Authors: Frank X. Walker
an introduce me to manhood
something like the truth whispers parts
a all my tomorrows an tell me things
I learns to keeps mostly to myself.
Sometime it be my Mamma's voice
an sometime it sound like mine only wiser
warning me a danger
preparing me for a coming death
or reminding me that this body here just be a shell
that Massa might laugh at or work to death
but never know
that inside it be a buffalo
an inside the buffalo be a rock
an inside that rock be a mountain.
I does all I can
to help Capt. Clark
get it in his head
that I have had my fill
a our union.
When he raise his hand
to strike me
for the last time
he still have hope
he can make me mind
he believe what we had
is worth saving an that
a new pair a boots
will make it all better.
But he soon know
that he can not whip this man
into a boy again
when he stare me down
an see somebody new
in my eyes.
When he see me dressed
in my hunter's shirt
he make quick plans
to send me back to Kentucke
curse himself for his “weakness”
an vow to never speak my name
again.
We start as fools and become wise through
experience.
âAfrican Proverb
I use to think it be the job a the man
to keep his woman in line with a open hand
I use to think there be such a thing
as a good massa and that freedom
be a ghost in a dream that I couldn't touch
I use to think I was too big to be knocked down
too old to learn something new
and too hard on the inside to shed a tear
I use to think that love was a word
that could only be used by white folks
I been wrong on all counts
an I gots plenty scars to prove it.
Lewis went into a terrible depression. In courting
a wife, his advances were rejected. Jefferson
appointed him Governor of Upper Louisiana, but he
proved utterly unsuited to politics. . . . His decline
eventually ended in suicide.
âStephen E. Ambrose,
Lewis & Clark: Voyage of Discovery
Why a fancy, educated man, who worked directly
with the president, traveled without harm to the ochian
returned as a hero, made chief a all the new territory
be given to such deep dark sadness, I can't say.
But something give Capt. Lewis cause to question alla
his success, something bigger than all them books
something heavy as a mountain burrowed deep inside
him like a groundhog an emptied out all his joy.
After watching how careful he conduct himself
'round the men an learning how much he frown
on lying with Indian women, I starts to think
'bout the things the men whispered 'round the fire.
I thinks not on if it true, but on how hard it must be
to live life like it not, to walk 'round under a mask
to ignore your own nature, to smile an laugh an dance
for the pleasure a others while crying all on the inside.
Maybe his sorrow was born from fear a his feelings
or maybe he be even more afraid a what others
might think or say. I knows well how a thing like death
seem welcome when you can't hold the ones you love.
Ol' York say, if ain't nothing in the barn but roosters
won't be no eggs for breakfast. But I ain't signifying
I'm just speculating on what ignorance an whiskey say
when they see how he carry hisself an how clean
an orderly he like his things. An it stand to reason
to ask if blue blood an education an manners can explain
all his odd ways or if he just seem a lil' less manly
standing next to a rugged man like Capt. Clark.
All I can rightfully say is he was rich an white an a man
in a land where them three things mean nothing but power.
Why else would he take his own life, unless one a those
things wasn't true, unless he too was a slave.
William Clark
Death will come, always out of season.
âBig Elk, Omaha Chief
When asked in '32 what ever happened to my boy York,
I spoke the truth as far as I know it and even shed a tear.
I ended the gossip and told them he failed in business
and died of the cholera in Tennessee while trying to return
to me and his position as my valued servant.
And why wouldn't he crawl back and apologize
for his foolish behavior over a woman
and for his poor conduct, instead of returning west to live
among the savages?
I was prepared to welcome him with open arms.
I would have history know
that I was not nor am I a severe master.
I understood the inferior nature of the slave.
His emotional and intellectual development
being what it was,
York couldn't forget all the nonsense put in his head
about his blackness
nor appreciate freedom
or understand the true place and value of women.
It was my idea to take him along to serve
on the great expedition.
It ruined a good slave. It ruined a great relationship.
And that kills me.
There be a voice inside that speak
only when I feels guilty
for something ugly
that come on my heart or 'cross my mind
an even louder when I acts on it
an say or do a thing I later regrets.
I remembers that Ol' York say
a piece a God live in every good man
an be what some calls a soul
then I look at alla wrong
I done an wonder how bad it scar
my soul to know a devil in there too.
But how easy some men must sleep
them having no guilt
an little soul.
Our people will be herded like buffalo
and walked backward from their own lands
until they fall off a great cliff.
Coyote will pretend to fall with them
and offer firewater and guns and beads
in exchange for their tongues and wisdom.
Young warriors will trade their best ponies
for white man clothes and iron horses.
Many will forget the hunt and the sweat.
Our storytellers will stop the winter count.
The rivers will turn to stone.
The white man will write down our truths.
But when they gather in great numbers
to celebrate their long trip to the ocean and back
many tribes will open their eyes and speak as one.
Before our feet touch the ground
we will grow eagle wings and buffalo horns
fly back to our homelands and rescue our stories.
The mountains will see us coming and weep.
The rivers will see us coming and sing.
The salmon will see us coming and dance with joy.
Ol' York say Africans believe a person can only die
when the people no longer speak they name.
I give you these words to hold, not so you remembers mine
but so you know the truth an keeps it alive as well.
He say there be times in every man's life when he have to
choose to hunt to feed himself or to hunt to feed his people
but only once can he choose to hunt no more forever.
He say when it all said an done there be nothing left 'cept
God.
In my dream I am standing in a deep deep hole
surrounded by a herd a wooly-headed buffalo
an hands as big as mine
are throwing dirt on my body.
At the edge a the hole
a old white man wrapped in a flag
is standing with his back turned away
an writing in a book with a long gold quill.
High above me in the clouds
an eagle is flying in circles.
When she folds her wings and starts to dive
I feel my body begin to float toward the surface
Her screeches are loud and piercing
They vibrate everything above and below the water.
She screeches one final time just before she plucks me
out of the river and carries me away, dancing like a fish.
is how the party was treated
when we returned
even me, back in the quarters
truth is
we ran out a food an supplies
before we even reached the ochian
we stole horses an anything else we could use
we pried the legs a women an girls open
let them think we had something special
something powerful to leave
with the trail a half-breeds
an sores an sickness
drunk with power an arrogance
we killed some young Blackfeet boys
then hung a peace medal 'round they neck
truth is
Indians was better people than us
instead a killing us all
they give us comfort an food
when we was starving
guides an directions
when we was lost
they traded their horses an women
for our survival an pleasure
watched us stumble all the way
to the ochian an back
we got better than we deserved from them
they got a whole lot worse
1770 | William Clark is born |
ca. 1772 | York is born |
1799 | John Clark (William Clark's father) |
1801 | Meriwether Lewis becomes |
1803 | United States acquires Louisiana |
Summer 1803 | Clark accepts Lewis's invitation to |
October 14, 1803 | Lewis arrives in Louisville |
October 26, 1803 | Lewis, Clark, York, and the nine |
May 14, 1804 | The Corps leaves the winter |
August 20, 1804 | Sgt. Charles Floyd dies |
February 11, 1805 | Sacagawea's son, Jean Baptiste |
November, 1805 | Lewis and Clarkâled parties reach |
March 23, 1806 | The return trip begins |
May 3, 1806 | The party returns to Nez Perce |
July 3, 1806 | Led by Nez Perce guides, the party |
August 17, 1806 | Party leaves Sacagawea, Pomp, and |
September 23, 1806 | The party arrives in St. Louis to a |
Nov. 5, 1806 | Lewis, Clark, and York arrive back |
Oct. 11, 1809 | Lewis dies in Tennessee from an |
1811â1816 | York works as a wagoner in |
Dec. 20, 1812 | Sacagawea dies |
1815 | York works for drayage business |
1832 | In interview with Washington |
1838 | Clark dies in St. Louis |
After an evening reading at Summer Fishtrap, a writing conference held every year in Nez Perce country at the foot of the Wallowa Mountains, just outside Joseph, Oregon, I stepped outside of a wooden cabin nestled near the opposite end of beautiful Wallowa Lake and the grave site of legendary Nez Perce leader Chief Joseph. There I met Diana Mallickan, a park ranger stationed in Spalding, Idaho, on the Lapwai reservation, and Allen Pinkham, an important Nez Perce elder and former chair of the tribe's governing body. I was holding my breath in anticipation of a critique of my book of poems entitled
Buffalo Dance: The Journey of York
(Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2004).
I had already survived criticism from Lewis and Clark enthusiasts and history scholars, but the audience I feared the most, representative voices of people most absent in the telling of the Lewis and Clark saga, now stood before me in the dark. I braced myself for the worst but breathed a sigh of relief when Pinkham held out a hardback copy of
Buffalo Dance
for me to sign.
The private and warm exchange that began that night continued over several years and grew to include a public reading at the University of Idaho, in Moscow, and an invitation to visit and read from the York manuscript at Lapwai High School, a Native American secondary school on the reservation. The initial meeting at Fishtrap also led to an opportunity to present my poems during the signature event of the National Lewis & Clark Bicentennial Commemoration at Lewis and Clark College and again in St. Louis for the commemoration's final event, called Currents of Change.