Authors: Gary Snyder
A
NKLE-DEEP IN
A
SHES
Ankle-deep gray muddy ash         sticky after rain
walking wet burnt forest floor
(one-armed mechanic working on a trailer-mounted generator
a little barbecue by a parked trailer,
grilling steak after ten hours checking out the diesels)
â we're clumping through slippery ashes to a sugar pine
â a planner from a private timber company
a fire expert from the State, a woman County Supervisor
a former Forest Service line officer, the regional District Ranger,
a businessman-scientist who managed early retirement and does good
deeds,
the superintendent of the county schools,
& the supervisor of one of the most productive public forests in the
country â
pretty high back in the mountains
after a long hot summer wildfire and a week of rain.
Drove here through miles of standing dead trees
gazed across the mountain valley,
the sweep of black snags with no needles,
stands of snags with burnt needles dangling,
patches of green trees that still look live.
They say the duff layers glowed for weeks as the fire sank down.
This noble sugar pine we came to see is green
seven feet dbh, “diameter at breast height”
first limb a hundred feet above.
The District Ranger chips four little notches
round the trunkbase, just above the ashy dust:
cambium layer dry and brown
cooked by the slow duff burn.
He says, “Likely die in three more years
but we will let it stand.”
I circumambulate it and invoke, “Good luck â long life â
Sarvamangalam
â I hope you prove him wrong”
pacing charred twigs crisscrossed on the ground.
(Field trip to the aftermath of the Star Fire, 5 November 2001)
W
INTER
A
LMOND
Tree over and down
its root-rot clear to the air, dirt tilted
trunk limbs and twiglets crashed
on my mother's driveway â her car's barricaded
up by the house â she called last night
“I can't get out”
I left at dawn â freezing and clear,
a scatter of light snow from last week still
little Stihl arborist's chainsaw (a thrasher)
canvas knapsack of saw gear
and head for town         fishtailing ice slicks
She's in the yard in a mustard knit hat and a shawl cerise
from her prize heap of woolens
from the world's Goodwills
The tree's rotten limbs and whippy sprouts both
in a damn near dead old frame
my mother eighty-seven (still drives)
worries the danger,
the snarl of the saw chases her into the house
in the fresh clear air I move with the limbs and the trunk
crash in a sequence and piled as it goes, so,
firewood rounds
here,
and the brushpile
there.
rake down the drive for the car â in three hours.
Inside where it's all too hot
drink chocolate and eat black bread with smoked oysters,
Lois goes over her memory of my jobs as a youth
that made me do this sort of work
when I'm really “So intellectual. But you always worked hard as a kid.”
She tells me a story: herself, seventeen, part-time clerk in a store
in Seattle, the boss called her in for a scolding.
“how come you shopped there?” â a competitor's place.
â her sister worked there (my Aunt Helen)
who could get her a discount as good
as what they had here.
The boss said “o.k. That's o.k. then,” and Lois said “also
it's time for a raise.” I asked did you get it?
“I did.”
So many hours at this chair
hearing tales of the years.
“I was skinny. So thin.”
With her great weight now.
“Thank you son for the tree.
You did it quick too.
The neighbors will say
He came right away.”
Well I needed a change.
A few rounds of sound almond wood â
maybe my craft friend Holly will want them
you won't be just firewood â a bowl or a salad fork
old down
almond tree
(1993)
M
ARIANO
V
ALLEJO
'
S
L
IBRARY
Mariano Vallejo's library
was the best in the Eastern Pacific
he was reading Rousseau, Voltaire
(some bought from the ship
Leonor
)
The Yankees arrived and he welcomed them
though they drove off his horses and cattle
then one year the Casa, books and all, burned to the ground.
The old adobe east of the Petaluma River still stands.
Silvery sheds in the pastures once were chicken-coops
the new box mansions march up the slope.
At my sister's
Empty Shell
book party some retired
chicken growers walked in cuddling favorite birds.
Vallejo taught vine-growing tricks to Charles Krug
and Agostin Haraszthy â the vineyards are everywhere
but the anarchist egg growers gone.
The bed of the Bay all shallowed by mining
preâice age Sierra dry riverbeds
upturned for gold and the stream gravel washed off by hoses
swept to the valley in floods.
Farmers lost patience, the miners are now gone too.
New people live in the foothills.
pine-pitch and dust, poison oak.
The barnyard fence shades jimson weed,
datura, toloache,
white trumpet flower, dark leaf.
The old ones from the world before taught care:
whoever's here, whatever language â
race, or century, be aware
that plant can scour your mind,
put all your books behind.
W
AITING FOR A
R
IDE
for Gary Holthaus
Standing at the baggage passing time:
Austin Texas airport â my ride hasn't come yet.
My former wife is making websites from her home,
one son's seldom seen,
the other one and his wife have a boy and girl of their own.
My wife and stepdaughter are spending weekdays in town
so she can get to high school.
My mother ninety-six still lives alone and she's in town too,
always gets her sanity back just barely in time.
My former former wife has become a unique poet;
most of my work,
such as it is                  is done.
Full moon was October second this year,
I ate a mooncake, slept out on the deck
white light beaming through the black boughs of the pine
owl hoots and rattling antlers,
Castor and Pollux rising strong
â it's good to know that the Pole Star drifts!
that even our present night sky slips away,
not that I'll see it.
Or maybe I will, much later,
some far time walking the spirit path in the sky,
“that long walk of spirits â where you fall right back into the
narrow painful passageway of the Bardo”
squeeze your little skull
and there you are again
waiting for your ride
(October 5, 2001)
IV
Steady, They Say
D
OCTOR
C
OYOTE
W
HEN
H
E
H
AD A
P
ROBLEM
Doctor Coyote when he had a problem
took a dump. On the grass, asked his turds where they lay
what to do? They gave him good advice.
He'd say “that's just what I thought too”
And do it.         And go his way.
C
LAWS
/ C
AUSE
for Zenshin
“Graph” is the claw-curve, carve â
grammar a         weaving
paw track, lizard-slither, tumble of
a single boulder down. Glacier scrapes across the bedrock,
wave-lines on the beach.
Saying, “this was me”
scat sign of time and mood and place
language is        breath, claw, or tongue
“tongue” with all its flickers
might be a word for
hot love, and               fate.
A single kiss               a tiny cause [claws]
â such grand effects [text].
H
OW
M
ANY
?
Australia, a group of girls at a corroboree
Lapland, reindeer herdgirls
China, the “yaktail”
Greece, the seven daughters, sisters,
or “the sailing stars”
a cluster of faint stars in Taurus,
the Pleiades,
name of a car in Japan â
“Subaru”
in Mayan â A fistful of boys â
L
OADS ON THE
R
OAD
Stu's stubby heavy tough old yellow dump truck
parked by his place          “For Sale”
he's fine, but times and people change.
Those loads of river-run and crushed blue mine rock
in our roadbed           Stu and me
standing talking            engine idling
those days gone now,
days to come.
C
ARWASH
T
IME
Looking at a gray-pine,
chunky fire-adapted cones
bunched toward the top,
a big tree there behind the tire shop
â I'm sitting on a low fence
while a wild gang does a benefit
wash-job on my daughter's car.
Tattooed and goateed white dudes,
brown and black guys,
I say “What you raising money for?”
â “The drug and alcohol halfway
house up the street”
old Ridge sedan
never been this neat
T
O
A
LL THE
G
IRLS
W
HOSE
E
ARS
I P
IERCED
B
ACK
T
HEN
for Maggie Brown Koller
(among others)
Sometimes we remember that moment:
you stood there attentive with clothespins
dangling, setting a bloodless dimple in each lobe
as I searched for a cork & the right-sized needle
& followed the quick pierce with a small gold hoop.
The only guy with an earring
back then
It didn't hurt that much
a sweetly earnest child
and a crazy country guy
with an earring and a
gray-green cast eye
and even then,
this poem.
S
HE
K
NEW
A
LL
A
BOUT
A
RT
She knew all about art â she was fragrant, soft,
I rode to her fine stone apartment, hid the bike in the hedge.
â We met at an opening, her lover was brilliant and rich,
first we would talk, then drift into long gentle love.
We always made love in the dark. Thirty years older than me.
C
OFFEE
, M
ARKETS
, B
LOSSOMS
My Japanese mother-in-law
born in America
tough with brokers
a smart trader
grew up working barefoot
in the Delta, on the farm.
Doesn't like Japan.
Sits in the early morning
by the window, coffee in hand,
gazing at cherry blossoms.
Jean Koda
needing no poem.
I
N THE
S
ANTA
C
LARITA
V
ALLEY
Like skinny wildweed flowers sticking up
hexagonal “Denny's” sign
starry “Carl's”
loopy “McDonald's”
eight-petaled yellow “Shell”
blue-and-white “Mobil” with a big red “O”
growing in the asphalt riparian zone
by the soft roar of the flow
of Interstate 5.
A
LMOST
O
KAY
N
OW
She had been in an accident: almost okay now,
but inside still recovering,
bones slow-healing â she was anxious
still fearful of cars and of men.
As I sped up the winding hill road
she shuddered â eyes beseeching me â
I slowed the car down.
Out on a high meadow under the moon,
With delicate guidance she showed me
how to make love without hurting her
and then napped awhile in my arms,
smell of sweet grass
warm night breeze
S
US
Two pigs in a pickup sailing down the freeway
stomping with the sway,
gaze back up the roadbed
on their last windy ride.
Big pink ears up          looking all around,
taut broad shoulders           trim little legs,
bright and lively with their parsnip-colored skin
wind-washed earth-diggers
snuffling in the swamps
they're not pork, they are forever
Sus:
breeze-braced and standing there,
velvet-dusty pigs.