This past April, when Joy Harjo was the opening guest artist at the Edmonton Poetry Festival, my friend and mentor, Anna Marie Sewell (whose name comes up in earlier postings), the former Poet Laureate of the city, organized a Poets' Jam to kick off the Festival. She invited a number of us to consider performing something on stage, in a loose group, after Joy and Anna had done their opening performances. I had never done anything like this, and had not even tuned my old guitar in another shamefully long time, let alone sing along with some others or supply accompaniment. But we can die only once--so I submitted that poem of the islanders who chose the water, and Anna accepted it. That acceptance began an educational couple of weeks of rewriting to get it into a shape and rhythm that could work out loud and to accompaniment.
In the end, it appeared to work pretty well--thanks to some strong percussion support from the others on stage (Gary Garrison, Ivan Sundal, Joshua Jackson, Daniel Poitras as well as Anna Marie and Joy) and from the audience, to keep me on pace. At least, nobody got up and left or called for their money back...
(Photo credit Randall Edwards, who took pictures of all the Festival events, photos that can be seen on the Edmonton Poetry Festival Facebook site)
Taking Leave Don Perkins
A community
known
unknown
misknown
to history-- maybe
Arawak--
or maybe
Carib--
or maybe—not,
saw Spanish sails, knew
the score,
walked off
the island:
The future’s
vacation
playground.
Beach paradise. Setting
for countless beer ads;
symbol of quiet retreat.
Packed up the children and walked
offshore and down . . . into what?
Oblivion? Freedom?
Life? Choice?
What did they call it?
Call themselves?
Optioned out to slavery,
debauchery, disease, belittlement, dispossession and all the
benefits and joys
of civilization
they took . . . leave.
Of what?
Their senses?
The senseless?
To what? Make sense?
Stay sensible?
Get away from
it all?
They took ---- leave.
To say “NO”?
To say “Not us”?
These are not their
words
but ours: Not their
answers
but ours. They took--leave,
moved down – and under—
maybe not away
but to.
Just maybe
meant not “No,”
meant, just maybe, “Yes.”
We latterly enlightened
latecomers
presume empathy
for fellow humans
gone, not lost--
Can there be lost
when found is not an
option?
Not absent.
Not away for the day
from the office or
school,
or missing some great
party.
If we hear it at all,
their silence
gifts us this:
Dead certainty of our
eternal ignorance.
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