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The View From Here

Observations and Insights on the Nature of Things


This monthly column features brief essays, poems, poetic micro essays and photography by Eve West Bessier, Poet Laureate Emerita of Silver City and Grant County, New Mexico.

Look for a new post every first Friday.



Escribir

It started in stone

carved and painted with petroglyphs,
symbols with real and spirit world meaning,

symbols shared between families,
clans, villages, civilizations.

It started on the dried, pressed
fiber of plants

as ornate lines drawn
with oily ink, flowing
down from the hollow barrel
into the sharpened tip of the quill.

The primary flight feather
of a goose or swan,
became a perfect instrument,
a pen with which to inscribe
onto papyrus and parchment,

a continuous movement of loops
indicating agreements, trusts,
instructions, prayers, love.

It started as a way to reach

beyond the carry of a voice
and the length of a life,
creating a permanence
of thought captured,
held, then flung into
an unknown future.

A mental trajectory
from the quill tip
of a golden eagle’s
forgotten feather,

it became flight.



Photo Credit: Stock

Disclaimer:
The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Southwest Word Fiesta™ or its steering committee.

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We respectfully acknowledge that the entirety of southwestern New Mexico is the traditional territory, since time immemorial, of the Chis-Nde, also known as the people of the Chiricahua Apache Nation. The Chiricahua Apache Nation is recognized as a sovereign Native Nation by the United States in the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Friendship of 1 July 1852 (10 Stat. 979) (Treaty of Santa Fe ratified 23 March 1853 and proclaimed by President Franklin Pierce 25 March 1853).

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Mimbres Press of Western New Mexico University is a traditional academic press that welcomes agented and unagented submissions in the following genres: literary fiction, creative non-fiction, essays, memoir, poetry, children’s books, historical fiction, and academic books. We are particularly interested in academic work and commercial work with a strong social message, including but not limited to works of history, reportage, biography, anthropology, culture, human rights, and the natural world. We will also consider selective works of national and global significance.