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Returning Native

What can you say about Pennsylvania

in regard to New England except that

it is slightly less cold, and less rocky,

or rather that the rocks are different?

Redder, and gritty, and piled up here and there,

whether as glacial moraine or collapsed springhouse

is not easy to tell, so quickly

are human efforts bundled back into nature.

 

In fall, the trees turn yellower-

hard maple, hickory, and oak

give way to tulip poplar, black walnut,

and locust. The woods are overgrown

with wild-grape vines, and with greenbrier

spreading its low net of anxious small claws.

In warm November, the mulching forest floor

smells like a rotting animal.

 

A genial pulpiness, in short: the sky

is soft with haze and paper-gray

even as the sun shines, and the rain

falls soft on the shoulders of farmers

while the children keep on playing,

their heads of hair beaded like spider webs.

A deep-dyed blur softens the bleak cities

whose people palaver in prolonged vowels.

 

There is a secret here, some death-defying joke

the eyes, the knuckles, the bellies imply-

a suet of consolation fetched straight

from the slaughterhouse and hung out

for chickadees to peck in the lee of the spruce,

where the husks of sunflower seeds

and the peace-signs of bird feet crowd

the snow that barely masks the still-green grass.

 

I knew that secret once, and have forgotten.

The death-defying secret-it rises

toward me like a dog's gaze, loving

but bewildered. When winter sits cold and black

slumped between its two polluted rivers,

warmth's shadow leans close to the wall

and gets the cement to deliver a kiss.

j
Written by
John Updike
1932-2009 / American
Lines·Words
39·269
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