Central Valley Sun

 

 

 

1.

 

Ceaseless fire-bathing

in the solar shine

since May:

 

Stagnant wallows of heat

have loitered on clay

to bake ceramic Sacramento.

 

Sniffing in the sun,

not quite lizard,

I read hot air

on a moist tongue.

 

It is with mirage

that I temper

each day.

With mirages.

 

 

2.

 

A boy scuffing in milkweed and dirt

swirls dust about his knees.

 

Cones of cinnamon-speckled

air rise up behind his stepping

 

like tissue paper thrown away

once the bouquets have been bestowed.

 

The legs of his pants are shucking kernels

of seed as he brushes

 

dried flyaway grass, whose rootedness

no longer matters. Clearly

 

he himself is only softly set

under these native skies

 

that rise so light above his head

to place the summer sun.

 

 

3.

 

Once midday has passed above,

all afternoon there comes a constant

buzzing from the earth.

Its well-established whisper

 

speaks accustomed tales of gravel

heaped against the Folsom foothills,

palladium-red hardpan laid to geologic rest,

delta-mellow vapors

 

rising to the cycle

till the gates of sinking gold

swing evening's respite into view.

One further day accumulates:

 

the dust of Sutter's mill

assayed and gilded

from a valley gone.

Voices of beloved dead

 

buzz too, and from the levee

leak the Yuba City floods of 1955

to sate the thirsty hops,

to soften and ferment our days of sun.

 

 

4.

 

Meager-floating dust accompanies

the boy; barbs of silver thistle

botanic wasps

 

at naked heelsare stabbing him.

Palms cupped with aqueous pollywogs,

a tap dance, bare charade of feet

 

stubbing muscle and mind

across dirt-clod fields.

Even asphalt patches pass along

 

golden weedy smells

of nostril and nostalgia,

dual demigods of summers past.

 

 

Richard Hacken