I. Qualacú
the guiding
light of our journey across this
mesquital was
the cerro indio moon’s pale
cantankerous shine.
We
followed
Oñate north across
the desert
winds rippled
the river into mud, the
bosque disappeared into
the badlands.
Once the smoke cleared
the far mesa fires of Acoma glowed like
bloodshot eyes the dead could
see from heaven. Once
we were gone, their ghosted
children swam through the kiva
dusk to the un-
contested terrain of stars.
In that heat,
I spoke for the soul’s epic
struggle to recognize the solitary
divinity of a raindrop
before
it touches ground.
II. Alamillo
I write for the glory of the Crown.
I speak for the flat, baked
faith-encrusted earth. I
am the entrada’s poet/warrior
of hard ground
I have no vices
We taught them the journey of
the Cross, we taught them the green
fields of salvation, that all
God’s children have the Guiding
Light
in their eyes. Their shamans
watched awestruck
our priests
make rain with simple prayer.
III. Senecú
We follow the coyotes, scorpions,
darting bats & vultures
to water, we follow the stars north,
we follow the cottonwoods to the river
we follow the river to the end
of the night,
we follow the darkness
to the myth of
buried gold.
IV. Socorro
I have built churches to last a
thousand years
I have beheaded deserters & left
their skulls to the wise curiosity of ravens
on the desert floor,
I have left men behind
in unmarked graves beneath
mesquite trees
I have left behind a beautiful alien
red earth
of memories,
I leave only with the words,
the ones left behind gather with
the bones & sing in the dust,
Not even the ghosts of the dead
will recognize me in the end.
I am addicted to ghosts.
Note: Gaspar Pérez de Villagrá was the poet/chronicler of the Oñate entrada into New Mexico in 1598. His epic poem of the journey, A History of New Mexico, whatever its merits as literature or history, preceded John Smith’s General History of Virginia by fourteen years. Qualacú, Senecú, Socorro & Alamillo were a few of the pueblos the Spanish first encountered on their journey north. The Pueblo Revolt of 1680 forced the Spaniards, temporarily, out of New Mexico.
February 27, 2014