Saturday, April 3, 2010

New Wind

The wind came out of Navajo country
across the plains
through the tops of the pines
sliding beneath the fur of
the four-footeds close to the ground

At first I thought it might be
the raw wind, the heartless wind
that lashes the elms and oaks
on its way from the gray-spotted waves
far to the east

But no, it was the kindly, deep, auburn wind
the wind with the talismans of deeds
the wind of the wise counsel
new responsibilities
the wind that confirms our ancestry

We belong to this land now
whether European, Asian or African orphans
the wind and mountains have molded us
the edges of the ocean have reminded us
of our origins

Boned by midwives
winnowed by witches
encased in hummingbird nest
struggling for purchase
on the tallest branch

Swooping down to the mole's lair
underneath the gloaming
eyes squinted at fairies
waiting for that wind - that prince of wind
to carry us off to our real home

In the arms of the new wind
not the wind of summer
mysterious blackness and crickets
dancing in the elven rings

Not the wind of winter
stern father to our labors
swallowing sound in a long whistle
weeping in ice dreams

We are lodged in the eternal heart
of mother wind like a walnut
that her owl will bear away
with secrets safe
in the moon's shadow.

4 comments:

A Word Witch said...

Wonderful, Stirling. I especially like "winnowed by witches."
:-)

Stirling Davenport said...

Somehow I knew you would like those, Lu. Thanks. I don't know what prompted the poem - a sense of a new season perhaps.

S.L. Corsua said...

I like how you've described the wind this way: "wind with the talismans of deeds." To me, that line is rife with meaning. :)

Cheers.

Stirling Davenport said...

Thanks, S.L. I really appreciate your comment.