The Sun’s Indigenous
A treat
The coffee
I don’t have to load it
In my buckboard
Like a settler come to town
On Saturday for supplies
Too easy to fantasize
My house on the prairie
Or my split-level
In the east
How much did others pay
For dreaming?
I don’t mean pioneers
Though for their dreaming
They gave much
I mean those who dreamed
Of earthen wisdom,
Already here for centuries
Imperfect
But here first
First people
In the world, we don’t respect
Indigenous save for study
(bless the anthropologists
in situ)
The land is there
Just needs some brutal scrubbing
Clear it out for destiny
That we own
I’m white
I don’t mind being white
I rarely have to
I rarely have to think of it,
Unless I want to
Call me a lover of dark skin
I am
I have no way to understand reparation
Except that it’s a worthy thought
At least to seek forgiveness
Knowing that each people
Have done each other
That is no excuse for us
Or anyone
To pick up the rope, the chain,
The sword
To take over for intrafamily rivalry
And sin of war that way
Theirs in the first,
Ours in the last
I think that colors merge into the sun
I think that I’m idealist
And most likely, oh, so naïve
But I’ll take it for my vision
Keeping in the daylight
Dreaming of at night
C L Couch
Photo by Drop the Label Movement on Unsplash
Azukar Coffee, Phoenix, United States
The subject of this photo, Hannah, radiates authenticity, joy, and beauty in her jean jacket laced with various pins and buttons. This photo of Hannah was captured by Idara Ekpoh in south Phoenix, Arizona, at Azukar Coffee Shop.
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