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	<title>Zócalo Public SquareStanzas to Those Just Arriving &#8211; Zócalo Public Square</title>
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		<title>Stanzas to Those Just Arriving</title>
		<link>https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org/2018/04/20/stanzas-just-arriving/chronicles/poetry/</link>
		<comments>https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org/2018/04/20/stanzas-just-arriving/chronicles/poetry/#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Apr 2018 07:01:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>By Rae Gouirand</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poem]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org/?p=93295</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Once in autumn’s ease date palm branches<br /> swung over my back, sugars creamed inside their skins—<br /> I’d never have guessed owls would nest in<br /> anything called the <i>phoenix</i>, that we’d practice confessions<br /> watching their shapes come and go on the way out<br /> to prey. But night hung beautifully and<br /> time practiced meaningless phrases. These I didn’t pick<br /> but pitted for us, amber in their red skins, so syrupy<br /> and rich. Somehow they crystallize both heaviness and light— across, some grapes, an heirloom kind from which<br /> dessert wines, those spheres on their stems<br /> the fattest obviates. What readiness beckons, what<br /> (I search for the word—) prescience. In each grape<br /> the rooted vine, its milk vein, its expectation.<br /> Its area of defense &#038; the tense of its fear. Against others<br /> it makes its edge in time and light—its terrain comes<br /> of tongue and fit pierced. Each joins &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org/2018/04/20/stanzas-just-arriving/chronicles/poetry/">&lt;i&gt;Stanzas to Those Just Arriving&lt;/i&gt;</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org">Zócalo Public Square</a>.</p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Once in autumn’s ease date palm branches<br />
swung over my back, sugars creamed inside their skins—<br />
I’d never have guessed owls would nest in<br />
anything called the <i>phoenix</i>, that we’d practice confessions<br />
watching their shapes come and go on the way out<br />
to prey. But night hung beautifully and<br />
time practiced meaningless phrases. These I didn’t pick<br />
but pitted for us, amber in their red skins, so syrupy<br />
and rich. Somehow they crystallize both heaviness and light—</p>
<p>across, some grapes, an heirloom kind from which<br />
dessert wines, those spheres on their stems<br />
the fattest obviates. What readiness beckons, what<br />
(I search for the word—) prescience. In each grape<br />
the rooted vine, its milk vein, its expectation.<br />
Its area of defense &#038; the tense of its fear. Against others<br />
it makes its edge in time and light—its terrain comes<br />
of tongue and fit pierced. Each joins and leaves the terroir<br />
as is its vision, weighing its final collection, its ripened<br />
arc. We cannot finish the inscription on the fence, only<br />
these thinning skins. One plunges the harvest to drown the earwigs—</p>
<p>here our pistachios, freed of their reddening husks, dried<br />
on shallow pans on the grass then boiled a bit<br />
in heavily salted water and dried again for splitting. Botanically,<br />
they’re drupes, and until ripe the shells pop almost<br />
as bubble wrap, release a scent like the bloom of a citrus—</p>
<p>the walnut is similarly laborious. There at the base<br />
of its visibly grafted trunk one stoops for fallen nuts that have<br />
rolled under bushes, rubs off the hulls which shred<br />
into black bloom before freeing the shell, airdrying<br />
a few days until the kernel is brittle, cracks only later—<br />
so often worms in the nutmeat after all that.<br />
Why you will count only five laid out.</p>
<p>Walking on olives olives split. Sometimes<br />
one just has to work it out over a bucket with lemons<br />
and salt, some knobs of garlic, and a bundle of bay emitting<br />
its eugenol message. The word buttery throws me—<br />
the center I seek is straight green, that quality<br />
they call peppery. A plane taking off. Crows. Forget<br />
what we’ve said about crows—past the cactus there is<br />
a ranch. Past the ranch a road sign and then<br />
everything narrows, becomes dirt. Every face nicked<br />
with precision to draw its bitterness out. The green<br />
and purple and black all gradations of the same.<br />
Have you ever tasted an olive straight off the tree?<br />
Sometimes it is time to divorce yourself.</p>
<p>From the ziziphus family, the thorny shade tree of the jujube<br />
releases what tastes at summer’s end like crisp green<br />
apple and closer to winter like baked apple while transitioning<br />
from glossy to mottled to full purplish-brown. Often<br />
smoked or dried for tea, eaten with coffee or brandied,<br />
I hear a relative is mentioned in the Qu’ran, that in Japan<br />
a style of nightlight is fashioned after them. I usually chop mine<br />
into stuffing where they are overpowered by aromatics,<br />
by onion and celery and mushroom, by the rowdy sugars<br />
in the meal of corn. But aren’t they pretty.</p>
<p>On the pickled seckel pears you must allow me a story.<br />
It’s always a house up the coast in my stories. Sometimes<br />
accuracy is all we need—part of what I love about these houses<br />
is there’s always something waiting. I was the first to arrive<br />
of the three who were convening and there it was, this platter<br />
covered in several kinds of local cheese, honey-spiced nuts,<br />
black pepper crisps, a golden raisin mostarda,<br />
and these perfectly creepy-looking tiny pear things, all<br />
laid out with a hand-carved wooden knife wedged between.<br />
I stood there staring. It was the most definitive thing.<br />
I wanted to put the knife in my mouth and impress<br />
my teeth. There’s an etiquette to not digging in,<br />
but the pears were the sole homemade piece and<br />
on the card there was this little heart. I think<br />
they taste like remembering and forgetting. I just used<br />
apple cider vinegar and plain sugar, salt, cinnamon<br />
sticks, star anise, and some cloves. You’ll see. </p>
<p>And in the valleys, winding between: a chunk of honey<br />
spilling out of its wax, a crumbling cheese and<br />
a running one, some salted meat, a dense cake of pounded fig<br />
and almond, some grainy mustard, some rosehips<br />
just because they’re lovely, the pickled stems of a chard<br />
I pulled, a lone flower clipped from the orange tree,<br />
and a scattering of larger caperberries, calendula petals’<br />
sparks, an unlikely ring of glowing currants<br />
balanced on a bed of mountain sage, a gooseberry husk,<br />
a dish of candied cherries dark in their syrup, a couple<br />
of poached prunes, sourdough sliced neat<br />
though we tear bread in this house—and in that corner<br />
where the eye begins its wandering, please imagine<br />
an invitation to help yourselves voiced by this<br />
gorgeous nasturtium believed to have migrated over<br />
from the neighbors, though we’re uncertain.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org/2018/04/20/stanzas-just-arriving/chronicles/poetry/">&lt;i&gt;Stanzas to Those Just Arriving&lt;/i&gt;</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://legacy.zocalopublicsquare.org">Zócalo Public Square</a>.</p>
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