Grandfather, I come in the middle of life

to your birthplace in the land of the Hun

Even as the bus curves through the mountains,

brakes downward towards your village

and crosses the bridge over the twisting river,

I begin to feel the anger of the dispossessed

I have heard how you stabled your ox and mule

on the mud floor of your drafty house,

how Kaiser Bill marched his soldiers

over the hills to claim your fields,

how you refused to be his conscript and fled

to the Statue of Liberty, how you fed

your young family driving a tea wagon,

how the men outside the tavern in your new home

mocked you for your poor and halting English,

laughed you into a two-day drunk

At 84, you simply smoked and smiled

and said nothing more to me than “grandson”

Grandfather, I only knew you when I was a child

II

Grandfather, since my first memory, I have been at war

When a hand reached down out of the sky,

lifted and dropped me into a real war,

I crawled on the jungle floor with my wrath,

waging a war against war and the makers of war

I brought the war back with me and fought for the peace

because you had drawn the battle lines long before

I knew anything about your own warmongers

All I could say to the mothers of the dead was,

“I am sorry – I am one of those who lived”

My war against war led me from one struggle to another

Whom did I struggle against, for what and why?

Was I fighting your war again, and on what battleground?

Grandfather, I keep hearing there will be no more wars,

at least not for a generation, not until new skin

replaces old, not until rain washes blood from stone

I keep firing into the darkness, my chin on the stock125

III

Grandfather, when I dream, I dream of windstorms,

the sudden swift scattering of leaf, brick and bone

Your son, my father, came spinning into your adopted land

protesting, fists doubled, his night howls so piercing

your neighbors turned on their lights

I never knew when his words or broadsides

would sweep out of nowhere to strike me down

He scattered his children and his days and his convictions

so wildly, I was almost forty-odd before I hit the ground

I tumbled through battered evenings, mornings at school when

my stomach sank in fear, my thoughts battered by terror

I waited for Kaiser Bill to come and burn my house

I could feel his soldiers outside my door, the assassins,

probing the perimeter, testing for a weakness

Even now, I fortify myself against disaster

Grandfather, no one knows when the next storm will

thunder down from the hills, when the next army will strike

IV

Grandfather, I wake early and go walking

I search for that moment when the light first appears

I walk in those seconds of first light knowing the peace

that rises from the scent of the earth, peace no man can steal

Some mornings the valleys swallow me in fog

Not until I reappear on the crest of the last hill,

not until I move up into the glow of the full light of dawn

do I know for certain that I have not disappeared forever

On one of those mornings, lost in a fog,

I climbed by chance into the swirl of a thunderstorm

I panicked in the lightning and raw rain

Halfway into the core of the storm I might have outrun it,

but I turned into it, leaping and laughing,

until I wondered why I had battled the sky for so long

Grandfather, on the morning I made peace with the rain,

I laughed and cried at the smallest of things126

V

Grandfather, in your country the spruces spring into the air

in patterns of majestic lace, the patterns of my dreams

Waterfalls spill from the sides of the steep green hills

into rivers and streams that disappear into ghostly lakes

Wild boars trample the underbrush as did the unicorn

in the great, deep forests of my ancestral myths

I see the old men with their walking sticks along the road

and I know this is where you were meant to be, why

you sat tightlipped and fuming for those many years

in a cheap wooden bungalow in someone else’s country

Your birthright and your heritage have been erased

by too many wars, too many winters

Seeing the cattle on the hillsides and the upright grain,

I feel as you felt looking out at the river churning

under the bridge in the middle of your village

Standing here in this immense valley, you saw

what the river was, that it could both bring

and carry away a part of you dream by dream

I see you in your youth, mustache as fine as newly

sprouted grass, your lederhosen stiff against your legs,

how you looked up at the mountains for the army

of occupation to fire their cannons at those you loved

I feel the anger and sadness you felt then, your vow

never to be enslaved, to live and speak as a free man

Grandfather, I know a little about what has been lost

I stand where you stood; I stand by a terrible rushing river