Ft. Sill Chiricahua/Warm Spring Apache leader; a stateswoman, a mother, A last sigh on her lips, There's Grandmother smiling, Now they are flying, Up, up they fly Closer, closer Red people, They're the old ones, Choctaw and Cherokee Oh, how they dance, Grandmother dances Moving so stately Grandfather is singing, Now they beckon Grandfathers, uncles, Then countless others To First Man and First Woman, Now they embrace her, She turns now to face us, Oh, what radiant feelings of love.
Return to Indigenous Peoples' Literature
Compiled by: Glenn Welker
This site has been accessed 10,000,000 times since February 8, 1996.
Homage to Mildred I. Cleghorn
a great-grandmother, an elder, a teacher, a prisoner of war, a proud Apache.
HER PASSING
by: Pax Riddle
Her spirit released,
The world becomes blurred, unreal.
Extending her hand,
Knowing they would meet.
Above the clouds,
The assurance of her grasp.
Toward the brilliant light
Sparkles and shimmers,
Wraiths dance into sight.
The phantoms transform
People? HER people
As many as stars.
The first people,
dance and sing,
Their voices rise anew.
The chaste ones,
Unsullied by whites
Their enigmatic whispers
Heard only at night.
Yakama and Cree,
Apache and Chippewa,
Kiowa and Creek.
Five hundred drums
Heartbeats of nations,
Beating as one.
With beauty and grace
Like fronds in a current,
Shawl swaying in space.
She watches her feet,
Lifting her eagle fan
To each honor beat.
He leads the drum
His resonant voice
Soars to new heights.
With faces of light
They are her relations
Who fought the good fight.
Cousins and aunts,
Freed from the fetters
Of earthly life.
She knows are her flesh,
Tied by a sacred cord.
Primeval womb,
They show her the crimson road.
Such rapture and peace
It's the end of her journey,
Sacred circle complete.
And speaks with her eyes.
ghwelker@gmx.com