Tag Archives: Washington State Book Award

LAURA DA’.August 2024


LAURA DA’

Photo by Jeff Sirkin


 

THE UBIQUITOUS GARDEN

When the last pangs of winter press

famine foods into the tongue like a bit,

the Skagit grants the interior Salish Sea

a kingly portion of its water. Dragonflies

at the corners of my view drip acid color

as I am put to a series of questions—spring

begins when your stride crosses at least seven

daisies in the meadow. I hear the childhood

birdsong we used to mimic in the strawberry fields

so it must be the cross-quarter day between

the equinoxes. What sort of sweetness

will you bring when you arrive and will you

be carrying a bright torch? Skunk cabbage

sentinels coat the swamps—old men in sunshine

shawls with spiney war clubs in the air. The slender

leathery intertarsal joints of the small birds rustle

near my shoulders; the digging pole leaves

its lasting shadow across my palms.

 

 

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THE HUNGRY SIBLINGS

Osprey near Deception Pass are so regal

fish go belly up just to be taken in such talons.

The wind dies down and the clams make belly buttons

in the sand. Sea pitted agates and crumbs from hasty

meals meld under the feet of children in bright swimsuits

who balance on a nurse log. Up the estuary to the flat green

ribbon of sweet water, a Falcon definitively plunges

into tall grass of riverine pasture then makes a flapping assent

unburdened by a catch. Three siblings throng in

with mountain berries on their fingertips. We are so hungry.

So hungry with nothing to eat but these berries and the sugar

in our pocket seams from yesterday’s candy. I feed them until

deep orange smoked salmon oil dyes their fingertips

and they wrinkle their noses at the thick draft

of sweetened iced coffee but drink anyway. The youngest

pronounces it marvelous. I take estuary salt

when I bite down on my tongue and hear pebble rake

in my ears. Osprey are heading south now.

Chinook nestle in the bull kelp just under the waves.

 

 

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BECOMING THE MONARCH OF THE TALKING FIELDS

We walk the small town whose staircases join

main street and first, passing the churches and trading posts

and the pioneer hut reeking of creosote to buy soap and

sorghum and coffee. Across the neck between Similk

and Padilla Bays, land accordions itself across outcroppings

of basalt veined in quartz—a vertical record of time

made horizontal in great haste. A ponytail of bull kelp

fans out in the teal water of the channel. Potato blossoms

broadcast across the funneled fields squint like the summer eyes

of children. Once when an older boy yanked me to the ground

by my braid my mother came running and hollered at him

until he trembled. She’s reaching now for the word butterfly,

gesturing, saying these pieces of yellow, do you see them?

On Fidalgo Island an Osprey lands on the snag above

a steep cove choked with kelp and seagulls and peers

at pilot whales slimly navigating the deep elbow of water

between the mainland and Guemes Island. There are so many

delicate passages of swift and narrow water that the Salish

name for this exquisite navigation comes up again and again; delicate

and fraught as a thread through the needle’s open eye or a thought

shuttling through a neural pathway. The rocks hold

a deep scoured groove in the form of a massive rope burn

from the cordilleran ice sheet’s frigid retreat.

We are strolling over open bedrock, Orange Sulphur

moth in the clover, Dreamy Duskywing in the willow.

 

 

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ON SANDBARS

A man is cleaning fish on the fish table monument.

Iridescent scales and gossamer webs of pink clinging

to translucent bone. In the background is the Columbia

and Cape Disappointment’s cedar stacks. To the north

is a town whose name may roughly translate to the phrase

hungry for trees in reference to the tide’s eroding bite.

Harbor seals bobbing at the river mouth dive under

the trunks of sea cast lumber as they tooth for fish.

They look like old friends recognizing one another across

the marketplace, waving fins and nodding. Perspective

can get lost in the granular view. Something innocuous

sometimes pushes an incisor into me too. Popping the trunk

to grab something to clean up a spilled coffee, my eyes hook

on the rolls of paper towels and Clorox wipes and I find myself

snagged, remembering chemo, surgery, radiation,

the first kidney biopsy from eight years ago that was mopped up

and held in the weave of the cleaning supplies just like the ones

under my fingers. The smell of the estuary is the same

mix of blood and iodine under the clean cover of ozone.

Anyhow, I clean it all up, hold my binoculars to my eyes

and peer back at the water, then get back in the car, drive

the precipitous climb of the Astoria-Megler bridge

right over the mouth of the Columbia where it meets

the Pacific; the most dangerous crossing in the world

by most accounts. Orange ribs of shipwreck still punctuate

the beaches. Floats of centuries old beeswax fumble

onto shore. The highest paid ship captains are navigators

of this stretch. The sandbar under the water is miles long

and perpetually shifting. Standing waves can tip even

the sturdiest vessel. The cost is that high.

 

 

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CAPE GOOD HEALTH

The same ghost towns that sketch themselves in sepia

retain living fields too color drenched to behold straight on—

meadows inundated with hues yanked from beneath the waves.

Backyards are studded with gilled trees and birds shrieking

in salted tones. I pass a knoll of the river near Sedro Woolley

and remember swimming with my mother—she was ebullient

with her feet flashing pale soled and her arms freckled like the spray

of sesame seeds on a sandwich roll. A Great Blue Heron flapped

onto a rocky bar and walked over the water to me. Certain unions

of ocean and river make the kinds of broad estuaries that can’t help

but leave wakes of flooded towns: Avon, Skagit City, Ridgeway.

Baptisms intomb and name in the same wet flux. There is not much

of my mother in my face or arms, save the proficient crawl stroke

she taught me to cut through currents and a gaze of saturated competence

across the bridge of our noses and eyes when we look to the far shore.

At Cap Sante, where the water moves definitively from sweet to salt,

there is a city buried, but the madronas no longer look like battered bodies,

rather they take on the silhouettes of mothers and children at the summer seaside.

Bronzed, gently peeling and drooping graceful limbs into sheltered coves.

In my shoulders I can feel the memory of dipping a baby into the water

and in my toes I can feel the memory of being dipped.

 

 

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SPINSTER MENDS THE TALKING FIELDS

Holding a licked thread to the needle eye,

I create the essential form of stability.

I’m about to turn left onto Chuckanut

Drive where my mom would always tell me

about her high school boyfriends at Fidalgo Beach

or Anacortes near Cap Sante, all pestering

for her hand in marriage. On the river’s

banks are surveyors’ transits and photographers’

tripods—in the water stand classic Salish

fishing weirs. What part of the story went underground

and what truth was buried in the shroud of symbols?

It might have been better to hold the needle than wear

the ring. Linguistically, Skagit may indicate

a hidden quality or abbreviated exclamation of surprise.

When the rich wedge of this estuary was drained,

draft horses had to be unhitched to turn, so thick

were the fir trees in that sliver of time before

they were hewn. And the lunar floods necessitated

carrying feed to the island-stranded cows by canoe,

tenders wading arm deep in the brackish water.

Who can say why the mind stops being able

to tell the potato shoots from the cow parsley?

I card and lift the wool, measure the dye, become

the mordant until the weave oxidizes as it must.

I mend the field, compressing scabs of earth with my toe.

 

 

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LAURA DA’


Laura Da’
is a poet and teacher who studied at the Institute of American Indian Arts. She is the author of Tributaries, American Book Award winner, Instruments of the True Measure, Washington State Book Award winner, and Severalty, forthcoming in 2025. Da’ is Eastern Shawnee, and she lives in Washington with her family.

 

 

To download a printable PDF version of this page, click here.

 

 

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August 2024.LAURA DA’