Harberton, a poem
Nicole K. Mayberry, Ph.D.
When I die, bury me at the Estancia.
Make room for my body, move the fence and find me a patch of grass
under
Lange Trees.
Face my body towards the cove so that I might watch as the flowers
bloom in the garden;
the geese waddle through the grass;
the trees hunched over as the wind tries tirelessly to
break their spirit.
Allow my bones to d e c o m p o s e (as the whales do in buckets of rainwater).
Adorn my grave with rocks
from the sea
bright blue shells--scalloped.
Behind me
devilish,
jagged,
black peaks
kissed with patches of snow…even in summer.
To my right, the little white home with green shutters.
To my left, tall forest with dark grey trunks and bright green canopies.
In front of me…the sea.
I want peace knowing where I will take my final rest after my little
life.
I want to hear the wind from the ground now above me and
feel the salt on my stone
which sleeps on the grass
that simply reads,
“Te Amo, Tierra del Fuego.”
When I die,
don’t tell them how I lived, or where I traveled, simply tell them this;
in that small cemetery guarded by a creaky, wooden, grey fence there are views
of the past…
When I die,
tell them to breathe in the sea;
feel the tall grass and lavender between their fingers;
walk among the Lange Trees.
When I die,
tell them,
Go to the Estancia.
Wamos ir a la Estancia, vamos.
and then you too will know.