Linda Hogan (b.1947)
Inside
How something is made flesh
no one can say. The buffalo soup
becomes a woman
who sings every day to her horses
or summons another to her private body
saying come, touch, this is how
it begins, the path of a newly born
who, salvaged from other lives and worlds,
will grow to become a woman, a man,
with a heart that never rests,
and the gathered berries,
the wild grapes
enter the body,
human wine
which can love,
where nothing created is wasted;
the swallowed grain
takes you through the dreams
of another night,
the deer meat becomes hands
strong enough to work.
But I love most
the white-haired creature
eating green leaves;
the sun shines there
swallowed, showing in her face
taking in all the light,
and in the end
when the shadow from the ground
enters the body and remains,
in the end, you might say,
This is myself
still unknown, still a mystery.
Linda Hogan (b.1947) is a Choctaw poet, novelist, essayist, and environmentalist. Her most recent collection of poems is called Dark. Sweet. New and Selected Poems (2014). Her most recent non-fiction is The Radiant Lives of Animals (2020). This poem was published in Rounding the Human Corners (Coffee House Press, 2008).
Selected by Amy Frykholm: amy@journeywithjesus.net