Jeannette Armstrong: Poetry Poem Text

Jeannette Armstrong: Poetry Poem Text

The History Lesson (excerpt)

Out of the belly of Christopher's ship

a mob bursts

Running in all directions

Pulling furs off animals

Shooting buffalo

Shooting each other left and right.

Father mean well waves his makeshift wand

forgives saucer-eyed Indians

Red coated knights

gallop across the prairie to get their men

and to build a new world

Pioneers and traders bring gifts

Smallpox, Seagrams and Rice Krispies

Civilization has reached the promised land.

Indian Woman (excerpt)

I am a squaw
a heathen
a savage
basically a mammal

I am a female
only in the ability
to breed
and bear papooses
to be carried
quaintly
on a board
or lost
to welfare

I have no feelings

The sinuous planes
of my brown body
carry no hint
of the need
to be caressed
desired
loved
Its only use
to be raped
beaten and bludgeoned
in some
B-grade western

I have no beauty

Artifacts (excerpt)

they collect the artifacts to study the past.
out of the bone fragment, chipped stone and delicate
cedar weave is written a history long forgotten.
in all this where is the truth?
what is the history?
maybe history should not be the question,
for history is written
not passed on in a story at the bighouse,
or in a lesson to the young.

yet while the archeologist’s artifact
and the historian’s document
remain important,
too often, the record shows the history
from the historian’s own living eye.

- Jeannette Armstrong

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