Mirabai Rode Her Donkey Naked: Three poems in 4:33
Michelle Y. Valladares
Mirabai Rode Her Donkey Naked
Mirabai rode her donkey naked
through the village and countryside
singing bhajans to Lord Krishna
they tried to poison her, called her mad.
In a few months a pandemic has silenced
countries, shut down economies, killed
thousands in Italy, Queens and Brooklyn
deer wander through the suburbs
wild pigs forage in the streets
swans return to canals
two cardinals eat berries and seeds
from china on a fire escape
the blue planet spins in its orbit
Who calls who mad?
Sages/oracles/poets
we need Sappho, Rumi, Shantideva
I hear the bird song opera
mixed with sirens
and your breath
and my breath
Banjo Player, Opera for Omar Ibn Said
for Rhiannon Giddens
banjo player, opera for Omar Ibn Said
singer/composer uninterested in the “self”
what remains is your history, culture, moonlight,
paleontological time, memories of ocean
in summer, clear quarry pools
music that played on the radio
when we were fifteen
the spring you built a canoe
from a tree trunk
the spruce we lay under to make love
until the midges arrived
hikes on Thursday mornings
to the bay and up the cliffs
we thought time was on our side
ignored our fragility
the wonder of a deep breath
we ignored warning signs
did not read the reports
of deaths in other countries
we believed in borders
and an inherently existent self
lost in blossoms of magnolia and cherry
forgetting our inter-dependence
that germs do not discriminate
we forge our brave new world
through the portal of kindness
Once we met in a Cafe
Once we could meet in a cafe
drink our expressos, lean in, chat
Once we could hug when we said “hello”
or “good bye” or “stop by later”
Once we could plant spring bulbs
in the garden side by side
Once we could let our dogs off lead, greet
each other’s dogs without heed
Once we could toast with a glass of wine
put our heads together to take selfies
Once we could run upstairs or next door
for hot sauce or sour cream
Once we could cry on each other’s shoulders
visit our sick friends, hold each other’s hands
Once we could tell bad jokes
over the copy machine
Once upon a time.
Michelle Y. Valladares is a poet, author and filmmaker. She is the Director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing and Lecturer in English at the City College of New York located in Harlem.