The Gift of
Tongues
Everything I steal, I give away.
Once, in
pines almost as tall as these,
same crescent moon sliding gently by,
I sat
curled on my knees, smoking with a friend,
sipping tea, swapping Coyote tales
and lies.
He said something to me
about words, that each is a
name,
and that every name is God's. I who have
no god sat in the vast
emptiness silent
as I could be. A way that can be named
is not the
way. Each word reflects
the Spirit which can't be named. Each word
a
gift, its value in exact proportion
to the spirit in which it is
given.
Thus spoken, these words I give
by way of Lao Tzu's old
Chinese, stolen
by a humble thief twenty-five centuries later.
The Word is
only evidence of the real:
in the Hopi tongue, there is no whale;
and, in
American English, no Fourth World.
~ Sam
Hamill ~
(left button to play, right button
to save)