Walking Through Your Song in My SoulA Chapter by Marie Anzalonewritten for Emma's song contest- works best if you listen before you readLetter to the late Utah Philips on his song "Walking Through Your Town in the Snow"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dj_slZCEPKU
Growing up country poor, I knew that man, of whom you sing- the one you don't let us disavow, this time; a stranger unto us all, head down, shuffling along down our streets. Through your words, I feel the snow balling into ice on his cuffs; the water seeping into thin cotton socks inside worn, cracked boots, mottled like old doorframes. Vapor from his breath forms crystals in his mustache, which he removes carefully, as they pinch and hurt; and his hands are stuck in mispatched gloves stuffed in pockets of someone's cast-off parka. I feel the chilled pain in his jaw from cold sinuses, clenched teeth throb in front of a parched tongue, each handful of snow consumed seems to only take more moisture out of a mouth already raw and sore. It is late, and both lonesomeness and the home in his bag weigh him down now, the pack soaked through where it set in meltwater; and that insistent dull ache radiating from somewhere underneath the coat, reminding him it's been hours since a burger- and his metabolism can't quite keep up with this chill, as snow squeaks underfoot like a rusty hinge on a doorway to the underworld. There are few worse feelings than knowing there's no place for a man to rest his weary feet; small towns don't have 24-hour shops for people with no dollar to spend. I want to see through your eyes, Utah, that day you were inspired to draft these haunting chords that put this tired wanderer on our street, make him one of us, Cleverly, through the use of "your town", instead of "a town"; you bring him home, outside our front door, walking past the Post Office. I implore you, teach me how to pen your vision, please- for we need to see again, so badly, in a world gone cold with heartlessness. Show me how to make others see it, too, like you did for me- feeling numbness and resignation emanate from each powdery footprint left by aching arches and cramped toes. Most of all- help me make those others imagine, for once, "let's pretend this is me", and be moved, so- to bring that man a thermos of soup; some warm bread, and a place d****t just to rest a single night, when he walks next through their own town. Help me make him merely human.
© 2012 Marie AnzaloneAuthor's Note
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Added on June 18, 2010Last Updated on August 12, 2012 AuthorMarie AnzaloneXecaracoj, Quetzaltenango, GuatemalaAboutBilingual (English and Spanish) poet, essayist, novelist, grant writer, editor, and technical writer working in Central America. "A poet's work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to ta.. more..Writing
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