“In a sacred manner I walk” Black
Elk Speaks
2012 was a year for coyotes. At home, I met them in
the yard, and heard them singing in the night.
Then, as I stood beside a thinly-restored, strip
mined Alabama landscape, I heard a vast coyote chorus insanely yapping at the setting
sun, like demented choirboys mocking the efforts of a damaged earth to
heal.
But
coyotes do not mock the earth. These, after all, were heyoka tricksters of the Spirit, who only seem to lie,
And
to ally
Themselves
with what is most bleak and dry
Within
the self.
In
time, I come to see that they have drawn me out
Beyond
my customary hunting-place,
To
where I can hear their voices differently,
And
now I see
The
one that they were laughing at
Was
me…
Not
“me” as I am at this moment, but “me” the scoffer,
The
safely cynical,
The
strip miner,
The
heedless coal-consumer,
The
crucifier,
The
one who “wags his head” at a humiliated earth and scolds the Christ for having
dared to venture out
from heaven.
“See
what happens?” I jeer. “What did you expect?” I howl.
But
these coyotes have tricked me again,
lulled
my well-defended soul into complacency,
And
now I can hear them differently, laughing still
But
no longer at the struggling pine
trees and violated earth, but with
them,
And
with the resurrecting self in me
That
loves coyotes and will not die.
“In
a sacred manner I will walk,” they cry.
And
in a sacred manner I will die, and burn like coal in sacrificial fire.
Only
in a sacred manner I will walk and talk.
“Only
In a sacred manner I will walk,” they cry.
Only
in a sacred manner I will die.