Growing up in West Virginia (or anywhere in this country) - you really don't get a sense that Appalachia is a good place to live. The media, our teachers, and society in general has a tendency to try and force us to conform, to lose our accents, and give up our traditions as if they were bad habits.
I have to admit that I was once in that same frame of mind. For a brief moment of my life, I was confused and searching for my identity. I was able to glean bits and pieces from other places, but it wasn't until I returned to West Virginia and starting reading about Appalachian history and literature that I gained my true sense of place.
It had been there all along, just below the surface. Of course looking back now, it makes sense that my identity was there. Where else would it be? Certainly not in the halls of a preppy private college in Virginia. I suppose for a while I ignored it, running away from what I thought was a bad thing (as I was influenced to believe) - I was running away from what I was looking for.
But I'm finally in a good place with my heritage, thought it took me a many good year to get there. I suppose you could still find fault with this place, just as you can with any place. However I happen to like my home in the mountains.
One of my favorite poems about Appalachia is by Muriel Miller Dressler, a woman from St. Albans, WV. She originally published this in 1977, and I have an original copy signed by the author. It's one of my prized possessions. The imagery in the poem is hypnotic and intoxicating - as well as brutally honest.
Enjoy!
By Muriel Miller Dressler
I am Appalachia. In my veins
Runs fierce mountain pride; the hill-fed streams
Of passion; and, stranger, you don’t know me!
You’ve analyzed my every move–you still
Go away shaking your head. I remain
Enigmatic. How can you find rapport with me–
You, who never stood in the bowels of hell,
Never felt a mountain shake and open its jaws
To partake of human sacrifice?
You, who never stood on a high mountain
Watching the sun unwind its spiral rays:
Who never searched the glens for wild flowers,
Never picked mayapples or black walnuts; never ran
Wildly through the woods in pure delight,
Nor dangled your feet in a lazy creek?
You, who never danced to wild sweet notes,
Outpouring of nimble-fingered fiddlers;
Who never just “sat a spell,” on a porch,
Chewing and whittling; or hearing in pastime
The deep-throated bay of chasing hounds
And hunters shouting with joy, “He’s treed!”
You, who never once carried a coffin
To a family plot high up on a ridge
Because mountain folk know it’s best to lie
Where breezes from the hills whisper, “You’re home”;
You, who never saw from the valley that graves on a hill
Bring easement of pain to those below?
I tell you, stranger, hill folk know
What life is all about; they don’t need pills
To tranquilize the sorrow and joy of living.
I am Appalachia: and, stranger,
Though you’ve studied me, you still don’t know.
This poem is still in print in the collection: Wild Sweet Notes: Fifty Years of West Virginia Poetry 1950-1999 published by Publishers Place, Inc., 2000.
14 comments:
What a beautiful poem!
thanks for sharing it in your blog, Jason.
It's one of my all time favorites, and I think captures the essence of the region quite nicely
That is a beautiful poem Jason! I also love all of your pictures of your mountains!
Have a Great Day!
Angela
Angela - glad you like it. The pictures are all of places I know well. The first is from the clifftops on North Mountain in Pendleton County, WV. The "v" shaped notch in the mountains is Judy Gap. The second picture is of Roots Run, a small country road that winds through a holler near Riverton, WV, and the last photo is of the Bland Hills (also near Riverton) where I took many a long walk in the summertime when I had nothing else to do as a teenager. The mountain in the background that the storm is coming across is Spruce Knob, the highest point in West Virginia.
YES! I love this poem. It says what needs to be said. Thank you for posting it, Jason.
One of my favorites too Jason! Funny how what you're looking for is sometimes right under you nose uh: )
I love this poem, for you see, I can relate to it. She would have been 100 years old this Christmas, but now she's leaning on the Everlasting Arms. As she took me up to the family plot years ago, she said " this is where most of my family is now." A lot of hill folk move away from Appalachia for myriad reasons.. some move back. But, as the saying goes," you can take us out of Appalachia but you can't take Appalachia out of us". I live now in the hills of McKean Co., PA. and grew up in WV. Your poems really touched my heart.
I met her once - at Berea College at an Old Time Music Celebration. Her poems are wonderful, but her delivery made them all the more wonderful. I wish I could find one she wrote about the "sarvis" blooming. It contained some information about her mother as well. I don't know how to find it.
I am Steve Cates, Murfreesboro, TN. Find me on facebook if you can help me find the poem I mentioned above. My email address is appdancer@aol.com. Thanks.
Check with Appalachian State University in NC. I don't know how to say it--they have her papers and books there in the Library. The librarian there sent me a copy of the poem about the sarvice being in bloom. And about burial time.
See above.
Special Collections Center of the library at Appalachian State University.. Get phone number and call them
I met her in high school what an inspiration she read from her works. This is my favorite
My senior English teacher, Mrs. Parsons, is the one who introduced me to this poem. I immediately said I wanted to memorize it, which I did. Sitting in the floor in front of Grandma's Hoosier cabinet, I recited it for my Grandpa. When I finished, I looked up to see tears in his eyes. At the same time, one of my uncles took off out the back door almost on a run. This poem speaks to our heart, to our very souls because we ARE Appalachia.
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