3611.jpg  Anchorage

for Audre Lorde

          This city is made of stone, of blood, and fish.

          There are Chugatch Mountains to the east

          and whale and seal to the west.

          It hasn’t always been this way, because glaciers

          who are ice ghosts create oceans, carve earth

          and shape this city here, by the sound.

          They swim backwards in time.

          Once a storm of boiling earth cracked open

          the streets, threw open the town.

          It’s quiet now, but underneath the concrete

          is the cooking earth,

                                            and above that, air

          which is another ocean, where spirits we can’t see

          are dancing                  joking                  getting full

          on roasted caribou, and the praying

          goes on, extends out.

          Nora and I go walking down 4th Avenue

          and know it is all happening.

          On a park bench we see someone’s Athabascan

          grandmother, folded up, smelling like 200 years

          of blood and piss, her eyes closed against some

          unimagined darkness, where she is buried in an ache

          in which nothing makes

                                                  sense.

          We keep on breathing, walking, but softer now,

          the clouds whirling in the air above us.

          What can we say that would make us understand

          better than we do already?

          Except to speak of her home and claim her

          as our own history, and know that our dreams

          don’t end here, two blocks away from the ocean

          where our hearts still batter away at the muddy shore.

          And I think of the 6th Avenue jail, of mostly Native

          and Black men, where Henry told about being shot at

          eight times outside a liquor store in L.A., but when

          the car sped away he was surprised he was alive,

          no bullet holes, man, and eight cartridges strewn

          on the sidewalk

                                   all around him.

          Everyone laughed at the impossibility of it,

          but also the truth. Because who would believe

          the fantastic and terrible story of all of our survival

          those who were never meant

                                                         to survive?