on the mud-green bay;

  a curving wake,

  and pale sides fingered

  by vigilant sunbeams.

  All around

  stood the dark

  double wall

  of hill and cloud,

  except to the west,

  where one breach was bound

  only by the horizon and the curling reach of a last futile cape.

  The End of Nature

  Today the wind cleared the beach of humans

  though there were crowds of stranded crabs

  and devalued sand dollars leaned against rotting coils of kelp

  and everywhere opalescent shrapnel of battered armor.

  Ravens kited a yard above the sand, bored, eyeing the selection of trash.

  Sanderlings and willets were subdued but busy by the water’s edge,

  heads down, working the curves of deep embayments torn by surf.

  A couple of dog walkers with their beasts

  one free spirit with a red sail on strings and a three-wheeled go-cart

  exploiting the gale and the depopulated strand – that was the human factor.

  And me, black-hooded, sucking wind and sand and grit of Asia’s palled cities

  and salt leached out of the old planet, ears aching with cold.

  A black freighter skated the dark horizon, bent for the Gate.

  It seemed the edge of the world, but not, after all, its end,

  despite the bears said to be drowning beyond that same horizon.

  The wind today was too personal, the birds’ stabbing

  for the fugitive life beneath the beach too intent.

  And behind the dunes, the city, silenced by the gale,

  for today at least too meek.

  Toward Mission Bay

  Out of the tunnel, into the dawn.

  High above, the bridge,

  untrafficked and old,

  and fair weather clouds furling

  like fresh sheets on a line.

  Below, on the bay,

  the black freighters doze.

  The slope of water climbs away

  to the sill of the world, where one

  tall dark ship is perched.

  Eight sails, lazy curves loose

  and shivering in a light breeze.

  She moves with leaden calm,

  hull down with unseen cargo.

  I have two fellow travelers today,

  one coughing like an April bear,

  the other squabbling on her cell.

  Outside, no one; or no one

  substantial. The tide is out,

  the world strewn with shells

  of piers and sagging houses.

  Someone walked away

  and left a drawbridge raised,

  a turnstile open to the glare

  off the bay, where the dark

  ship still glides, backed by hills

  that would be green in another light.

  We three, though far from content,

  stay glued to our seats:

  the anxious little cult

  of the living, rolling south

  toward our personal stops.

  Above us, a sky so high

  the earth seems to ride low,

  packed to the railings with

  her ex-billions and burdened

  with all the time in the world.

  Native Planting

  On red eroded dust

  100 tiny green flags flapping

  in a cold wind

  their hundred wiry feet

  jabbed in the heads

  of 100 hopeful graves.

  100 shivering witnesses

  appealing to the past

  100 fluttering prayers

  flying up over the hilltop

  and off to the west.

  In the cold evening wind

  100 solo hands clapping.

  Surf

  The Farallons today are a low

  hulk adrift in hazy sun, half

  below the world’s blue-black hump,

  just one ship among the many

  sliding down toward Asia.

  Below this cliff the sea is

  spangled with floating black

  ninjas, their boards up-angled

  like sharks’ jaws, waiting.

 

  But this morning

  all they do is wait.

  From here I see

  no rear and crash of surf

  but just a slow fall

  and rise. The surfers ride

  that deep breathing

  like well-fed babes,

  too near sleep to try

 

  the patience of this day.

  Those Autumn Leaves...

  Maybe guessing they don’t belong

  cherry trees blush flame

  in December. But one night’s rain

  will send their leaves

  to the street, and a breeze

  soon sails them away.

  Tannic shadows stain

  where that radiance fell

  on wet concrete; downslope

  their borders fail and free

  these thoughts to tail off

  to nowhere.

  Life History

  The clouds are busy this workday,

  commuting over bay and hills,

  riding a wind they barely feel.

  They look real, like pale flesh,

  proud bellies solid

  as the ridges they run.

  But the air moves through them

  as though nothing were there.

  And they are nothing

  but where a part of the sky cares

  to show itself.

  All day long

  the clouds bulk and loom as though

  the light were their own.

  Sunset lends a final glow;

  then they wither and die.

  In the dark, unseen, the sky

  continues on its way.

  City Plane Trees

  City dawn under a dirty

  manmade cloud.

  The wind clears its throat

  dragging sheets of cardboard

  over tainted streets.

  A trolley groans

  on a rising pitch

  toward the dark hills

  past bodies sprawled

  in their own puddles

  in random doorways

  and casual middens.

  Above it all

  a haughty little moon.

  So unlike the clean break

  in desert country: the still

  mountains topped with sun

  pines silent and straight

  feet deep in the pure pumice

  of old extinctions.

  But I will praise these

  twisted city plane trees

  condemned to concrete and

  too tall for their sparse crowd

  of desiccated leaves

  that cackle in the dawn wind,

  counting on some tomorrow.

  Hawk Politics 2011

  Never let them get above you

  is the tribal lore.

  Keep an eye turned to the sky.

  But this day that started softly

  now has a hard stare. White air

  and dark needles in the corners

  of my vision, and just below

  my feet the rough branch

  I can’t reach, and don’t need,

  being firmly gripped. The harsh

  intimacy of the natural

  squeezing out my last few

  difficult breaths. Crows, feigning

  concern, bottom out in black

  parabolas, and vanish

  up into gray rolls of cloud,

  over and over, screaming

  their own agenda.

  Why must this take so long?

  This knowledge hung in the glare

  waiting, as though there were

  a proper moment to be eate
n.

  Puffs of useless feathers

  flutter down the wind.

  I suppose we pigeons

  should be grateful

  just to be needed.

  The Hero You Will Always Have With You

  Even the wolverine can be discredited

  if the dry season lasts too long.

  Everywhere he looks

  the hapless little snacks have holed up

  and circumstances might even force him

  to leave a foot or toe in some trap.

  In the silence we may think he’s gone

  or turned cuddly.

  But he’ll be back

  lifting like the low hull

  of a long black ship

  over the white horizon

  behind him the trail of looted nests

  torn meat and blots of red ink on snow

  boarded windows vacant lots

  curling tails of smoke

  from burning cities.

  And always the next

  rosy-fingered dawn

  in the quiet business district

  before the morning rush.

  His glittering gaze turning

  this way and that.

  Grocery Run

  I had low hopes

  for this routine stroll

  whole wheat rolls

  in a paper sack

  but the wind surprised me

  scrawling as always

  its first thought

  down Market Street

  clatter of leaves

  and the coverlet of fog

  for once turned back

  all the way to the hills

  freed the sun to impose

  its evening rules

  on a clean vacant lot.

  In This Economy

  Construction interrupted,

  raw excavations fill

  with runoff, surprisingly pure.

  For a time, sunlight ripples

  on their sandy floors;

  spores blow in from somewhere

  and worlds are born.

  In a few days they peak,

  and flourish a few more:

  green cultures occupy

  warming seas, confidently

  mutate, and then die

  when the final drops

  decamp and drift away.

  After which, dust and sun,

  a curling page of fossils

  shadowed by idle cranes.

  Street Tree

  Our tree is always busy

  buckling the pavement

  and dropping deadfalls

  on sidewalk and street.

  I fear for its fate –

  in our knotty age

  patience is a thin bark,

  easily breached.

  But its high crown is a cloud

  in dust green, never quite still,

  a restless crowd browsing the sky.

  And when I pass by before dawn,

  in the dark, condemning the rain

  or the street’s debris, I know the tree

  will be there, whispering to itself,

  and sometimes to a Cheshire moon,

  of its own affairs:

  the secret findings of its roots

  and diversions of the air.

  ####

 
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