way a using his whole body to
communicate 'tween us an the Indians.
He always use his face an eyes to deepen the message
an could call up an change to any emotion needed
to make his words fly over an cause the Indians to nod.
He could make his body say
buffalo
or
deer
or
bear.
His hands could be a great bald eagle or a hummingbird.
His arms and neck could call up a snake or a river.
Sometimes 'round the fire we ask him to sign us a story
just for the pleasure a seeing him make the words move.
for N. Scott Momaday, Rock Tree Boy
Seven sisters an they brother was playing
in what the Indians call the Black Hills out west
the boy pretend to be a grizzly bear
an chase his sisters 'round an 'round
he play so hard he turn into a real bear
an try to eat the sisters who become afraid an run
when they run past a tree stump it hollas out
an tell the sisters to climb on for protection
when bear catch up the stump begin to grow
an grow an grow 'til he can't reach them no more
bear get angry an scrape up stump with claws
stump turn to rock to protect itself
stump keep growing an the seven sisters get so high
them become the seven stars in the ol' drinking gourd.
When things was first born
sun touch moon
an pass on light
moonlight touch water
an pass on dance
water move upon the land
an give her hips
hips give birth to trees
an them bear fruit
fruit teach man
to pass on seeds
man plant seeds
an woman become moon
moon get full
give birth to son
William Henry Jackson . . . took a picture of a Nez
Perce half-breed . . . other Nez Perce told him, was
the son of William Clark.
âAlvin M. Josephy Jr.,
Lewis and Clark Through Indian Eyes
The hero makers say
the captains try an set
a good example
an be too gentlemanly
or too busy
to lie
with Indian women.
But like Ol' York say
babies always tell
on themselves, especially
when they comes out
with red hair,
whiter skin
than they mamma's
an eyes
the color a the sky.
He who learns teaches.
âAfrican Proverb
When Brotha come back from da journey
colored folk come from miles 'round
an sits on da porch all night
just t'hear stories 'bout da indians 'n da ochian
some a da things he say
gets us yung bucks mighty excited 'n stirred up
'n scares off da olda ones
'specially when he talk a tastin' freedom
what it mean t'be a man
'n how out west they worship
our blackness 'n live married to da lan'
like our people do back in Africa
He have us all struttin' like roostas
our backs straight 'n chins up
'n not rushin' t'grin 'n fetch it when called
boys or chil'ren or uncle or less for a long time.
York act like his axe got two heads on it
an' dat he da One who make lightnin' strike
but his thunder ain't no more den a han' clap.
I bites my tongue outta respect fo' his daddy
'cause he parta da blame for eggin' on
dat boy's foolishness all dese years
but I lost my taste for 'im after listenin' to 'im
all night on the porch braggin' to da mens 'bout
sleepin' wit' long haired Indian women
an' how much prettier dey is den us, how much
softer dey skin be an' how dey don't talk back.
How dey treated him like a king an' whatnot.
Like 'at wife a his ain't neva washed his dirty feet.
If he was really my son, he'd know better den actin'
so high an' mighty. A big tree fall just the same
as a little one, only harder.
Just 'cause he ain't out in da field. Just 'cause he follow
Massa Clark 'round like a pet dog an eat da scraps
off his plate, he think he better den the rest a us.
He couldn't hardly get his big head in the door when he left.
Now he back here, tellin' all dem lies, an' claimin' to be a hero
for wipin' a white man's ass alla way to the ochian an' back.
I dreams so much about the expedition
I wakes up tasting the air for ochian salt
an take on a load a sadness when I open
my eyes an find that I am not a buffalo.
Even awake my mind carry me back
to the Nez Perce an the peaceful life there.
I miss the time spent playing games
while waiting for the mountain snow to melt.
It lift our spirits to try to outshoot their warriors,
pitch the rings at the stick, an run races on foot
though they was the masters a anything on horseback.
I pray the peaceful times I left is theirs forever
an that freedom is all my lil' York an his mamma
ever know, but I fear it is a empty prayer.
Ev'rytime I sees a beautiful anything with a mustang heart,
catch the moon with her eye wide open or hear the river
slap a wet rock like a man slap his woman's thigh at night
I close my eyes an see her standing there, naked
just after a hard rain, belly fulla promises
an I suddenly remembers what huckleberries taste like
then I know, it one thing to force a man to remember
his life as a slave, but it another to expect him to forget
such gifts as these.
The old woman reach in my stomach
an pull out a horse covered with spots.
She keeps pulling an pulling horses 'til
they numbers four.
Then they ride 'round in a big circle
alla way to where the sun rise
when they gets back to us
they all carrying chiefs.
When I make to stare at them I can see
they all be tied to they horses
an alla the riders is dead except one.
An he is cradling a book a light in his arms.
When the people see the book they cut off
they hair an burn all they medicines an skins
Then they stand together in a long long line
wrapped in thin blankets 'til they fall asleep.
When they wake, somebody has stolen alla land.
Alla buffalo are dead. An half-breeds out number
the trees. When I ask the old woman who did this
she points at me an begins to sing a wailing song.
When Massa Clark trade in his buckskin
for ruffled shirts, silk hose, and buckled shoes
I knows my gun an hatchet an knife be next
being back inside the stomach a the city
put knots in mine after all I seen an done out west
the thunder a buffalo, the roar ova grizzly, the voices
a the ochian an waterfalls is all dead to me here
out in the wild, I could hear my mamma sing
with each morning sun, here in Louavul an St. Louie
I hear nothing but the sound a money being made,
the crack a the whip, an no music.
York's slave wife
Folks round here wanna call me Auntie,
York's ol' wife, or Massa So an So's niggah wench
Like I ain't got a name a my own.
Dem don't know how hard it be t'put aside
a lil' piece a myself dat nobody can't neva touch
but me, a piece big enuf t'wrestle the long hard days
an keep itself warm at night, without a man 'round.