Ojibway Graveyard
Beyond here is the residential school where
hundreds of our kids were sent sprawling
face first against the hard-packed ground
of a religion and an ethic that said “surrender”
and when they couldn't or wouldn't
they wound up here just beyond the gaze
of the building that condemned them to
this untended stretch of earth
everywhere
the unmarked graves of a people
whose very idea of god sprang from
the ground in which they're laid
there is no fence here no hedgerow
to proclaim this as a sanctuary or even
as a resting place only bitter twirls
of barbed wire canted wildly on posts
rotted and broken and snapped by neglect
unlike the marble and granite headstones
that proclaim the resting places of nuns
and priests devoted to the earthly toil
of saving lost and ravaged souls
for a god and a book that says
to suffer the children to come
unto the light that never really
shone for them
ever
even the wind is lonely here
clouds skim low and the chill
becomes a living thing that invades
the mind and there is nothing
not even prayer in any human tongue
that can lift the pall of dispiritedness
created here for them to sleep in
a brother's grave somewhere in the rough
and tangle of the grasses can't be seen
only felt like a cold spot between the ribs
and a caught breath sharp with tears
bitterness
what they slipped onto the tongues
of generations removed from us
like a wafer
soaked in vinegar
they say we Indians never say goodbye
but I doubt that's true
no people in their right minds or hearts
would cling to these sad effigies
the knowledge that someone once thought
that they were less than human
deserving nothing in the end
but an unmarked plot of earth
beneath a sullen sky the weeds and grasses
stoked by wind to sing their only benediction
we bid goodbye
to nuns and priests
and schools
that only ever taught us pain
keep your blessing for yourselves
in the end you're the ones
who need them
Ojibway Dream
There's nothing like a can of Spam mixed
with eggs, canned potatoes and a mug of
campfire coffee with the grounds still in
cooked over an open flame
and even if there was it wouldn't measure
up to the crucial test of how it tastes
on bannock made on a stick
that's just the plain truth of things
well, a pickerel packed in clay and tossed
into the fire comes awful close
as long as there's greens and wild mushrooms
tossed over flame and then blueberries
all washed down with Ojibway tea
then a smoke to share
with the Spirits might
just come close
but then again a nice moose rubaboo
properly done with flour, water and maple
syrup with bannock for dipping is hard
to resist at the best of times provided
there's a cob of corn roasted on the fire
with the husk still on and water from
the river cold and rich with the mineral taste
that reminds you of rocks and lakes upstream
and time and the fact that the way
to an Ojibway man's heart
isn't through his stomach
but through his recollections
while seated on a cheap red stool
in a plastic diner looking out
over a freeway choked with cars
and people hungering
for something better tasting
than success
Copper Thunderbird
in memory of Norval Morrisseau
Diogenes you said went walking
with a lamp in the broadest daylight
in a search for one good man
as though that would explain how
they came to find you lurking
in the bushes beyond Hastings & Main drunk
that early summer of '87
raving and talking in ebullient colours
as though the air were a canvas
and legends are born on the dire breath
of rot-gut sherry and the twisting snake
of dreams bred in the bruise of hangover mornings
where Diogenes wakes to crawl
on hands and knees into the light himself
you chuckled then
said they'd never get you
and the truth is they never did
in the belly of legends lives
the truth of us
where shape-shifters walk and flying skeletons
cruise the long nights of our souls
and the tricksters inhabit the dark
where the light of the lamp
you shone there bleeds fantastic colour
into the crevices we've learned
to be afraid to look into for fear
we'd see ourselves peering outward
and know we needed you or your like
to paint us home
you talked to me of birch bark scrolls
and your grandfather's cabin in the trees
where the map of our being laid out in pictographs
was translated in the talk you said
was the original talk of our people
that's rarely spoken anymore
then chuckled again and held me fast
with obsidian eyes that gleamed
with teachings and spoke softly of the stories
that came to fill the canvas of you
resplendent in the harmony and sheen
of colours you said were meant to heal
mystic tones and the hue of shaman songs
the river of black becoming the contrast
that teaches us everything about ourselves
if we're willing to bob in its current
so you set them there in the weft and weave
of canvases despite those Ojibway who claimed
that you gave too much away
even though they could only ever guess
at what you meant to say
because they'd closed their ears and hearts
and minds to stories alive
in the belly of legends
you said to me then
“they'll never get me”
and the truth is they never did
all through that long day ensconced
in the feigned rusticity of the Jasper Lodge
you made me tea and told me
the migration story of my people falling
into the old talk every now and then
but I never minded because it was authentic
and the dip and roll of Ojibway became
another way to enter it together
keep it
close to me like the migis shell
you pressed into my palm
when I made it to the ocean eventually
I left it there
returned it to the place of its beginnings
and watched while the surf rolled it over
and over again until it disappeared
like the brush when it's lifted
at the end of the line
I don't know why it is, Morrisseau
that we come to cling to stories so
only perhaps that something in us understands
that what we get from reality sometimes
is only the veneer, the fixative perhaps
that holds everything in place so the art
can happen underneath it all forever
Copper Thunderbird, you said to me
tell the story for the story's sake
let the line lead them where it will
and don't forget that the best ones come
from everything that's gone before
so never be afraid to splash
enough colour to wake them up to that
and in that way, you said
they'll get you in the end
and the truth is
they sometimes do
In Peigan Country 1993
You drive west out of Calgary
swing left at Bragg Creek to the east and down
through Millarville then due south again
letting the blacktop lead you through Turner Valley
while Van Morrison sings something about
travelling himself and with the windows open
the svelte jump of rhythm and blues
gets punctuated by the sudden cry
of a red-tailed hawk skimming across the highway
and the black comma of a bear
eating berries on a hill
you've come to love this drive
the unnecessary westward loop of it
you take just because it feels so good
to motor through this country
that rollicks with good cowboy humour
and rolls with the solemnity
of a well-told tribal tale
this ancient sea
crumpled up into foothills
at Turner Valley you swing west again
and climb into the arms of the Rockies
and you've switched to Leos Janacek now
letting the romantic swirl of violins
ease you upward so that
rounding a curve you look out across
the great purple stretch of prairie
and the sloping curve of the planet
framed by clouds and the ghostly echo
of the pounding hooves of Peigan ponies
chasing buffalo to the cliff in the gully
where women wait with knives and clubs
and honour songs to take the sacred meat
of their older brother and join it
to their own
the road bends into grizzly country
and there's a long sloping downward curve
between the hump of twin ridges
and where it levels out there's the sudden
smell of medicine sage from a meadow
flat as a table
and you ease the car to the shoulder
clamber out and squint across the wide green
to the resolute grey and weathered face
of the granite cliffs at its southern edge
there's a packet of tobacco in the trunk
and retrieving it you set out across
this perfect meadow while ground squirrels
voice their irritation at your presence
and the smell of sage is so sharp
you can feel it in your lungs
at the far end the ground drops off at your feet
and there's the gorge in a narrow
vertical drop to the river twisting
into rapids and pools far below
and the sage is growing thick as hair
on the sheer slope of it
so you offer tobacco and a prayer
and bend to gather this sacred medicine
and you can hear the river and the wind
and the voices of the squirrels
and the swish of the meadow grasses
like the whisper of fancy-dance shawls
and young girls' feet kicking gracefully
to the beat of a drum
and you lose yourself so completely
in the timeless feel of this act of gathering
that when the wind picks up you smell
the rain and there's a sudden bank of clouds
pushed in low above the cliffs
with the roll of thunder and the smell of lightning
and you stand and just for a second
in the middle of that meadow
you see a circle of tipis
and the people dancing
but there's a flash of lightning
and the vision winks out
and you're stood there
on the precipice
with an armful of sage
feeling honoured
and blessed and a little weak in the knees
but happier than you've ever been
walking back across that meadow
the rain pelts down and you lift your face
so that it can wash you
and reaching the car you tuck the medicine away
and turn to the rain again
and dance shirtless
in that meadow where the people came
in the Long Ago Time to sing and celebrate
this power you feel all around you
and in that rain and in the presence
of the vision you took for real
you came to realize that freedom
is the shrugging off of worldly things
and that in the ceremony of that
lies a common practical magic
that's not so much Indian as it is human
an ordinary thing we lose
when we cease believing in things
like dancing shirtless in the rain
medicine and ceremony and prayer
and the ability of the planet to show us things
she keeps sheltered in her breast
driving home you listened to the music
of the medicine on the seat behind you
the sage, the women's power
grandmother teachings
holding everything together