“Ode to Lakapati”
“Lakapati, pakanin mo yaring alipin mo; huwag mong gutumin.”
“Lakapati, feed thy servant; let him not hunger.”
— ancient supplication, once proclaimed before planting a new field,
to the Philippine hermaphroditic deity of fertility
dear hybrid spirit dear dual creature you are like me cousin to morels gatherer of moss
you are as rice kernel tiny unhusked & you are as blue above skyfield of constellations
where God/ess roams looking for lost things you too are a lost thing forgotten like the name
of a former lover the scent of weed-flowers he-she snail & slug little chimera both sure & slow
farmers used you to fool Spanish priests who thought you were the Holy Spirit
have the people forsaken you? have you like me hungered for? longed for—yearned for? Lakapati
hum to me in the buzz of sunflowers on the hill their gold chorus for a good harvest tonight
I make atang scant offering from a hot meal grain liquor to appease I fashion an altar out of stones
place your figure in its darkest crevice from there smile under the brim of your straw hat
with your sheaf your wicker basket your ragged skirt your woven tapis
nights I cut myself
in two wait to see which half
sprouts its small seeds first
Josephine ‘Ina’ Cariño’s work has appeared in such journals as New American Fiction (New Rivers Press), One (Jacar Press), and december Magazine, among others. Her poem ‘Feast’ won the inaugural 2018 Sundress Publications broadside contest. Influenced by the natural backdrop of her childhood home in the mountains of the Philippines, Ina draws on both nature imagery and folklore in her work. She currently resides in Raleigh, NC, where she is a candidate for an MFA in creative writing at North Carolina State University.