Spirit in the Sky



It's a pile of rock,
a mound 12-feet high,
15-stones that fitted so,
placed just so, sure
but why? &why

'The Spirit of the Lima Bean'?
raised above the long illusions
of plateau and meandering canal
on a tessellated floor. Dry sandstone
recalls the sweeping vistas once proud
Californios must have known, at least
as well as their horses knew the contours
of the valley lands by the grass winds
and pollen blown; by salt-scented loam
and sea spray tossed in the off-shore breeze.

It was one of the brightest spots
to be found in all our bright land
John Muir said of that, still most wilderness,
the smooth brown bosom of the Valley,
is what he said he found.

Here and there, along with their conceits,
he saw little towns baked in tired argument,
their petty differences white and brown where
shingle and adobe met, priest and pioneer
had once contended.

While all else slept, then and now
would draw the same breath
from the same mountain air.
He looked at the sky, he said,
and to the garden lands as well;
the rest was just a checkerboard affair -
scant preview
of things to come whence idyll ends
and, soon enough, the new barbarity begins.

That is what he said he found, and we'll
take him at his word; so much blood
was buried by then. It was 1877
and there was little left of those affairs,
little point to wonder why no thatch
or long-pole settlement, no hovel, mud
or such, nor the grog shops of San Gabriel
nor pueblito sinkholes troubled his landscape
with their abject cries to the gardens of the sky.

The Chumash, Serrano, Gabrieleno,
are not even mentioned in his catalog
of semi-barbarous civility - They do not
appear at all, stewards from another time,
another year among the brightest of places
he embraced for its exuberant wholeness.
By then, they had all but disappeared, all
hundred and thirty-thousand of them, all
but a handful that stooped here and there
to pick a little cotton, corn or bean or an
orange, sweet-bitter orange that blessed
his bright wilderness, Oh Wilderness, swept clean.

Now the office workers file by, seen
through curious garden eye, homage
to the spirit of the lowly bean. Nothing
in that plaza stands still where the
shadow of the passerby makes
its escape by some slant geometry
beyond the walls, the hills, the Valley.
For, say, the spirit will not rest there
in the noonday still, will not stay
among those who come and go
along the way. Do they ever stop
to ask themselves, why?

"Milk and honey, and plenty of money,"
Dr. Conger said to Muir. Among
the olive, walnut, lemon and orange -
even the banana with its dark comb leaf -
but above all, the orange; sweet and lucrative
the night air becomes to those who can afford
to wait, and corn. But, not a whisper
of the little bean, torn, just so, from some
unknown and more bitter, transitory plate.

There was once a wilderness here, too. Once,
even here, beneath these shimmering glass falls
all the sky was open to view, with little need
for walls' disguise, the lima left to fable on the
tables of Peru. Enough here to gather and hunt,
some pretty damn big canoes, and plenty
of shell-beads to go around; don't kid yourself,
long before Alta California , commerce was
a lively game in town and down around the
Santa Anna river, the boys would whoop
it up and bury their dead beneath the ground.

They are not fit like the ancient concourse
stones that abut in perfect surface on the slopes
of terraced Inca farms. Rather, segmented,
open and articulate as though, a moment more,
a leaf will open above the semi-arid plain,
its root will show and bur into the vastness
of this California Scenario; yes, beans
will grow. Yes, and plenty of money flows.






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