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The Apple Trees at Olema Page 2


  had been crushed expensively. one summer

  by that waterfall I saw a hummingbird,

  a calliope, hovering and glistening

  above the water’s spray and the hemlock,

  then dropping down into it and rising

  and wobbling and beating its furious wings

  and dropping again and rising and glistening. The others

  should be there by now, and it’s possible the bird

  is back this year. They’d have made their way

  down the dusty trail and over the ledge of granite

  to the creek’s edge and that cascade of spray.

  For C.R.

  What do you mean you have nothing?

  You can’t have nothing. Aren’t there three green apples

  on the table in an earth-brown bowl? Weren’t there

  three apples for three goddesses in the story

  and the fellow had to pick—no, there was one apple

  and three goddesses, as in the well-known remark

  that all of politics is two pieces of cake

  and three children. Aren’t there three yellow roses

  on the counter in a clear glass vase among purple spikes

  of another flower that resembles a little

  the Nile hyacinth you saw in lush borders

  along the green canal at Puerto Escondido?

  Do you remember Juan called them “Lent flowers,”

  which made you see that the white gush of the calyx

  was an eastering, and you looked at Connie

  with her shaved head after chemo and her bright,

  wide eyes that wanted to miss nothing,

  and do you remember that the surface of the water

  came suddenly alive: a violent roiling and leaping

  of small fish, and Juan, pointing into the water

  at what had got them leaping, shouted “Barracuda,”

  and that the young pelicans came swooping in

  to practice their new awkward skill of fishing

  on the small, terrified, silvery river fish? And

  the black-headed terns, a flock of them,

  joined in, hovering and plunging like needles

  into the churning water? All in one explosion:

  green lagoon, barracuda, silver fish, brown pelicans,

  plunging terns, Juan’s laugh, appalled, alive,

  and Connie’s wide blue eyes and the river smell

  coming up as the water quieted again. of course,

  there were three apples, one for beauty,

  and one for terror, and one for Connie ’s eyes

  in the quiet after, mangrove swallows in the air,

  shy, white-faced ibises foraging among the hyacinths.

  Late afternoons in June the fog rides in

  across the ridge of pines, ghosting them,

  and settling on the bay to give a muted gray

  luster to the last hours of light and take back

  what we didn’t know at midday we’d experience

  as lack: the blue of summer and the dry spiced scent

  of the summer woods. It’s as if some cold salt god

  had wandered inland for a nap. You still see

  herons fishing in the shallows, a kingfisher or an osprey

  emerges for a moment out of the high, drifting mist,

  then vanishes again. And the soft, light green leaves

  of the thimbleberry and the ridged coffeeberry leaves

  and the needles of the redwoods and pines look more sprightly

  in the cool gray air with the long dusk coming on,

  since fog is their natural element. I had it in mind

  that this description of the weather would be a way

  to say things come and go, a way of subsuming

  the rhythms of arrival and departure to a sense

  of how brief the time is on a summer afternoon

  when the sun is warm on your neck and the world

  might as well be a dog sleeping on a porch, or a child

  for whom an afternoon is endless, endless. Time:

  thick honey, and no one saying good-bye.

  AUGUST NOTEBOOK: A DEATH

  1. River Bicycle Peony

  I woke up thinking abouy my brothr’s body.

  that q That was my first bit of early morning typing

  so the first dignity, it turns out, is to get the spelling right.

  I woke up thinking about my brother’s body.

  Apparently it’s at the medical examiner’s morgue.

  I found myself wondering whether he was naked

  yet and whose job it was to take clothes off

  and when they did it. It seemed unnecessary

  to undress his body until they performed the exam

  and that is going to happen later this morning

  and so I found myself hoping that he was dressed

  still, though smell may be an issue, or hygiene.

  When the police do a forced entry for the purpose

  of a welfare check and the deceased person is alone,

  the body goes to the medical examiner’s morgue

  in the section for those deaths in which no evidence

  of foul play is involved, so the examination

  for cause of death is fairly routine. Two policemen,

  for some reason I imagine they were young,

  found my brother. His body was in the bed

  which was a mattress on the floor. He was lying

  on his back, according to Angela, my brother’s friend,

  who lives nearby and has her own troubles

  and always introduced herself as my brother’s

  personal assistant, and he seemed peaceful.

  There would have been nothing in the room

  but the mattress and a microwave, an ashtray,

  I suppose, cartons and food wrappers he hadn’t

  thrown away and the little plastic subscription

  bottles that he referred to as his ’scrips.

  They must have called the ME’s ambulance

  and that was probably a team of three.

  When I woke, I visualized this narrative

  and thought it would be shorter. I thought

  that what would represent my feelings

  would be the absence of metaphor.

  But then, at the third line, I discovered

  the three line stanza and that it was

  going to be the second dignity. So

  I imagine he is in one of those aluminium

  cubicles I’ve seen in the movies,

  dressed or not. I also imagine that,

  if they undressed him, and perhaps washed

  his body or gave it an alcohol rub

  to disinfect it, that that was the job

  of some emigrant from a hot, poor country.

  Anyway, he is dressed in this stanza,

  which mimics the terza rima of Dante’s comedy

  and is a form that Wallace Stevens liked

  to use, and also my dear friend Robert.

  And “seemed peaceful” is a kind of metaphor.

  2. Sudden and Grateful Memory of Mississippi John Hurt

  Because I woke again thinking of my brother’s body

  and why anyone would care in some future

  that poetry addresses how a body is transferred

  from the medical examiner’s office,

  which is organized by local government

  and issues a certificate establishing that the person

  in question is in fact dead and names the cause

  or causes, to the mortuary or cremation society,

  most of which are privately owned businesses

  and run for profit and until recently tended

  to be family businesses with skills and decorums

  passed from father to son, and often quite ethnically

  specific, in a country like ours made from crossers

  of borders, as if, i
n the intimacy of death,

  some tribal shame or squeamishness or sense

  of propriety asserted itself so that the Irish

  buried the Irish and the Italians the Italians.

  In the south in the early years of the last century

  it was the one business in which a black person

  could grow wealthy and pass on a trade

  and a modicum of independence to his children.

  I know this because Judith wrote a piece about it

  for which she interviewed fourth-generation

  African-American morticians in oakland

  whose grandfathers and great-grandfathers

  had buried the dead in cotton towns on the Delta

  or along the Brazos River in Texas, passing on

  to their children who had gone west an order

  of doing things and symbolic forms of courtesy

  for the bereaved and sequences of behavior

  at wakes and funerals, so that, for example,

  the eldest woman in the maternal line

  entered the chapel first, and what prayers

  were said in what order. During Prohibition

  they even sold the white lightning to the men

  who were allowed to slip outside and take a nip

  and talk about the dead while the cries

  and gospel-song-voiced contralto moans

  of grief that could sound like curious elation

  rose inside. Also the rules for burial or burning.

  Griefs and rituals and inside them cosmologies.

  And I thought of Mississippi John Hurt’s

  great song about Louis Collins and its terrible

  tenderness which can’t be reproduced here

  because so much of it is in the picking

  of the six-string guitar and in his sweet,

  reedy old man’s voice: “And when they heard

  that Louis was dead,

  all the women dressed in red.

  Angels laid him away.

  They laid him six feet under the clay.

  Angels laid him away.”

  3.

  You can fall a long way in sunlight.

  You can fall a long way in the rain.

  The ones who don’t take the old white horse

  take the morning train.

  When you go down

  into the city of the dead

  with its whitewashed walls and winding alleys

  and avenues of autumnal lindens and the heavy bells

  tolling by the sea, crowds

  appear in all directions,

  having left their benches and tiered plazas,

  laying aside their occupations of reverie

  and gossip and the memory of breathing—

  at least in the most reliable stories,

  which are the ones the poets tell—

  to hear what scraps of news they can

  from this world where the air is thin

  at high altitudes and smells of pine

  and of almost perfect density in the valleys

  where trees on summer afternoons sometimes

  throw violet shadows across sidewalks.

  only the arborist in the park never stirs

  for the new arrivals; he is not incurious,

  but he has his work. It is he who decides

  which limbs get lopped off

  in the city of the dead.

  You can fall a long way in sunlight.

  You can fall a long way in the rain.

  The ones who don’t take the old white horse

  take the evening train.

  4.

  Today his body is consigned to the flames

  and I begin to understand why people

  would want to carry a body to the river’s edge

  and build a platform of wood and burn it

  in the wind and scatter the ashes in the river.

  As if to say, take him, fire, take him, air,

  and, river, take him. Downstream. Downstream.

  Watch the ashes disappear in the fast water

  or, in a small flaring of anger, turn away, walk back

  toward the markets and the hum of life, not quite

  saying to yourself There, the hell with it, it’s done.

  I said to him once, when he’d gotten into some scrape

  or other, “You know, you have the impulse control

  of a ferret.” And he said, “Yeah? I don’t know

  what a ferret is, but I get greedy. I don’t mean to,

  but I get greedy.” An old grubber’s beard, going gray,

  a wheelchair, sweats, a street person’s baseball cap.

  “I’ve been thinking about Billie Holiday, you know

  if she were around now, she ’d be nothing. You know

  what I mean? Hip-hop? Never. She had to be born

  at a time when they were writing the kind of songs

  and people were listening to the kind of songs

  she was great at singing.” And I would say,

  “You just got evicted from your apartment,

  you can’t walk and you have no money, so

  I don’t want to talk to you about Billie Holiday

  right now, okay.” And he would say, “You know,

  I’m like Mom. I mean, she really had a genius

  for denial, don’t you think? And the thing is,

  you know, she was a pretty happy person.”

  And I would say, “She was not a happy person.

  She was panicky, crippled by guilt at her drinking,

  and she was evasive to herself about herself,

  and so she couldn’t actually connect with anybody,

  and her only defense was to be chronically cheerful.”

  And he would say, “Worse things than cheerful.”

  Well, I am through with those arguments,

  except in my head, and not through, I see, with the habit—

  I thought this poem would end downriver downriver—

  of worrying about where you are and how you’re doing.

  VARIATIONS ON A PASSAGE IN EDWARD ABBEY

  A dune begins with an obstacle—a stone, a shrub, a log,

  anything heavy enough to resist being moved by wind.

  This obstacle forms a wind shadow on its leeward side,

  making eddies in the currents, now fast, now slow, of the air,

  exactly as a rock in a stream causes an eddy in the water.

  Within the eddy the wind moves with less force and less velocity

  than the airstreams on either side, creating what geologists call

  the surface of discontinuity. And it is here that the wind

  tends to drop part of its load of sand. The sand particles,

  which hop or bounce along the earth before the wind,

  begin to accumulate,

  creating a greater eddy in the air currents

  and capturing still more sand.

  It’s thus a dune is formed.

  viewed in cross section, sand dunes display a characteristic profile.

  on the windward side the angle of ascent is low and gradual—

  twenty to twenty-five degrees from the horizontal. on the leeward side

  the slope is much steeper, usually about thirty-four degrees—

  the angle of repose of sand and most other loose materials.

  The steep side of the dune is called the slip face

  because of the slides

  that occur as sand is driven up the windward side

  and deposited on or just over the crest.

  The weight of the crest

  eventually becomes greater than can be supported by the sand beneath,

  so the extra sand slumps down the slip face

  and the whole dune

  advances in the direction of the prevailing wind, until some obstacle

  like a mountain intervenes.

  This movement, this grand slow march

  across t
he earth’s surface, has an external counterpart in the scouring

  movement of glaciers,

  and an internal one in the movement of grief

  which has something in it of the desert’s bareness

  and of its distances.

  THE BUS TO BAEKDAM TEMPLE

  The freeway tracks the Han River, which flows

  west out of the mountains we are heading toward.

  This morning it is river-colored, gray-green,

  streaked with muddy gold, and swift. August,

  an overcast morning after rain, the sky one shade

  of pearl and the sheen of the roadside puddles

  is so empty it seems to steady the world

  like the posture of zealous young monks.

  SONG OF THE BORDER GUARD

  When I sat in the square in Cuernavaca

  outside the Church of the Conquistador,

  wondering if Malinche had ever loved Cortés

  and watching the streams of people go by

  in their white shirts and blouses in the heat

  and the brightly colored cellophane papers

  in which small candies are wrapped and unwrapped

  being blown about in the slight breeze,

  what was all that racket in the trees?

  Boat-tailed grackles and white-winged doves.

  And in Houston in the park on a Sunday

  among the dragon kites and soccer balls

  and the families on picnics in the heat,

  not far from the Chapel of the Sacred Heart

  where Rothko had made that solemnity

  of stained glass windows for the suffering god

  in cardinal red and a sorrowing blue,

  what was louder than all the transistor radios?

  The hip-hop and mariachi? What was that racket in the trees?

  Boat-tailed grackles and white-winged doves.

  And in Waco in the riverside park along the Brazos

  where the city fathers might spend a little more money

  picking up the blown-about wrappers of fast food,

  even if it would constitute an activity of government,