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By William Oandasan

around the house stood an
orchard of plum, apple and pear
a blackwalnut tree, one white pine,
groves of white oak and willow clumps
the home of Jessie was largely redwood


blood, flesh and bone sprouted
inside her womb of redwood
for five generations
the trees now stand unpruned and wild


after relocating so many years before the War
the seeds of Jessie have returned


afternoon sunlight on the field
breezes moving grass and leaves
memories with family names wait
within the earth, the mountains,
the valley, the field, the trees


William Oandasan, “Grandmothers Land” from Round Valley Songs. Copyright © 1984 by William Oandasan. Reprinted by permission of West End Press.

Source: Round Valley Songs (West End Press, 1984)

  • Nature
  • Relationships
  • Social Commentaries

Poet Bio

William Oandasan
Of mixed Yuki and Filipino heritage, William Oandasan was a member of the Yuki tribe of Round Valley, California. An advocate for Native American writers, he founded A Press in 1976 and edited A: A Journal of Contemporary Literature. Oandasan died in 1992.   See More By This Poet

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