By: Madeline Olson
Mount Holyoke College, MA, USA
I have not yet learned the meaning of Māori yet,
and i don’t think unknowing foolish anymore
only a wise risk of lingering instead
but i do say this sometimes i harbor things in life
such as the rain i let drain in my mouth
before clearing grey swallow
such as
the morning the
kawakawa tea steam
climbing the cup to dance up
into the air twisting
its fog tail
steamy
languid
unbothered
i mistake this morning mug steam
for clouds over Lake Wakatipu could mistake it for
the chalky air over its neighbors : The Remarkables
Cecil Peak / Walter Peak / Ben Lomond / Queenstown Hill
so when i recognized this fog in my tea steam i learned
i am not the only harborer
because when morning lull starts breaking
it is te iti kahurangi, rising, unfettered
the landscape was bustling we spoke it informed me
morning too could be treasured simply because it safeguards,
simply because it exists.
And so the other day i bought a $39 ticket to meet
these chalky clouds as i ascended the houses
started falling,
red
yellow
brown like feathers
floating dissolving
compressed from sight
while gondolas scaled the mountain
shearing the treetops
one
two
three
green
brown
white
red
yellow
brown like feathers
there are no more houses left once i ascended the 790m peak
Look! Says my neighbor over the rail
Look! means to see how the clouds shepard
the wedged yellow and red houses, tucking
it only cries, you fool!
Look! means to see that maybe these clouds hang on their own time and
these mountains, these mountains are backbones
seated around the lake, the water, one silent muscle
the soleus, the rectus, the tendons of nature’s body,
tendons of time.
And even though the clouds are thirsting,
and it is so temperate in this creation,
it’s okay to worry, the clouds whisper
to confess,
i don’t know if this morning
steam comes from the clouds or
from my breath
but i do believe
in dwellings existing together.
Maybe believe in harmony too
and the wind, is a steel pipe that whistles,
tunneling the ears howling them clean
releasing echos that spool upon
teardrop water
the coniferous trees, an army,
marching in tempo alongside me
to witness the clouds, saying
this is our sacred whenua
and that’s why the air feels
so fresh up here.
You see, i am not the only harborer the tea steam,
is not simply air sublimating and this chalky hillside,
this chalky hillside is the sanctuary
for the stranger beside me