Easy to Empty My Mind Here: A Few Poems from Mongolia

Easy to Empty My Mind Here: A Few Poems from Mongolia
August 17, 2011 at 7:51pm
#1
Flap of felt in wind
Outside, camels close their eyes
Sleep is hard to come.

#2
Morning sun subtle
Dawn breaks without announcement
No trace of night rain.

#3
Shimmery grasses.
Over there, pools of water
No! Only mirage.

#4
Betsy’s Camel Ride:
Sad! Deflated humps!
Nother much left to hold !
Old woman’s flat breasts.

#5
Dandylion tufts
Waving from my camel’s neck
Otherwise, naked.

#6
Bright bleached bone trees
stand forlorn on stacked stone mountains.
Above: bunched sword grass.
Disturbed, geese cry out.
A legion of them
wing their way between the canyon walls.

#7
Sundancer camel:
hide lashed and taut on sturdy poles.
Witness: bone of one leg.

#8
Smoke from the bath house.
Water heating for our ablutions.
Smell of desert brush.

#9
Our drying garments
are prayer flags
hung on camel rope:
boons for our journey.

#10
Near the high dun cliffs,
white butterfly on my leg:
Request: bless my day.

#11
Paws trace moonlit ridge:
Silent Mongolian wolf.
Below, mindful dog guards us.

About Llyn De Danaan

LLyn De Danaan is an anthropologist and author. She writes fiction and nonfiction. Katie Gale: A Coast Salish Woman's Life on Oyster Bay was published by the University of Nebraska Press. She is currently a speaker for Humanities Washington.
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