Watching the Ancestral Prayers of Venerable Others
a poem by Pattiann Rogers from DoubleTake


  

Lena Higgins, 92, breastless,
blind, chewing her gums by the window,
is old, but, the Great Comet of 1843


is much order than that.  Dry land
tortoises with their elephantine
feet are often very old, but giant

sequoias of the western Sierras
are generations older than that.
The first prayer ratttle, made

on the savannah of seeds and bones
strung together, is old, but the first
winged cockroach to appear on earth

is hundreds of millions of years
older than that.  A flowering plant
fossil or a mollusk fossil in limy

shale is old.  Stony meteorites buried
beneath polar ice are older than that,
and death itself is very, very

ancient, but life is certainly older
than death.  Shadows and silhouettes
created by primordial sea storms

erupting in crests high above
one another occurred eons ago,
but the sun and its flaring eruptions

existed long before they did.  Light
from the most distant known quasar
seen at this moment tonight is old

(should light be said to exist
in time), but the moment witnessed
just previous is older than that.

The compact, pea-drop power
of the initial, beginning nothing
is surely oldest, but then the intention,

with its integrity, must have come
before and thus is obviously
older than that.  Amen.

Copyright @1999 Pattiann Rogers

About The Author

PATTIANN ROGERS's seven books of poetry include Eating Bread and Honey(1997) and Firekeeper: New and Selected Poems (1994).   She is one of five finalists for the Lenore Marshall Award of the Academy of American Poets.  She has received two NEA grants, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Poetry Fellowship from the Lannan Foundation.  Her Collected Poems will be published in 2001.
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