On this second day of Native American Heritage month we note that Kimberly Blaeser is the November 2021 Poem-a-Day guest editor! Listen to an interview about her curatorial process and artistic practice at poets.org
Boundary Waters: key words
Photo by J. Harrington
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A couple of years ago, the Better Half and I participated in a writing workshop Blaeser conducted at the Aldo Leopold Foundation, entitled “Wisdom Sits In Places”: Creative Writing from the Natural World. In fact, I believe the Better Half may have “given" us the registration fees as an anniversary present. One of the places the workshop explored vicariously was Minnesota’s Boundary Waters [see photo above].
This posting has prompted me to dig out the file from the Places workshop and refreshed my aging memory about how much I enjoy Blaeser’s poetry. Some things to add to my list of items about which to be thankful this Thanksgiving month include having several volumes of her poems available for rereading.
Since we are hoping for positive outcomes from Glasgow and COP26 actions on (re)solving climate breakdown, we also can be thankful that Blaeser has captured many of the problems to be considered in Glasgow in one of her poems about the wisdom of and on this place we call Earth.
Poem for a Tattered Planet: If the Measure is Life
by Kimberly Blaeser
Born under the canopy of plenty the sweet unfolding season’s of a planet’s youth, in the trance of capitalism we take our fill content with the status quo pull our shades on encroaching collapse say something about Anthropocene, the energy barter and the holy fortress of science. But beyond the throat of commerce, beneath the reflection of the celestial river, within the ancient copper beauty of belonging we stand encircled inhabit the Ish, navigate by the singing of songs. Though money fog settles around, confounds measure today veil of mystery shifts lifts for momentary sigh t. Here find rhythm of a tattered planet, feel on panther mound a pulse. Listen—don’t count. Feel small life drum beneath ______. My core. I am ancient refracted light or sound traveling, my frequency a constant my voice bending at angles to become whole in another surface— say a poem. Say a poem perpendicular to the boundary of meaning, make it a prism or possibility sing of turtle or cast the mythic lumen of thunderbird here on the flat f alter of words: This page not contract but covenant. Sacred where. When neither image nor voice will twin itself, In the thick moist cloud of being if the measure is life each limb a nimble test of tree glimpse not see nor calculate. This Shroud of Commerce shrouds meaning. In the technology of documentary genocide in the destructive bonanza of the industrial age— declare the death of planet as it passes through a sound speed gradient comes out on the other side a lost echo of human greed repeating itself repeating itself repea t in g Each splinter of language bent in complicated formulas of inference of ownership as fog forgets then remembers form. But we find measure in metaphor vibration earth timbre. Amid endless metric errors of science or prayer speak the ninety-nine names for god: Gizhe-manidoo, Great Spirit, or longing, Knower of Subtleties, trembling aspen, the sung bones of salmon, braided sweetgrass, the sacred hair bundles of women, this edible landscape— aki, nabi, ishkode, noodin, the ten little winds of our whirled fingertips, this round dance of the seasons— the ineffable flourishing. With mind as holy wind and voice a frog’s bellowous night song we arrive. Here sandhill cranes mark sky. If the measure is life— their clan legs the length of forever. Here mirror of lake a canvas of belief. If the measure is life— refraction the trigger of all knowing. Only this. Now we place aseema, the fragrant tobacco bodies of our relatives. A sung offering. To make the tattered whole. A question of survival. Of correlation. Of vision. The measure is life.
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