http://allpoetry.com/Dream-Song-116:-Through-the-forest,-followed,-Henry-----made-his-silky-way
The Dream Songs are called “Dream” Songs because B. tapped his
dreams all the time for material. In the old filmed readings available on
YouTube, he mentions this often. For example, in a reading of DS 7, he remarks that
the actor Paul Muni doesn’t actually appear in the movie Prisoners of Shark Island, but, he says, this doesn’t matter
because it’s only a dream. So there’s
often a dream-like, surreal weirdness about The
Dream Songs, which recalls stuff as disparate at Tyrone Slothrop’s journey
down the toilet bowl in Gravity’s Rainbow,
which has to figure as one of the most surreal scenes in all of
literature, to Salvador Dali’s melting watches in The Persistence of Memory, one example of what he often called his “hand
painted dream photographs,” to ex-Senator Michelle Bachman claiming just
recently—apparently in all seriousness—that President Obama is bringing on the
rapturous biblical end of days. (Hard to say which of these twists our
perceptions of reality the hardest, but my vote goes to the ex-Senator from
Minnesota, who strikes me as every inch as loony as Daffy Duck.)
DS 116 has all the earmarks of a
reported dream. The overtones of paranoia—Henry is “followed”—the references to
Indian stereotypes, which fall into The
Dream Songs out of nowhere, and that reference to a “worst enemy”, a being
shivering with power and held together with wires. A surreal nightmare image if
I’ve ever read one. If Indians in dreams mean something to a non-native American,
it probably has something to do with associations with the primal, something
like that. And it is complicated by the history of wars and genocide that
wrested this continent away from its original inhabitants, aided by disease which
tipped the scales early. This has buried something deep in the non-native American
psyche. It’s a complex mixture of fear, fascination, hatred, and respect, and a
dream image would carry expression of all of that.
I had a quite surreal waking
experience once that taught me something about that complex assemblage of
emotions we carry with respect to Indian peoples. I had been backpacking by
myself for a few days in the Red River Gorge area of Eastern Kentucky, which is
loved locally for its scenery, wildflowers, fantastic cliffs and rock
formations, and this area rivals Utah for rock arches and natural bridges. It’s
also a top destination for rock climbers from all over the world. It gets
rugged and remote in a hurry too. Like in the Smoky Mountains, hike thirty
minutes away from the traffic jams and you might not see a soul for the next
week. I had been wandering mainly alone for a few days, just the occasional
encounters with backpacker types who are always pleasant and friendly. On the
way out I hadn’t seen anyone for two days. Then I saw something that for a few
seconds was so strange and out of place that my first thought was that I
had to be seeing a ghost. Walking
quietly through the woods—off the trail—was a young, fit guy outfitted in full historically
accurate Shawnee dress—deerskin leggings, moccasins, silver ring in his nose, a
feather and quill roach on his half-shaved head, face paint, and a red blanket
tucked in complex folds around his waist and over his shoulders. Something much
like
this.
The only detail missing was that he didn’t have the Shawnee treatment of the ears—nearly
all Shawnee men cut their ears and worked the outer fleshy rim out into long
loops. But, this guy had the look down cold otherwise. I don’t even know if he
was of Indian ancestry or not. He was also carrying a musket and had a couple
other weapons, club-type things, tucked in his belt. It was an astonishing enough
sight on its own, but I experienced this
uncanny
time-warp sensation where I understood exactly what a white guy alone in these
same woods two centuries earlier would have felt encountering a Shawnee or
Cherokee or Lenni Lenape (aka Delaware) man in the same circumstances. As long
as they weren’t actively at war, it was probably okay, but you needed to be on
your guard, and there was now work to do to establish an interpersonal trust, and
there was more than a little trepidation and fear involved with both parties. This
was not a calm and peaceful time and place; it was rife with tension, for
obvious reasons, and it would have been a dangerous moment for both of these
people. I felt all of that in a split second.
Well I stood there for a sec, with
my mouth open, totally dumbfounded, trying to figure out just what the hell I
was looking at, then the guy broke the spell. He said, “How’s it going?” and
walked over to the trail, smiling, and shook my hand. Normal dude, playing
dress up in an Indian costume, out in the woods, but seriously into it. Turns
out there was one of those historical reenactment events going on—Civil War
buffs do it all the time—where they were refighting some frontier engagement
from the French and Indian War or War of 1812 or the American Revolution—they all
caused trouble out here in the forests. Pretty soon, here came more of them,
frontiersmen and Indians, all dressed,
laughing, taking photos, telling stories about their girlfriends and wives and
kids, their insufferable bosses where they work. Most of them were a bit older
and softer and more overweight than the real historical frontiersmen, who would
have been hard, tough and wiry, in their twenties, thirties tops. Still, everything
fell back into place, into modern history-nerd order.
It was a moment no one would ever
forget. It brought me the same strange emotional complexity B.’s dream brought,
but the thing about a dream is that, as soon as you wake up, no matter how
scary or weird it was, even if it had you screaming out loud in your sleep, you
say to yourself, it’s only a dream. It settles down. It was just a dream. We
know what to expect from our dreams, which is that the rules that govern them aren’t
the rules that operate when we’re awake. But we can still learn a lot from our
dreams if we let them teach us. I do from mine. That’s what prompts us to talk about
The Dream Songs like we do, as if
they have something to teach us as well. But this experience out in the woods came
fully awake, and because it caught me utterly off guard, and was so anomalous
anyway, it triggered a flash of feelings and understandings that are normally
only available in the weirdness of the dream world. But they were real in a way
dreams aren’t, so I feel now that I understand in a very intimate, actual way
something that few people could share. I know
what it’s like to meet an Indian alone in the woods, in a time and place when
their culture and very presence are under assault, and they’re fighting back with
everything they’ve got, as of course they must, and it’s all nervous and anxious
and more than a little bit dangerous. That’s the broad political context,
though. On the footpath, it’s just him and me, and if we choose, we can keep
all that at bay, and rest for a bit and talk and share some food and help each
other get where we’re going.