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Pilgrimage


Vicksburg, Mississippi


Here, the Mississippi carved
             its mud-dark path, a graveyard


for skeletons of sunken riverboats.
             Here, the river changed its course,


turning away from the city
             as one turns, forgetting, from the past-


the abandoned bluffs, land sloping up
             above the river's bend-where now


the Yazoo fills the Mississippi's empty bed.
             Here, the dead stand up in stone, white


marble, on Confederate Avenue. I stand
             on ground once hollowed by a web of caves;


they must have seemed like catacombs,
             in 1863, to the woman sitting in her parlor,


candlelit, underground. I can see her
             listening to shells explode, writing herself


into history, asking what is to become
             of all the living things in this place?


This whole city is a grave. Every spring-
             Pilgrimage-the living come to mingle


with the dead, brush against their cold shoulders
             in the long hallways, listen all night


to their silence and indifference, relive
             their dying on the green battlefield.


At the museum, we marvel at their clothes-
             preserved under glass-so much smaller


than our own, as if those who wore them
             were only children. We sleep in their beds,


the old mansions hunkered on the bluffs, draped
             in flowers-funereal-a blur


of petals against the river's gray.
             The brochure in my room calls this


living history. The brass plate on the door reads
             Prissy's Room. A window frames


the river's crawl toward the Gulf. In my dream,
             the ghost of history lies down beside me,


rolls over, pins me beneath a heavy arm.

Written by Natasha Trethewey

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