IV. Popé
~
The strands, knotted leather,
each knot of the tether,
a message, in passage,
denoting together
when Pueblo
would no longer hide.
A signaling system
that signified
breaking of the yoke
and cruel chaffing chide.
Augusto de Año,
Sixteen-Eighty,
The High Time had come,
the bell had been rung,
and the Pueblo people were ready.
~
The Second Estate,
that of the Church,
had fused to their power
that of the First,
who abandoned the Land
as too far away,
and, now, the Lord Manor,
a Franciscan Frey.
Franciscan theocracies
now were established,
and all Pueblo religious
deemed as deep heresy.
The rough life got worse
by Sixteen-Seventy:
drought and invasion,
both Navajo, Apache,
and the life of the Pueblo
grew harder, not easy –
the death rate increased.
From eighty-thousand
to a mere fifteen questioned
all reason to the bastion
of Spanish Inquisition –
To save the Soul
for the Here
and then After,
begged them to differ
with either Revelation.
The Pueblo practice
of Kachina dances
and the Kivas,
sacred rooms underground,
flew to the face
of the teachings of Jesus.
And ‘his’ grace, “in His place”
did not want found around.
The tension grew high
in Seventy-Five,
the Franciscans arrested
forty-seven men
and charged each of heresy,
for the practice of sorcery –
each one a sage,
each, someone’s ken,
each one, a medicine man.
Four were then sentenced
to be hanged until dead;
one, committed suicide, instead.
All the rest, were publicly whipped!
and then they were sent off to prison.
The last thing to bring
the Pueblo to reason,
the time ‘over-ripe’
to fall back to treason.
The Pueblo, en masse,
protested all of this,
of their sages encaged
in a prison.
And the Spanish complied,
let the men go –
they were too busy
in New Mexico
fighting Apache and the Navajo.
Among the released
was an Indian priest,
a medicine man, Popé.
A leader to nurture
all of his Pueblo
to revolt, in future.
And in five years more,
it was so.
~
©2013, Marvin Loyd Welborn
11July2013
I love it. It really depicts the scene as well as the feelings. Well done, Tink! More to come?
Oh yes! The Rebellion.
Brilliant!
Thanks.