POEM FOR MY FATHER'S GHOST
By Mary Oliver
Now is my father A traveler, like all the bold men He talked of, endlessly And with boundless admiration, Over the supper table, Or gazing up from his white pillow -- Book on his lap always, until Even that grew too heavy to hold.
Now is my father free of all binding fevers Now is my father Travelling where there is no road Finally, he could not lift a hand To cover his eyes. Now he climbs to the eye of the river, He strides through the Dakotas, He disappears into the mountains, And though he looks Cold and hungry as any man At the end of a questing season,
He is one of them now: He cannot be stopped.
Now is my father Walking the wind, Sniffing the deep Pacific That begins at the end of the world.
Vanished from us utterly, Now is my father circling the deepest forest -- Then turning in to the last red campfire burning In the final hills,
Where chieftains, warriors and heroes Rise and make him welcome, Recognizing, under the shambles of his body, A brother who has walked his thousand miles. |