Grandfather

Porch Wisdom

Grandfather had many personal theories
On deer, on soil, weather and human relationships
These were seeds he would toss onto the fields of our young minds
The truth was amorphous, it was deeper than fact, he would say

On deer, on farming, weather and human relationships
Long evenings on the porch were his natural home
The truth was amorphous, it was deeper than fact, he would say
The sweetness of his cherry pipe stained my plaid shirts

Long evenings on the porch were his natural home
The bible, his journal and a stack of old field guides beside him
The sweetness of his cherry pipe stained my plaid shirts
His eyes re-reading the clouds

The bible, his journal, and a stack of old field guides beside him
Each day he’d present some new riddle
His eyes re-reading the clouds
When you have a fever, the depths become shallow and the shallows become deep

Each day he’d present some new riddle
A stone tossed into the pond, a barn swallow surfing the evening air
When you have a fever, the depths become shallow and the shallows become deep
When you are little, you don’t yet know the world, but you know the soul

A stone tossed into the pond, a barn swallow surfing the evening air
When we are little, seven or eight or so,
We don’t yet know the world, but we know the soul
We want little more than to smell that cherry tobacco in the humid summer evening air

Street Life de la Ciudad de Mexico

I am writing from the centuries-old Mexico City.  I forget that it is still March.  The word from New York is that it is snowing and this news seems surreal, for it is what I know as summer here - seventy five degrees and the occasional thundershower. 

What has struck me most about this city is the abundance of street life - plants, vendors and pedestrians flow in endless rivers.  The neighborhood I am staying in, Condesa, is full of narrow streets canopied with thick green trees.  (Words are coming slowly to me as I have been thinking almost entirely in spanish while I am here - as I write 'narrow streets' my mind thinks 'calle estrecho.´)

In a city that is new to us, we are children, young children, with hungry minds.  The streets, the design of buildings, the social behaviors on buses and subways, the unfamiliar or less familiar words, all feed the mind with endless fresh experience.  Sleep is filled with dramatic and colorful and strange dreams.  Old characters and settings are drudged up.  One feels as if one is being reborn.