b2
Ex Member
|
Autumn in California Kenneth Rexroth from Penguin Modern Poets 9 Penguin Books, 1967, p.49
Autumn in California is a mild And anonymous season, hills and valleys Are colorless then, only the sooty green Eucalyptus, the conifers and oaks sink deep Into the haze; the fields are plowed, bare, waiting; The steep pastures are tracked by the cattle; There are no flowers, the herbage is brittle. All night along the coast and the mountain crests Birds go by, murmurous, high in the warm air. Only in the mountain meadows the aspens Glitter like goldfish moving up swift water; Only in the desert villages the leaves Of the cottonwoods descend in smoky air. Once more I wander in the warm evening Calling the heart to order and the stiff brain To passion. I should be thinking of dreaming, loving, dying, Beauty wasting through time like draining blood, And me alone in all the world with pictures Of pretty women and constellations. But I hear the clocks in Barcelona strike at dawn And the whistles blowing for noon in Nanking. I hear the drone, the snapping high in the air Of planes fighting, the deep reverberant Grunts of bombardment, the hasty clamor Of anti-aircraft. In Nanking at the first bomb, A moon-faced, willowy young girl runs into the street, Leaves her rice bowl spilled and her children crying, And stands stiff, cursing quietly, her face raised to the sky. Suddenly she bursts like a bag of water, And then as the blossom of smoke and dust diffuses, The walls topple slowly over her. I hear the voices Young, fatigued and excited, of two comrades In a closed room in Madrid. They have been up All night, talking of trout in the Pyrenees, Spinoza, old nights full of riot and sherry, Women they might have had or almost had, Picasso, Velasquez, relativity. The candlelight reddens, blue bars appear In the cracks of the shutters, the bombardment Begins again as though it had never stopped, The morning wind is cold and dusty, Their furloughs are over. They are shock troopers, They may not meet again. The dead light holds In impersonal focus the patched uniforms, The dog-eared copy of Lenin's Imperialism, The heavy cartridge belt, holster and black revolver butt. The moon rises late over Mt. Diablo, Huge, gibbous, warm; the wind goes out, Brown fog spreads over the bay from the marshes, And overhead the cry of birds is suddenly Loud, wiry, and tremulous.
|