Sauna(poem)

Grandson Nick jumps into Helen Lake
Pearl Piirto on front porch of camp at Helen Lake
The stainless steel sauna stove and water tank at our camp, made by our welder father, who made them as a side business. He worked for the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company in the shops as his job.

“When sauna-time comes / draw the water, bring the whisks.”

                Runo 23, Kalevala

 

 

SAUNA

© Jane Piirto. All Rights Reserved

 

Our feet in buckets, we sit

on the top bench in a row.

The little kids sit

near the floor.

Mother throws löyly

on with the ladle.

Steam rushes from the rocks.

We sting.

We put noses in washcloths.

We talk and sweat.

The urgency takes

over our thumping hearts.

We run out barefoot,

leap in a group,

prance down the hill

through raspberry thorn,

dive, stumble, on pebbles,

flail in splashes.

The water receives us.

Our shouts and whoops

force us to relief,

to skin eskimo warm.

We glow in perfect awareness.

Cool, we climb the hill

to the sauna again,

soap up, wash each other’s backs,

run in lather to the lake,

and back again, this time,

this time for the real steam,

and back to our holy lake.

Then pop, rolls, cold cuts–

the ritual of our ancestors,

ruddy and calm.

Piirto, J. (1980, April). Sauna. Okooch Mt. News.

  • (1981). Finnish Americana, IV, p. 69.
  • (1983). M. Karni and A. Jarvenpa (Eds.), Finnish American Writers (p. 69). New Brighton, MN: Finnish Americana Press.
  • (1983). Postcards From The Upper Peninsula. Pocasse Press.
  • (1989). M. Karni and A. Jarvenpa (Eds.), Sampo: The Magic Mill (p. 180). Minneapolis, MN: New Rivers.
  • (2008). Saunas: Poems by Jane Piirto. Woodstock, NY: Mayapple Press.
The family enjoying the lake after sauna