Wednesday, July 14, 2010

ON THE WAY TO BURGOYNE BAY


In the grassland, stillness spilling
swallow’s flight unweighted, sprung to sky
this branch, this winged release
up, up, high hummingbird, dragonfly, goldfinch, swallow

memory of warmth, shard of stone holding snake
uncoiling shade at my feet black and gold garter disappearing
raven’s guttural clamshell call, fieldberry, forest of many layered darkness entering deep pine, hemlock, cedar calm sea of green
looking back at me
standing in the long grass with the ancestors beneath me.
Daisies on the mounded land waving white heads. Last requiem.
In the open meadow moves a deer and her fawn, flash
of robin’s vermillion breast startled up, eagles riding slow
circles of air, infinite charcoal ceiling of the world, this calligraphic scribe of stormcloud and light closing the distance between us
azure pools of your eyes.

Friday, June 11, 2010

ON APPROACHING THE AFTERLIFE

POEM ON APPROACHING THE AFTERLIFE

The big fish are almost gone now
empty beds where they rested and fed
my childhood past, spent watching
the struggle on bank’s edge
bloodied, ragged skins in shreds
falling from salmon spent in spawn.
Living flesh broken away from spines
even as new life struggled within
to be born
sweet milt filling streams lost now.
Lost streams buried under the IGA down the street
concrete mall holding heavy metal freezers full of fish.

Hole gushing in the Gulf, spilt riches
they call it crude, but what’s more crude
than a gaping wound I ask you
What is not yet taken?

Before I fall silent, I want to say
do not look away. Feed them. Give to them
give to the broken and empty. Give your own starving heart.
For every hungry ghost, give up your life.

For years now, I have mistaken despair for caring
like many—I have been sleeping.
Wake up!
Do not hesitate because your tender heart is almost gone
we are all killing something
you have this courage
forgive yourself, and go on loving the world.
Accept your gift.

c. Gabryel Harrison

REQUIEM FOR THE GULF

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

take a chance on your inspiration


Don't be afraid to be a mystery to yourself. So many times we do things or take certain directions that we don't understand. It is only much later that we see how that action fit perfectly and inevitably to the overall pattern of our life. That is why it is so important to be willing to take a chance on our inspiration...When we override our deepest desires with "practical, “reasonable” considerations we are not only wasting our time, we are passing up precious opportunities that will not come again. -Reggie Ray

for all those born and unborn





sorrow is the darkness
curled in your closed fist

emptiness
like a hole in the palm of your hand

We all touch it
are touched by the one wound
opening us to light

home waters


Going home. To the country of my birth
to hear the wordless speech of mountain,
earth, water, horizon, longing
to touch ground
breathing the breath
of the Long White Cloud
like a pilgrim walking,
the closer I come
the more the mountain disappears
the closer I come
the more I realize
you were always inside me
in my bones
there is no seeking
just home
in your waters.

Gabryel Harrison

ELEGY 111


Born when the hearse

was drawn by powerful black horses

one hundred and three years gone.

In one small room of himself

sitting for hours, weeks months.

Years of sleeping, or sitting still,

seeming to study the empty air

unmoving in his chair

staring into the distance

serious face expecting nothing.

Nothing changing. Not even the chair.

Not since mustard was the favored color

of naugahyde lazy boys.

He died in winter, blind buds waking

in wet beds too soon.

I remember the warm silver drizzle

of rain, the usual barrenness of trees

shining forth in a cloud of strangeness,

pussy willows bursting from branches

like sparked flint torches burning holes

in January’s ashen sky. I remember

the river was high. The quiet glow,

how even the water looked solemn,

tide slow as a curtain closing.

When I asked, was he meditating,

was he perfecting stillness,

he shrugged, hopeless gesture

of emptiness, “ No “ he said, “I can’t stop

my mind wandering. I can’t stop

worrying. Its not peaceful in here”.

I used to think the only bead left to worry was

who shall deliver him from his life

buried, yet surviving in the dry tear of memory,

a rise in the Dow Jones feeding him like scripture.

The winter I was fifty, I sat with him, waiting,

by his bedside watching

the full moon of his mouth, the open“O

full and empty, one last syllable drawn in

circle of time gasping, shuddering

wound and portal,

as if the death-tide rising in his throat

were lover, as if all the waters in him

were reaching up for sky

eyes fallen inward, aliveness imploded

as a star burst inside him so all I could see

was light, the eye of his heart opened outward

to the world

a man blind all his life, lost and bewildered,

now lit up and burning like a torch

a light in the wilderness

we all saw it. We all felt the sweetness pouring from him

the softness, kindness,

the hard flint of his life surrendered

spark of absolution

touching us all

burning the knotted cord

of hurt between us

nothing left but the body’s butter lamp glow

spilling its light in darkness,

one being, one body

touching and being,

released and releasing

all that remains

“I will tell you how it was the world changed”

Robert Bringhurst

I will tell you how it was the world changed

at the precipice of his life

watching a man clinging to breath

die slowly by drowning

his hands reaching up

in parting, it is then

the world enters you.

The world gives itself up to you

more real than flesh

more real than the body you inhabit

more than air

more than water

in its great turning

all returning,

light is all that remains

growing like a tide inside you.

I will tell you how it was the world changed

between us time and space

dissolved

silences full of language

sightless eyes bright

opening to another world

inside of this one

growing visible

in his blind eyes and mine

joined in the heart’s transmission.

Wisdom, holy, eternal love

being at the edge of a cliff

where it all opens out

no ground, nothing left,

everything held in emptiness.

ELEGY FOR HHH


The January of my grandfather’s death

the unborn river rose from its bed.

Fraser’s South Arm raised up

its waters toward the land

spilled streams of mountains

emptied darkness of canyon walls

gunmetal clouds, glacial water

falls, light, quick and silver water

rising over moss, swallowing boulders and trees

slippery branches grazing the river’s spine

cold to the bone, bubbling

life sunken deep beneath the surface

unextinguished, tide gurgling

like the waters of death rising in my grandfather’s throat.

Death doesn’t arrive from somewhere.

It doesn’t come from far away

but swells sea-deep inside the skin,

sounds guttural rattling the body’s cave

shudder and twitch of

mind riding waves beneath the skull

plunge and surge

of light lifting up into him

indivisible being

undying

pouring through his veins love, endless, full,

luminous spirit flown, vanished,

nothing left

but beached alabaster vessel of bone.

Gabryel Harrison January 19, 2010