Category Archives: Poetry

Homecoming

for Uncle Max

Greed, I guess – my father answered
me uncharacteristically critical
of our ancestors, their impulsive
move to New Mexico Territory

stopping somewhere around Clayton
where nothing worked out. When
the horses died from grazing locoweed
they loaded their sparse selves in a wagon

and bleakly headed back to northwest
Oklahoma – the grass in those Gypsum
Hills green enough. They returned
to what they feared, reclaimed what they

knew, relinquished a short-lived dream
busted now like clods of red clay
crumbling to dust beneath a cattle herd.
It’s not easy to feed seven growing boys

so the toughest, Uncle Arnold, walked
back – herding the cattle as he made way
all those miles along unmarked paths
primal as a Kalahari Bushman – big boy,

keeper of the family’s future swaying,
stumbling, shitting slowly toward home
through cactus and redrock steadfast
under sun and stars close enough to touch.

Finalist for Spur Award, 2015
-first published in THIS LAND PRESS

Canadian River in Moonlight

Even muddy water shines
sand glistens — a crystal
menagerie overlooked
in our desperate plight
to dazzle ourselves with wires
and bulbs piling kilowatt
upon kilowatt in the hyper
glow that dulls with the faint
hope of progress.

Hear brackish grass humming
in the deeper curves, a salty voice
whispering in shadows – the river
bends forever and I follow
the turns toward yesterday.

I am captive, wayfarer
subdued by wild, enduring
unobtrusive glory.

Like critters secluded
along your sandy shores
I am at home.

Blue River

She calles me to secluded pools
along quiet shores
beneath canopies of White Oak
and Red Cedar.

My pace slows –
thoughts diminish,
sounds hush
in this cloistered place.

I sit in shadows smoking
a soft cigar,
the full moon peaking
above the ridge.

Beyond dense timber,
purling water
and tree frogs abide
a humble campfire.

I have no need tonight
for noise,
no desire
for that other life.

Only primal sounds matter:
these ancient rituals
merging fire and water,
earth and sky.

Ken Hada
from The Way of the Wind
(Village Books Press, 2008)