Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful
eBook - ePub

Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful

Poems

  1. 96 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful

Poems

About this book

Poems from the author of The Color Purple: "This book has two fine strengths—a music that comes along sometimes [and] Walker's own tragicomic gifts" ( The New York Times Book Review).
 
The title of this collection comes from a Native American shaman who, reflecting on the terrible problems brought by white colonizers, nearly forgave them all because with the settlers came horses to the North American Plains. And, indeed, in these poems we find Alice Walker seeking a saving grace even in the most difficult circumstances, and in the hearts of the most brutal oppressors. Here Walker's attention turns toward the small moments and subliminal exchanges between lovers and enemies, even as her verse addresses concerns as vast as the choking of the planet by war and pollution.
This ebook features an illustrated biography of Alice Walker including rare photos from the author's personal collection.

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Yes, you can access Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful by Alice Walker in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & American Poetry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

THESE DAYS
Some words for people I think of as friends.

These days I think of Belvie
swimming happily in the country pond
coating her face with its mud.
She says:
“We could put the whole bottom of this pond in jars
and sell it to the folks
in the city!”
Lying in the sun she dreams
of making our fortune, à la Helena Rubenstein.
Bottling the murky water
too smelly to drink,
offering exotic mud facials and mineral baths
at exorbitant fees.
But mostly she lies in the sun
dreaming of water, sun and the earth
itself—
Surely the earth can be saved for Belvie.
These days I think of Robert
folding his child’s tiny shirts
consuming TV dinners (“A kind of processed flavor”)
rushing off each morning to school—then to the office,
the supermarket, the inevitable meeting: writing,
speaking, marching against oppression, hunger,
ignorance.
And in between having a love affair
with tiny wildflowers and gigantic
rocks.
“Look at this one!” he cries,
as a small purple face
raises its blue eye to the sun.
“Wow, look at that one!” he says,
as we pass a large rock
reclining beside the road.
He is the man with child
the new old man.
Brushing hair, checking hands, nails
and teeth.
A sick child finds comfort
lying on his chest all night
as do I.
Surely the earth can be saved for Robert.
These days I think of Elena.
In the summers, for years, she camps
beside the Northern rivers
sometimes with her children
sometimes with women friends
from “way, way back.”
She is never too busy to want at least
to join a demonstration
or to long to sit
beside
a river.
“I will not think less of you
if you do not attend this meeting,” she says,
making us compañeras for life.
Surely the earth can be saved for Elena.
These days I think of Susan;
so many of her people lost
in the Holocaust. Every time I see her
I can’t believe it.
“You have to have some of my cosmos seeds!”
she says
over the phone. “The blooms
are glorious!”
Whenever we are together
we eat a lot.
If I am at her house
it is bacon, boiled potatoes,
coffee and broiled fish:
if she is at my house it is
oyster stew, clams, artichokes
and wine.
Our dream is for time in which
to walk miles together, a couple
of weeds stuck between our teeth,
comfy in our yogi pants
discoursing on Woolf
and child raising,
essay writing and gardening.
Susan makes me happy
because she exists.
Surely the earth can be saved for Susan.
These days I think of Sheila.
“‘Sheila’ is already a spiritual name,” she says.
And “Try meditation and jogging both.”
When we are together we talk
and talk
about The Spirit.
About What is Good and What is Not.
There was a time she applauded my anger,
now she feels it is something I should outgrow.
“It is not a useful emotion,” she says. “And besides,
if you think about it, there’s nothing worth
getting angry about.”
“I do not like anger,” I say.
“It raises my blood pressure.
I do not like violence. So much has been done to me.
But having embraced my complete being
I find anger
and the capacity for violence
within me.
Control
rather than eradication
is about the best
I feel I can do.
Besides, they intend to murder us,
you know.”
“Yes, I understand,” she says.
“But try meditation
and jogging both;
you’ll be surprised how calm you feel.”
I meditate, walk briskly, and take deep, deep breaths
for I know the importance of peace to the inner self.
When I talk to Sheila
I am forced to honor
my own ideals.
Surely the earth can be saved for Sheila.
These days I think of Gloria.
“The mere sight of an airplane puts me to sleep,”
she says.
Since she is not the pilot, this makes sense.
If this were a courageous country,
it would ask Gloria to lead it
since she is sane and funny and beautiful and smart
and the National Leaders we’ve always had
are not.
When I listen to her talk about women’s rights
children’s rights
men’s rights
I think of the long line of Americans
who should have been president, but weren’t.
Imagine Crazy Horse as president. Sojourner Truth.
John Brown. Harriet Tubman. Black Elk or Geronimo.
Imagine President Martin Luther King confronting
the youthful “Oppie” Oppenheimer. Imagine P...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Publisher’s Note
  6. Epigraph
  7. Remember?
  8. These Mornings of Rain
  9. First, They Said
  10. Listen
  11. S M
  12. The Diamonds on Liz's Bosom
  13. We Alone
  14. Attentiveness
  15. 1971
  16. Every Morning
  17. How Poems Are Made / A Discredited View
  18. Mississippi Winter I
  19. Mississippi Winter II
  20. Mississippi Winter III
  21. Mississippi Winter IV
  22. love is not concerned
  23. She said:
  24. Walker
  25. Killers
  26. Songless
  27. A Few Sirens
  28. Poem at Thirty-nine
  29. I Said to Poetry
  30. Gray
  31. Overnights
  32. My Daughter Is Coming!
  33. When Golda Meir Was in Africa
  34. If "Those People" Like You
  35. On Sight
  36. I'm Really Very Fond
  37. Representing the Universe
  38. Family Of
  39. Each One, Pull One
  40. Who?
  41. Without Commercials
  42. No One Can Watch the Wasichu
  43. The Thing Itself
  44. Torture
  45. Well.
  46. Song
  47. These Days
  48. A Biography of Alice Walker
  49. Copyright