“Pregnant Women Laying on the Riverbank” by Raymond Sewell

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Pregnant Women Laying on the Riverbank” by Raymond Sewell.


Pregnant Women Laying on the Riverbank

By Raymond Sewell

In the comfort of the sun

Every wind a sweet wind

Like the sound of water through cedar

In the comfort of the sun

Showing webs and fine hairs

Witnessing the divine

The riverine

Water sprites

Fantastic weather

An incoming message

Jumping emphatically

From body to body

The warming sun

Lgetu on branches

Kind gestures

Joy jumping emphatically

Infant like pursuits of the sun

Joy re-entering the atmosphere

Feathers drying in the sun

Joy entering the self in renewal

Water pleasantly engulfing you

In the presence of pregnant women

Laying on the riverbank

Basking in safety

The long legs of the sun walking

A message incoming

A picture of the sacred

A wand to your head

The sophisticated poet

The sapphic poet

Laundering romantic thoughts

At the curve of the river

To the curve of the river

To establish oneself in the sun

The divinity of being

The reverberation of birds flying

Like water spiders in the sky

The delicate light

Shaking like a veil

Like draped fabric

Long rainbow legs in spring

Springtide and spring shutter

Dying birch signalling lgetu life

Chewing on earthy things

In the presence of the biggest sun

Dynastic inheritance

Copper and water

Limb and leaf

Gradually letting go

Easing into memory

Easing into place medicine

Easing into the long legs of the sun

Tilling the ice

A short wandering poem

About new infirmity

Returning to a place you understand

To a swamp that slipped your memory

Followed by a train of skulls

Seasons opening

Thought relinquishing control

To be stunned in the open

To sit in static

To be webbed by the sun

In the presence of the matriarch

Mushrooming

Collecting and returning

While the sun tills the ice

Returning to the womb

Re-seeing entry light

Smoke dancing in a boiling sacred fire

It is about you

The riverine

Eyes digging like a badger

Holes filing with rain

A medicine boiling

A bushcraft learned and remembered

An elder settling into the sun

I stand in good relation

I file no grievance for life

My spirit is full

Seeing pregnant women laying on the riverbank

Through my eyes

1872

Cry

Cry like wind cries

Cry like loon cries

Cry for things lost and gained

Cry into the trees

Let down


Copyright ยฉ Raymond Sewell

Raymond Sewell is an l’nu poet, singer-songwriter, and English professor from Pabineau, First Nation, New-Brunswick.


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