I originally wrote this first poem years ago and have revised it so many times since that it gives me a headache to think about. It's the time of year here when plants begin to grow inches a day, and so this morning, passing our nearby strawberry field, seeing how big the plants suddenly are, and wondering with watering mouth when the first strawberries would be ready, I decided to share my thoughts on the matter.
Between the Rows
1.
A tall pole rose in my
grandparents' back yard, its finial a two-story,
multiple-room purple marten
house Grandpa built. From the grass’s edge,
Grandpa’s strawberry vines trailed
down the bank toward the woods. Mom
preserved their summer sweetness
in jam we spread on toast
to warm us on Pennsylvania winter
mornings. My own efforts,
while my sons napped, rarely made
it to Fresno’s foggy winters.
I lack patience, and when a
batch appeared promising,
the paraffin failed to seal.
2.
Clouds of pink and white blossoms
billow in the orchards
that line the road we follow
east toward the Sierra Nevada
foothills rising in gray-green
mounds. Through the open windows
the breeze whispers of almonds,
peaches, nectarines,
plums, apricots. My sons, the
older turned to his brother
in the back, chat of clubs and
hopes, for it’s Hank's-Swank-
Par-Three day of the Fresno Junior
Golf Tournament, which means
it is also first-flat-of-strawberries
day. After the boys' rounds
we pull off to a crude roadside
stand, swirling dust behind us.
Between the rows that stretch to
the vanishing point
stoop Hmong families, grandpas
and grandmas in conical hats,
women in colorful print and
striped wrap skirts and blouses,
children in t-shirts and jeans. We
study the mounded flats of fruit,
pay for the twelve green plastic
baskets of the chosen one, lift it
from the wooden counter and settle
it like royalty in the center
of the back seat. Now, my sons
and I gather green leaves
with our fingers, open our
mouths to the crimson flesh
and are anointed by the moist
sweetness of spring.
3.
Like giant gray-green feather
dusters, cypress line our narrow
country lane in the middle of
the city, crows calling from the tops
that they see the Sierras. It is
July, and we move, in a parade
of friends, wheels, and
belongings four houses down the street
to our new home. I plant
strawberries, but birds and sow bugs
usually find the small fruit before
I. Our sons’ bedrooms cannot fit
two beds, and sometimes,
unprepared for separation,
one drags his mattress to the
other’s room for a sleepover.
4.
For three decades since Vietnam,
tens of thousands of Hmong have arrived here,
in California's Central Valley,
whose flat aridity contradicts
the humid heights of their
Laotian mountain past. But they’ve been expelled
from one land and another and
another, for centuries. In the nurturing
of strawberries, they wed ancient
culture to new surroundings, and strawberries
do not despise them for being
Hmong. My teen students, some born
in Thai refugee camps, some in
America, tell me their grandparents chide them
for not speaking Hmong well.
“But Grandma speaks so fast, I can't understand.”
5.
It's long since I've driven to
Hank's Swank Par Three, drawn by the Sierras
down the road between the rows of blossoms. In this new town
with my new husband, the jagged Southern Sierras swell
what soul I may have. I begin to allow my feet to rest on the ground
of this dry valley that has claimed me. In early spring
on the corner down the street, green plants poke through
black plastic and trail down the sides of rows that stretch
to the wood fence. One day the Hmong man opens
the shutters of the wood stand to crimson-mounded flats:
it is time again to be anointed with spring’s sweetness.
down the road between the rows of blossoms. In this new town
with my new husband, the jagged Southern Sierras swell
what soul I may have. I begin to allow my feet to rest on the ground
of this dry valley that has claimed me. In early spring
on the corner down the street, green plants poke through
black plastic and trail down the sides of rows that stretch
to the wood fence. One day the Hmong man opens
the shutters of the wood stand to crimson-mounded flats:
it is time again to be anointed with spring’s sweetness.
—Marilyn Riddle Harper
Sister, you astound me with your memories and observations. What a beautiful picture you have worded.
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