1. The Icelandic Language

    In this language, no industrial revolution;
    no pasteurized milk; no oxygen, no telephone;
    only sheep, fish, horses, water falling.
    The middle class can hardly speak it.

    In this language, no flush toilet; you stumble
    through dark and rain with a handful of rags.
    The door groans; the old smell comes
    up from under the earth to meet you.

    But this language believes in ghosts;
    chairs rock by themselves under the lamp; horses
    neigh inside an empty gully, nothing
    at the bottom but moonlight and black rocks.

    The woman with marble hands whispers
    this language to you in your sleep; faces
    come to the window and sing rhymes; old ladies
    wind long hair, hum, tat, fold jam inside pancakes.

    In this language, you can’t chit-chat
    holding a highball in your hand, can’t
    even be polite. Once the sentence starts its course,
    all your grief and failure come clear at last.

    Old inflections move from case to case,
    gender to gender, softening consonants, darkening
    vowels, till they sound like the sea moving
    icebergs back and forth in its mouth.

    By Bill Holm