Monday, September 15, 2025

1193. New Mexican Mountain - Robinson Jeffers, 1932

 I watch the Indians dancing to help the young corn at Taos Pueblo.

The old men squat in a ring

And make the song, the young women with fat bare arms, and a

few shame-faces young men shuffle the dance.


The lean-muscled young men are naked to the narrow loins, their

breasts and backs daubed with white clay,

Two eagle-feathers plume the black heads. They dance with

reluctance, they are growing civilized; the old men persuade them.


Only the drum is confident, it thinks the world has not changed, the

beating heart, the simplest of rhythms,

It thinks the world has not changed at all; it is only a dreamer, a

branchless heart, the drum has no eyes.


These tourists have eyes, the hundred watching the dance, white

Americans, hungrily too, with reverence, not laughter;

Pilgrims from civilization, anxiously seeking beauty, religion, poetry;

pilgrims from the vacuum.


People from cities, anxious to be human again. Poor show how they

suck you empty! The Indians are emptied,

And certainly there was never religion enough, nor beauty nor

poetry here… to fill Americans.


Only the drum is confident, it thinks the world has not changed.

Apparently only myself and the strong

Tribal drum, and the rockhead of Taos mountain, remember that

civilization is a transient sickness.


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