
A Warming Haiku #2
a global warning –
geese that sought warm, winter lake
linger through season
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Entry posted in haiku & poetry. Bookmark the permalink.
a global warning –
geese that sought warm, winter lake
linger through season
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Entry posted in haiku & poetry. Bookmark the permalink.
ground caked with dead leaves
winter breeze turns rain to ice
Nature’s cold frosting
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Entry posted in haiku & poetry. Bookmark the permalink.
“Words do not pay for my dead people.”
Shall we talk
about
it
awhile while we travel the miles
of
defiled
land
slaughtered
animals
murdered
people
that
lead
to a
place
you will be
graciously confined
called
a
reservation
but
you
don’t
need
an
application
just
lose
your
apprehension
and
stay
put
here
awhile while we hand out the piles
of
stingy
food
rationed
goods
white man’s
ways
that
you
are
being
graciously supplied
without
hesitation.
“Good words will not give me back my children.”
Yes, but you fled
showing great
premonition
against our
demands,
AND
we require
your
supplication
without
RESERVATION.
“Treat all men alike. Give them all the same law.”
Sure, just submit
to our
imposed
economic
spiritual
cultural
bounded
limitations
until we discover the next resource we want.
“Give them all an even chance to live and grow.”
You ARE free to live
and grow –
within the
restriction
called
a
RESERVATION
and
all
its
white man’s
imposed
economic
spiritual
cultural
bounded
rules!
“Let man be a free man – free to travel, free to stop, free to work, free to trade where I choose, free to choose my own teachers, free to follow the religion of my fathers, free to think and talk and act for myself – and I will obey every law, or submit to the penalty.”
Sigh.
We’ve talked
about
it
awhile
while you traveled the miles
to
bitter
tears
stolen
lives
broken
hearts
that
you
have now
been
forever (until we discover the next valuable resource we want need)
graciously subjected to
called
a
reservation
but…
“You might as well expect the rivers to run backward as that any man who was born a free man should be contented when penned up and denied liberty to go where he pleases.”
but…
“I am tired of talk that comes to nothing. It makes my heart sick when I remember all the good words and all the broken promises.”
but…
“All men were made by the same Great Spirit Chief. They are all brothers…”
but…
“Words do not pay for my dead people.”
~
All the words in quotes above were taken from a speech given by In-mut-too-yah-lat-lat (Thunder traveling over the Mountains), more commonly known as Chief Joseph. He was chief of a tribe of the Nez Perces (Wal-lam-wat-kin band of the Chute-pa-lu), a group of people who had maintained peace with white people since they had first met and helped Lewis and Clark in 1805. It was always his goal to live peacefully with the white people. After a few young Nez Perces men took revenge on a white settler group who had killed their own fathers and brothers, Chief Joseph’s tribe became the target of military action and revenge, in spite of his appeals.
~
I am revisiting “With Reservation”, first published last year, in recognition of Native American Heritage Month and the continuing battle in my state (Line 5) and others to recognize treaty rights and improve the living conditions of and opportunities available to Indigenous groups. We have a long way to go.
The United States celebrates something we call “Thanksgiving” this week. In schools, students are taught the story of Native Americans who helped Pilgrims during a difficult season and the meal they shared to celebrate the harvest. In truth, colonialism resulted in the decimation of hundreds of nations and millions of human lives. Those who didn’t perish faced the loss of culture, dignity and ancestral lands. The destruction to natural resources that Europeans wrought on the so-called “New World” has included everything from buffalo to water. The persecutions and resource grabs continue to this day.
~
The complete original post can be read here.
~
Words and Photography ©2016 & 2017Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Posted in poetry, noDAPL & human rights. Bookmark the permalink.
the prince lost his leather boot
the beanstalk rotted
Papa Bear ate Goldilocks for dinner
and
Rapunzel rappelled down the side of the tower
Snow White never tasted the poisoned apple
she was too busy
cooking
mending
and
cleaning
for seven needy dwarfs
to stop for a snack
in her spare time
she penned a best-selling novel
“The Fairy-Tale Delusion”
GOOD THING
it was rumored that
Prince Charming swam off with a mermaid
on his Caribbean vacation
and
drowned
what line did Snow White write to end her children’s classic?
“She fought.
She survived.
She shared.
She thrived.”
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Posted in poetry & free verse. Bookmark the permalink.
naked
stripped bare by a gust of mocking wind
tree branches tremble
in complaint
Nature
responds
to creak-cracking pleas
fills her storehouse clouds
with
empathetic
frigid
tears
She
beckons the wind
with
thick
smoke
signals
wind
sighs
puffs
whispers
dies
then, observing
those pathetic, quaking, naked limbs shaking
blows
a sympathetic gale
snow
falls
covers limbs with frosty blankets
and
blankets roots under thick cover
until
wind,
tired of stillness,
decides to stir Nature’s pot
with
a
hot
air
whirling
melting
mock
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Posted in poetry & free verse. Bookmark the permalink,
tranquil pond reflects
an autumn-tree forgery
till wind curls canvass
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
woven
a tapestry
with threads intertwining
writer knits a colorful yarn
carefully stitches in all the loose ends
tightens the narrative
reader unfolds the plot
mind perceives words
woven
~
Words and Photography ©2017 Tanya Cliff ~ to contact me
Entry posted in poetry & Rictameter Verse. Bookmark the permalink.