Maps - Kaleem Omar
https://www.loc.gov/item/95770033
Much of our north is still safe from the exactitude of maps.
The survey of Pakistan has not pinned down
each water sound to its hidden source.
The movements of the Marco Polo sheep
are not yet reproduced in dotted lines.
In any life some secrets should remain
the property of those who need to live with them.
The telescoping eagle drops undisturbed
alone to its young below the stones of Rakaposhi.
The pitching trail above Baltit wanders
undescribed, free from the tyranny of tourist guides.
Rest houses are few and far between.
The Neelum Valley still has no safe way in.
This, everything we were insists, is as it should be.
No map can ever sustain the instantaneous
release the eye is air to when we,
leaning into the buttock-only climb,
catch the snow held breath of the meadows at Lalazar.
Only a stray cow and buttercups in sight.
The track through Chakdara is not all weather.
I know the climate cannot retain this quality forever.
Someday giant bulldozers may fill the gaps
between these rocks
to fabricate the dams necessary for development.
But what develops here,
will not appease our need for the cold
of a Kojak wind, footloose
without baggage beyond Shilabar.
How long, the question stings,
can we walk the precipice?
Each year they advertise
one more spot for which a plan is made.
Houses impinge their shabbiness upon the pines.
Would they have even the forests
of Astor preclude the vanishing?
The national gross may increase,
but there should be a limit to utility.
Con trails are not after all fair
exchange for unattended streams.
Already they begin to cut us down
to the close size of reference grids.
Indifference too begins at home.
But we must refuse the begging bowl
of civilized embellishments. The fall
of empires worms from within,
irrespective of the time and latitude.
Few know that Mariam, the strongest woman
of her day in Balakot, remained unmarried
to the end because no suitor, and there
were many, could match her feat of lifting
a huge stone high before she would allow him
to speak of possessing her. Today that stone
lies on a rough edge base where the Kunhar's
savage water evens out. Whatever the Western
rain may bring, we should mark such names.
The animal tracks along the edge of Balika
Parbat cannot obliterate the value
of our stamp upon the ground.
But we would breathe a whiter air
if snow leopards kept their vigil here.
The routes of Hunza's trees
may be measured when they are cut,
but no census will count the poverty of leaves
per capita. The mind makes its own weather.
Nevertheless we hope that Mariam's strength
will hold its link with each new fanged element,
what lives too long divided from its origins.
~Editor's note: I heard this poem on the Library of Congress website and was immediately struck by its directness. I have not seen it reproduced, so this is my best guess at line breaks and spellings. I ask anyone who reads it to hold me accountable for my faults, but not the poems.