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#southdakota
Dip, scoop, Lift, turn, throw Repeat Repeat Repeat Repeat Clear the white Bright and hard packed snow Expose the sidewalk Waiting for summer To be covered by green clippings And darkened by the sprinkler Cooling on a hot day But now uncovered By a twisted and sore back.
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Jan 21, 2020
Jan 21, 2020 at 12:22 AM UTC
Twisted Back
I hear the droning moans of Winter Blowing on my house so cold Northwest winds from Dakota plains Aimed at this Dakota home It’s endurance is commendable One hundred and eight years Of standing here in this weather, I have only been here forty-nine There are creaks and groans And sagging a bit from settling Crackled, worn and flaking... And the house is aging too.
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Jan 7, 2020
Jan 7, 2020 at 1:28 AM UTC
So Many Winters
I bet that sunsets taste Like sherbet ice cream On a warm summer day. I'll take two scoops And enjoy it right here On my front porch.
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Jun 20, 2019
Jun 20, 2019 at 10:17 AM UTC
Sherbet Sunset
My Dakota plains Broken by clusters of trees That surround farms Connected by black thin lines Draped between poles That follow roads Or a shortcut across fields On giant steel mannequins Standing watch over Corn, beans, sunflower Or cows or horses Or sheep On My Dakota prairie With rich black dirt That feed crops And sustain our towns Our clusters of life Our family and self.
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Jun 19, 2019
Jun 19, 2019 at 12:43 AM UTC
My Dakota
I was born under great open skies, Brought up with the smell of coal-black smoke Hovering over the family farm. I grew as distant sounds of whooping Echoed like thunder across the land And I was raised on bias, which clung To the white men of the Black Hills like Their guns, their religion, and their homesteads. Those Hills are no place for me. Look at my multi-colored dress, the Multi-million-dollar stage, the Multi-colored lights hanging over me. This is my home. I thrive in this place. Gone are the chiefs and their headdresses. Gone are the dream-catchers and stories Of battles between Unkthei, the Serpant, and Wakinyan, the eagle. Gone is Crazy Horse, always wily Like the winter fox. All cast off for a new life of bias. I make the formula that nurtures Bias in every little kid’s mind. Every day’s the same. I spew my words, My angry, petrol-soaked vitriol, Which deludes their minds. They’ll be “pigs” in the not-too-distant future. In a way, this life disappoints me. The trailer homes of Indians were Run-down and forgotten about. They lived lives of quiet desperation. No Spotlights shined on their struggles. The men who killed their kin were immortal. But pow-wows in South Dakota were ***** dingy, and dark, yet they were Attended by many a native. The farms were barren and gray, Stockpiles of grain long gone, given to The plutocratic hands of Washington. Aunt Ida clung to this world. Aunt Ida is dead and forgotten. I was raised on bias in the Black Hills, and I will stay biased for the rest Of my days. Why would I give it up? Joseph, the great Chief, never know Such a life.
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Feb 28, 2018
Feb 28, 2018 at 11:02 PM UTC
Raised on Bias in the Black Hills
I was born under great open skies, Brought up with the smell of coal-black smoke Hovering over the family farm. I grew as distant sounds of whooping Echoed like thunder across the land And I was raised on bias, which clung To the white men of the Black Hills like Their guns, their religion, and their homesteads. Those Hills are no place for me. Look at my multi-colored dress, the Multi-million-dollar stage, the Multi-colored lights hanging over me. This is my home. I thrive in this place. Gone are the chiefs and their headdresses. Gone are the dream-catchers and stories Of battles between Unkthei, the Serpant, and Wakinyan, the eagle. Gone is Crazy Horse, always wily Like the winter fox. All cast off for a new life of bias. I make the formula that nurtures Bias in every little kid’s mind. Every day’s the same. I spew my words, My angry, petrol-soaked vitriol, Which deludes their minds. They’ll be “pigs” in the not-too-distant future. In a way, this life disappoints me. The trailer homes of Indians were Run-down and forgotten about. They lived lives of quiet desperation. No Spotlights shined on their struggles. The men who killed their kin were immortal. But pow-wows in South Dakota were ***** dingy, and dark, yet they were Attended by many a native. The farms were barren and gray, Stockpiles of grain long gone, given to The plutocratic hands of Washington. Aunt Ida clung to this world. Aunt Ida is dead and forgotten. I was raised on bias in the Black Hills, and I will stay biased for the rest Of my days. Why would I give it up? Joseph, the great Chief, never know Such a life.
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