Sweet corn, sweet grass

 Sweetgrass Is Around Her


A woman was sitting
on a rock.
I could see her
clearly,
even though
she was far away.
She was Teiohontasen,
my mother’s aunt.
She was a
basket maker.
When I was young,
my mother told me
that her name meant,
“Sweetgrass is all around her.”
I thought that it was a good name
for a basket maker.
She was in her eighties
then.
She was short like me,
and a bit stout.
She knew the land well;
and the plants,
and the medicines,
and the seasons.
She knew how to talk
to the Creator too;
and the thunderers,
and the rainmakers.
She had a big bundle of sweetgrass
at her side.
It was long, and green,
and shiny.

Her big straw hat
shaded
her round face.
It was very hot.
She pulled her mid-calf length dress
down to her ankles,
over her rubber boots.
She brought her lunch
in a paper bag;
a canning jar of cold tea,
fried bread,
sliced meat,
and some butter,
wrapped in tin foil.
She placed them carefully
on the rock.
She reached
into the bag,
and pulled out a
can of soft drink.
I thought it strange.
She didn’t drink
soft drinks.
Then,
she reached for her
pocket knife.
Basket makers always
have a good knife.
It was in the pocket of
the full-length
canvas apron,
that was always
safety-pinned to her dress.
She made two sandwiches,
. . . looked around.
Saw me looking at her.
Her eyes sparkled,
she smiled.
She lifted up the soft drink,
and signaled me to come.

After we ate,
she stood up
on the rock
and looked out.
She smelled the air.
I knew that she
could smell the sweetgrass.
I never could.
She pointed to
very swampy land.
Mosquitos, I thought.
I was dressed poorly.
We didn’t talk much
but we could hear,
and listen to each other.
She never forced me
to speak Mohawk.
Mohawk with an
English accent
made her laugh.
She didn’t
want to hear
English though.
We would spend
all day
picking sweetgrass.
Sometimes
we would look for
medicines.
One time,
my mother asked her
what she thought
Heaven would be like.
She said
that there was sweetgrass everywhere
and people made
the most beautiful
baskets.

  • Sallie M. Kawennotakie Benedict

________________

You start with an inspirational poem and you write something of your own.

See where it goes.

Just for fun,

Why not.  

________________

Quietly She Sits

Quietly she sits,

pulls a stalk of corn,

fingertips grab hold

of the pointy shank, knuckles

bent, dug-in, tearing

down the course husk.

______________

Peeling

back the thick fibrous

layer,

sweet kernels

set in rows, cylinder-like

all the way down; in

soldier-like rows.

________________

She takes a knife,  

presses her thumb

into the shank –  

cuts deep below the kernels

pop, pop, pop,

all the way down

____________

into a burlap sack lined

with plastic, to protect

the sweet kernels from

getting beat up, buried,

caught, mushed, into

the fine burlap

threads.

_____________

She shakes the burlap

sack, kernels fall deeper in.  

______________

She pauses, wipes her brow

with the back of her

hand. Two layers of

dirt, cover her skin.

_____________

One lighter

from days, weeks,

of the lands dust, soot

over her hands

like gloves.

______________

Today’s darker, fresh,

dirt, flesh black

from plucking each stalk of

up and out

of its roots –

__________________

She slowly stands straight

Up, her knees still bent,

stuck. She arches

her back – her

spine stacks one on

top of the next.

____________

Eyes

squint, cheeks

round, lips

pucker.  

____________

Sun still high, she opens

her eyes a slit, 3’o clock;

sighs.

She bends over,

grabs

another stalk,

pulls it back,

and pops each kernel off

again.

  • – Tessa Weber

Much love to you and to you and to you.

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