This Indian man is instructing us
about the ways of a native dance,
with illustrations and young people
regaled in their finest beaded clothing
and they sing and pound drums
and the dancers move in ways I have
never seen and the music is notes
I have never heard, like the sound
creek water makes hitting stones under
a distant crow. The man introduces
a new dance and he calls the dancer
by the wrong name and his young
daughter laughs at him just exactly
the way my daughter laughs at me.
A million crows fly over the world
and if we look up we will see a million
silhouettes, each one as different
as Gene Kelly is to these dancers,
but a daughter’s laugh, that,
that sting of wrath wrapped inside
the music of a child’s delight, I
think that’s the same sound
no matter what dance you do,
no matter what creek you hear.
previously published in Galway Review
Rod Tulloss says
A lovely, straight forward poem including the familar theme (that our children connect us without any intent to do so) presented in a quiet way surrounded in a newly made bouquet of delicate imagery. Loved it immediately.
winterstreet says
Thank you, Rod, for your thoughtful comment and consistent support.