The Desert Light September/October 2017 | Page 13

P oet ’ s C orner Dust to Dust - J.Marie Huston M ojave By: Diane Siebert Throughout her poetry, Diane Siebert gives the desert the voice of a very old woman. She reminds us that the desert -- and the earth itself-- are living things. As you read the poem, ask yourself, “ How can a desert be like a person? ” I am the desert. I am free Come walk the sweeping face of me. Through canyon eyes of sandstone red I see the hawk, his wings outspread; He sunward soars to block the light And casts the shadow of his flight Upon my vast and ancient face, Whose deep arroyos boldly trace The paths where sudden waters run- Long streams of tears dried by the sun. I feel the windstorm’s violent thrust; I feel the sting of sand and dust As bit by bit, and year by year, New features on my face appear. Great mountain ranges stretch for miles To crease my face with frowns and smiles. My lakes are dry and marked by tracks Of zigging, zagging, long-eared jacks. Dust devils swirl and slowly rise; They whistle, whirling to the skies, While tossed and blown in great stampedes Are stumbling, bumbling tumbleweeds. And as the desert seasons change, The hands of Nature rearrange My timeworn face with new designs Of colors, shadows, shapes and lines: In wintertime the north winds blow; My mountain peaks are capped with snow; But resting, waiting patiently Beneath the frost that covers me, I dream of spring, when I can wear The blossoms of the prickly pear, Along with flowers, wild and bright, And butterflies in joyful flight. My summer face is cracked and dry, All blotched and flecked with alkali, Until the coming of a storm When thunderclouds above me form, And bursting, send their rains to pound Across my high, unyielding ground Where walls of water grow, and flow Toward my valleys far below. But soon the blazing sun breaks through, And then, beneath skies wide and blue, My features shimmer, blurred by heat, Till autumn breezes, cool and sweet, Caress my face, now brown and burned, To tell me autumn has returned, To touch the land where coyotes prowl, Where coyotes lift their heads and howl; At night they sing their songs to me: We are the desert. We are free... Sep/Oct 2017 | THE DESERT LIGHT 13