The Silence of the
Stars
When Laurens van der
Post one night
In the Kalihari Desert told the Bushmen
He couldn't hear
the stars
Singing, they didn't believe him. They looked at
him,
Half-smiling. They examined his face
To see whether he was
joking
Or deceiving them. Then two of those small men
Who plant
nothing, who have almost
Nothing to hunt, who live
On almost nothing, and
with no one
But themselves, led him away
From the crackling thorn-scrub
fire
And stood with him under the night sky
And listened. One of
them whispered,
Do you not hear them
now?
And van der Post listened, not wanting
To disbelieve, but had to
answer,
No. They walked him slowly
Like a sick man to the
small dim
Circle of firelight and told him
They were terribly
sorry,
And he felt even sorrier
For himself and blamed his
ancestors
For their strange loss of hearing,
Which was his loss now.
On some clear nights
When nearby houses have turned off their
visions,
When the traffic dwindles, when through streets
Are between
sirens and the jets overhead
Are between crossings, when the wind
Is
hanging fire in the fir trees,
And the long-eared owl in the neighboring
grove
Between calls is regarding his own darkness,
I look at the stars
again as I first did
To school myself in the names of constellations
And
remember my first sense of their terrible distance,
I can still hear what I
thought
At the edge of silence where the inside jokes
Of my heartbeat, my
arterial traffic,
The C above high C of my inner ear, myself
Tunelessly
humming, but now I know what they are:
My fair share of the music of the
spheres
And clusters of ripening stars,
Of the songs from the throats of
the old gods
Still tending even tone-deaf creatures
Through their exiles
in the desert.
~ David Wagoner
~