By Laura Pochintesta
Name the great rivers of the world
You know, the ones you learned
In school – how to spell them,
Where on earth they are,
The direction in which they flow,
Their basin, their source - in fact
All the terms you memorized for the geography quiz
Remember the Nile, the Amazon,
The Tigris and Euphrates, the
M-i-s-s-i-s-s-i-p-p-i
Most of us grew up never having seen
Most of them, just memorizing
Their lengths, their significance as
Feeders of fertile soil on which great
Civilizations were planted.
But, no one ever talks about the
Two little rivers
Where my ancestors are from
Their names do not ring a bell on any test
They are so far from grand they sometimes
Dry up all together in the heat of midsummer
When pebbles and rocks pockmark the course
Where their waters will flow again come fall.
From these
Two little rivers
Came hundreds, maybe thousands, of people
Some of whom ended up on ships carrying them
Across oceans bound for greater rivers
Far from the people born in the hills and valleys
Formed and fed by those
Two little rivers
Whose names will be forgotten by those who don’t learn
To sing the songs and tell the stories that speak of them
Two little rivers
Whose currents will pulse in the veins of their descendants
Flowing, surging like lifeblood, emptying themselves
Into a future sea
Laura Pochintesta is a writer in Connecticut. She enjoys writing poetry and fiction that examine relationships in a historical context, often with a focus on familial bonds, faith, migration and home. Her work has appeared in literary journals. Her chapbook She: A Small Book of Poems is available on Amazon.