Yet I would rather (you too, ghost?) have danced not alone, the word-dance, the rhyming remembering praises, the play of light and surrounding of darkness, feet pounding earth growing firm, resilient: rock in the sunlight planet in sunlight spirit in sunlight hand taking hand in the long dance by the edge of the Ocean.
I don’t think Le Guin had a poetry editor, otherwise this would have been a shorter collection. Some are so good, a flash of insight, an original thought, a lovely vision, mostly her nature poems, but many are strange, and not in a sci fi way she wrote in prose, but just odd and they don’t work and obscure the really good ones.
From my California, my great land of gold and complications, wilderness, enormous cities built on faults, austere, bizarre, and inexhaustible vineyards, valleys crowded with visions, to your Georgia of red dirt farms, where trees are all one green, a bony piny sandy silence, your Georgia of slow rivers, graves, islands, that quiet place, how could I come with all my California? I see them come with open hands, transparent, sharing everything, giving and cleaving, nothing kept, the emigrants that leave their motherland for love and never look behind. But if I would how could I give you California? and I have to live there, working the creeks my veins, the mines. Or could you leave Georgia, leaving your bones behind, and give me more than silence?
We met at sea, married in a foreign language: what wonder if we cross a continent on foot each time to find each other at secret borders bringing of all my streams and darknesses of gold and your deep graves and islands a feather a flake of mica a willow leaf that is our country, ours alone.
The way you can go isn’t the real way. The name you can say isn’t the real name. Heaven and earth begin in the unnamed: name’s the mother of the ten thousand things. So the unwanting soul sees what’s hidden, and the ever-wanting soul sees only what it wants. Two things, one origin, but different in name, whose identity is mystery. Mystery of all mysteries! The door to the hidden.
The smooth-skinned warm rosy quartz that sings the fingers a wonderful geology, this curving maiden came downstream from the snow before mad Columbus, maybe before canoes; she knows enough; so she curves over, blessing the ephemeral in the armless gesture of the sea-borne, the foam-mother.
My daughter’s soul sings three or four hours a day the young soul runs the scales and sings from string to string down the deep cello all down the valleys and whispers with the soul of Bach O and shouts aloud to God and I hear her
Arboreal
The family tree has not got back to trees yet; we uproot and move and lack the steady knowing what is good and living on it, that makes wood. Out of the root arises all the dance. He’s not yet born who will (O high ash-tree, O rowan fair red rowan on the hill) in flower whiten all the air, heir of the whole inheritance…
Smith Creek
Ripples of water quicken rippled mud. Ripples of light run downstream on opal-blue and brownish minnow-depths to flood in foam across a sunken branch. Mica in mud says Sun, staring and shining, but the creek ripples, goes forward, seaward, counting aloud the ten thousand things, carrying heaven downward.
Torrey Pines Reserve
Sandstone is softer than the salty wind; it crumbles, wrinkles, very old, vulnerable. Circles in the rock in hollows worn by ocean long ago. These are eyes that were his pearls. One must walk lightly; this is fragile. Hold to the thread of way. There’s narrow place for us in this high place between the still desert and the stillness of the sea. This gentle wilderness. The Torrey pines grow nowhere else on earth. Listen: you can hear the lizards listening.
My House
I have built a house in Time, my home province. Up in the hills not far from the city, it looks west over fields, vineyards, wild lands to the shore of the Eternal. Many years went to building it as I wanted it to be, the sleeping porches, the shady rooms, the inner gardens with their fountains. Above the front door, a word in a language as yet unknown may perhaps mean Praise. Windows are open to the summer air. In winter rain patters in the courtyards and in the basins of the fountains and gathers to drip from the deep eaves.
Kinship
Very slowly burning, the big forest tree stands in the slight hollow of the snow melted around it by the mild, long heat of its being and its will to be root, trunk, branch, leaf, and know earth dark, sun light, wind touch, bird song. Rootless and restless and warmblooded, we blaze in the flare that blinds us to that slow, tall, fraternal fire of life as strong now as in the seedling two centuries ago.
A Meditation in the Desert
As thought to mind, so to the string plucked, or touched, or bowed, the music is, a wrinkling of the air as immaterial and brief as sunlight glancing on a wave. The silence in these empty lands is long. Voice is as mortal as the word it says, with little time to speak the thought, to tell or sing the quick idea of those who live. So brief the spoken word, the airy thing in which are placed our deepest constancies, though by it love or life may stand or fall, and in it is the power to ruin or save. The silence in these empty lands is long. Rock has no tongue to speak or voice to sing, mute, heavy matter. Yet as I lift up this dull desert stone, the weight of it is full of slower, longer thoughts than mind can have. Be my mind, stone lying on my grave. The silence in these empty lands is long. The stars have long to listen. Be my song.