
Wanting to Say Things: The Power of Stories
AN ANTHOLOGY OF NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE
"The Sandhills" by Linda Hogan
The language of cranes
we once were told
is the wind. The wind
is their method,
their current, the translated story
of life they write across the sky.
Millions of years
they have blown here
on ancestral longing,
their wings of wide arrival,
necks long, legs stretched out
above strands of earth
where they arrive
with the shine of water,
stories, interminable
language of exchanges
descended from the sky
and then they stand,
earth made only of crane
from bank to bank of the river
as far as you can see
the ancient story made new.
Editor's Imitation
The language of fireflies
is spoken in ancient
lullabies and the yellow
of traffic signals. Their glow,
the story of a hearth and
smothering cinders, of
neon signs flickering
off, tells
us to slow down,
rest a while.
Their arrival whispers,
night is not extinguishing
obliteration, but the pause
of a yawn,
the stretch to rest
our bones, the comma
in this story.