& here you are again (again) asking me to explain broken glass.
You scour the reservation landfill through the debris of so many lives: old guitar, basketball on fire, pair of shoes. All you bring me is an empty bottle.
Am I the garbageman of your dreams?
*
Listen:
it will not save you or talk you down from the ledge of a personal building.
It will not kill you or throw you facedown to the floor & pull the trigger twice.
It believes a roomful of monkeys in a roomful of typewriters would eventually produce a roomful of poetry about missing the jungle.
You will forget more than you remember: that is why we all dream slowly. Often you need a change of scenery. It will give you one black & white photo- graph.
Sometimes it whispers into anonymous corner bars & talks too much about the color of its eyes & skin & hair.
It believes a piece of coal shoved up its own ass will emerge years later as a perfectly imperfect diamond.
Sometimes it screams the English language near freeways until trucks jackknife & stop all traffic while the city runs over itself.
Often, you ask forgiveness. It will give you a 10% discount.
*
Because you have seen the color of my bare skin does not mean you have memorized the shape of my ribcage.
Because you have seen the spine of the mountain does not mean you made the climb.
Because you stood waist-deep in the changing river does not mean you were equal to MC2.
Because you gave something a name does not mean your name is important.
Because you sleep does not mean you see into my dreams.
*
Send it a letter: the address will keep changing. Give it a phone call: busy signal. Knock on its door: you'll hear voices. Look in its windows: shadows dance through blinds.
In the end, it will pick you up from the pavement & take you to the tribal cafe for breakfast.
It will read you the menu. It will not pay your half of the bill.
-- Sherman Alexie (Spokane/Coeur d'Alene), "Introduction to Native American Literature"
-v-
Questia, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning. www.questia.com
Publication Information: Book Title: That the People Might Live: Native American Literatures and Native American Community. Contributors: Jace Weaver - author. Publisher: Oxford. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1997. Page Number: v.
Add a Shared Note
Shared Notes are comments made by Questia users on books,
book pages, or articles that inform other users and enhance
the Questia research community.
This feature allows you to create and manage separate folders for your different research projects. To view markups for a different project, make that project your current project.
This feature allows you to save a link to the publication you are reading or view all the publications you have put on your bookshelf.
This feature allows you to save a link to the page you are reading, which you can later return to from Projects.
This feature allows you to highlight words or phrases on the publication page you are reading.
This feature allows you to save a note you write on the publication page you are reading.
This feature allows you to create a citation to the page you are reading that you can paste into your paper. Highlight a passage to include that passage as a quotation.
This feature allows you to save a reference to a publication you are reading for your bibliography or generate a bibliography you can paste into your paper.
This feature allows you to print the page you are reading,
including your notes or highlights (IE users must have "print background colors and image" setting selected.)
This feature allows you to look up words in encyclopedia.
Questia's powerful research tools allow you to highlight, take notes, bookmark and even create instant citations and bibliographies. To use these features and save hours of work, you must create a Questia account.
Need a Questia account? Sign up for a FREE trial now. Save time, stress and hassle, and get better grades with trusted, online research.