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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


PARAGRAPHS: 9 by HAYDEN CARRUTH

Poet Analysis

First Line: IT WAS THE CUSTOM OF MY TRIBE TO BE SILENT
Last Line: indivisible, unvoiced
Subject(s): NATIVE AMERICANS; SNOW; INDIANS OF AMERICA; AMERICAN INDIANS; INDIANS OF SOUTH AMERICA;

It was the custom of my tribe to be silent,
to think the song inwardly, tune and word
so beautiful they could be only held,
not sung; held and heard
in quietness while walking the end of the field
where birches make a grove, or standing by the rail
in back of the library in some northern
city, or in the long dream of a tower
of gothic stoniness; and always we were alone.
Yet sometimes two
heard it, two separately together. It could come
nearby in the shadow of a pine bough
on the snow, or high in the orchestral lights,
or maybe (this was our miracle) it would have no
intermediary --
a suddenness,
indivisible, unvoiced.


Used with the permission of Copper Canyon Press, P.O. Box 271, Port Townsend, WA
98368-0271, www.cc.press.org



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