Buffalo
On Sundays
my mother took me to Frontier Park
where
there were three old, worn out, scruffy
and dusty
buffalo. I can’t remember
my father
ever being there.
Those were
calm Sundays.
My father
was probably sleeping it off.
Maybe
mother hadn’t drunk the night before.
I don’t
know.
We’d take
a loaf of whole wheat bread.
She’d hold
me up to the fence and
I’d feed
one of the buffalo a slice.
His old
sandpaper tongue
would
glide out of his mouth.
He never
took his side-eye off me—
even as I
fed him. He’d learned
never to
trust a white person.
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Giants in the Mist -- James Corwin
Though now a resident of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Charlie grew up in Cheyenne, Wyoming. It is perhaps ironic that a poet of his caliber is from a city which means "people of the strange tongue" in Arapaho.
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