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Robinson Jeffers - The Loving ShepherdessRobinson Jeffers - The Loving Shepherdess
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I The little one-room schoolhousc among the redwoods Opened its door, a dozen children ran out And saw on the narrow road between the dense trees A persona girl by the long light-colored hair: The torn brown cloak that she wore might be a man`s Or woman`s either-walking hastily northward Among a huddle of sheep. Her thin young face Seemed joyful, and lighted from inside, and formed Too finely to be so wind-burnt. As she went forward One or another of the trotting sheep would turn Its head to look at her face, and one would press Its matted shoulder against her moving thigh. The schoolchildren stood laughing and shouting together. "Who`s that?" "Clare Walker," they said, "down from the hill. She`d fifty sheep and now she`s got eight, nine, Ten: what have you done with all the others, Clare Walker?" The joy that had lived in her face died, she yet Went on as if she were deaf, with forward eyes And lifted head, but the delicate lips moving. The jeering children ran in behind her, and the sheep Drew nervously on before, except the old ram, That close at her side dipped his coiled horns a little But neither looked back nor edged forward. An urchin shouted "You killed your daddy, why don`t you kill your sheep?" And a fat girl, "Oh where`s your lover, Clare Walker? He didn`t want you after all."                                               The patriarch ram That walked beside her wore a greasy brown bundle Tied on his back with cords in the felt of wool, And one of the little boys, running by, snatched at it So that it fell. Clare bent to gather it fallen, And tears dropped from her eyes. She offered no threat With the bent staff of rosy-barked madrone-wood That lay in her hand, but said "Oh please, Oh please," As meek as one of her ewes. An eight-year-old girl Shrilled, "Whistle for the dogs, make her run like a cat, Call your dog, Charlie Geary!" But a brown-skinned Spanish-Indian boy came forward and said, "You let her alone. They`ll not hurt you, Clare Walker. Don`t cry, I`ll walk beside you." She thanked him, still crying. Four of the children, who lived southward, turned back; The rest followed more quietly.                                                   The black-haired boy Said gently, "Remember to keep in the road, Clare Walker. There`s enough grass. The ranchers will sick their dogs on you If you go into the pastures, because their cows Won`t eat where the sheep have passed; but you can walk Into the woods." She answered, "You`re kind, you`re kind. Oh yes, I always remember." The small road dipped Under the river when they`d come down the hill, A shallow mountain river that Clare skipped over By stone after stone, the sheep wading beside her. The friendly boy went south to the farm on the hill, "good-by, good-by," and Clare with her little flock Kept northward among great trees like towers in the river-valley. Her sheep sidled the path, snifHng The bitter sorrel, lavender-flowering in shade, and the withered ferns. Toward evening they found a hollow Of autumn grass. II                           Clare laughed and was glad, she undid the bundle from the ram`s back And found in the folds a battered metal cup and a broken loaf. She shared her bread with the sheep, A morsel for each, and prettily laughing Pushed down the reaching faces. "Piggies, eat grass. Leave me the crust, Tiny, I can`t eat grass. Nosie, keep off. Here Frannie, here Frannie." One of the ewes came close and stood to be milked, Clare stroked The little udders and drank when the cup filled, and filled it again and drank, dividing her crust With the milch ewe; the flock wandered the glade, nibbling white grass. There was only one lamb among them, The others had died in the spring storm.                                                                 The light in the glade suddenly increased and changed, the hill High eastward began to shine and be rosy-colored, and bathed in so clear a light that up the bare hill Each clump of yucca stood like a star, bristling sharp rays; while westward the spires of the giant wood Were strangely tall and intensely dark on the layered colors of the winter sundown; their blunt points touched The high tender blue, their heads were backed by the amber, the thick-branched columns Crossed flaming rose. Then Clare with the flush Of the solemn and glad sky on her face went lightly down to the river to wash her cup; and the flock Fed on a moment before they looked up and missed her. The ewe called Frannie had gone with Clare, and the others Heard Frannie`s hooves on the crisp oak-leaves at the edge of the glade. They followed, bleating, and found their mistress On the brink of the stream, in the clear gloom of the wood, and nipped the cresses from the water. Thence all returning Lay down together in the glade, but Clare among them Sat combing her hair, with a gap-toothed comb brought from the bundle. The evening deepened, the thick blonde strands Hissed in the comb and glimmered in the brown twilight, Clare began weeping, full of sorrow for no reason As she had been full of happiness before. She braided her hair and pillowed her head on the bundle; she heard The sheep breathing about her and felt the warmth of their bodies, through the heavy fleeces.                                                         In the night she moaned And bolted upright. "Oh come, come, Come Fern, come Frannie, Leader and Saul and Tiny, We have to go on," she whispered, sobbing with fear, and stood With a glimmer in her hair among the sheep rising. The halved moon had arisen clear of the hill, And touched her hair, and the hollow, in the mist from the river, was a lake of whiteness. Clare stood wreathed with her flock And stared at the dark towers of the wood, the dream faded away from her mind, she sighed and fondled The frightened foreheads. "Lie down, lie down darlings, we can`t escape it." But after that they were restless And heard noises in the night nil dawn. They rose in the quivering Pale clearness before daylight, Clare milked her ewe, The others feeding drifted across the glade Like little clouds at sunrise wandering apart; She lifted up the madrone-wood staff and called them. "Fay, Fern, Oh Frannie. Come Saul. Leader and Tiny and Nosie, we have to go on." They went to the stream and then returned to the road And very slowly went north, nibbling the margin Bushes and grass, tracking the tender dust With numberless prints of oblique crossings and driftings. They came to Fogler`s place and two ruffian dogs Flew over the fence: Clare screaming "Oh, Oh, Oh, Oh," An inarticulate wildbird cry, brandishing The staff but never striking, stood out against them, That dashed by her, and the packed and trembling ball Of fleeces rolling into the wood was broken. The sheep might have been torn there, some ewe or the lamb Against the great foundations of the trees, but Fogler Ran shouting over the road after his dogs And drove them home. Clare gathered her flock, the sobbing Throats and the tired eyes, "Fay, Fern, Oh Frannie, Come Leader, come little Hornie, come Saul"; and Fogler: "You ought to get a good dog to help take care of them." He eyed curiously her thin young face, Pale parted lips cracked by the sun and wind, And then the thin bare ankles and broken shoes. "Are you Clare Walker? I heard that you`d gone away: But you`re Clare Walker, aren`t you?" "We had a dog," She said, "a long time ago but he went away. There, Nosie. Poor Frannie. There. These poor things Can find their food, but what could I keep a dog with? But that was some years ago." He said, "Are these all? They`re all gathered? I heard you`d thirty or forty." Then hastily, for he saw the long hazel eyes Filling with tears, "Where are you going, Clare Walker? Because I think it will rain in a week or two, You can`t sleep out then." She answered with a little shudder, "Wherever I go this winter will be all right. I`m going somewhere next April." Fogler stood rubbing His short black beard, then dropped his hand to scratch The ram`s forehead by the horns but Saul drew away. And Fogler said: "You`re too young and too pretty To wander around the country like this. I`d ask you to come here when it rains, but my wife . . . And how could I keep the sheep here?" "Ah, no," she answered, "I couldn`t come back." "Well, wait," he said, "for a minute, Until I go to the house. Will you wait, Clare? I`ll tie up the dogs. I`ve got some biscuit and things . . ." He returned with a sack of food, and two old shoes A little better than Clare`s. She sat on a root; He knelt before her, fumbling the knotted laces Of those she had on, and she felt his hands tremble. His wife`s shoes were too short for the slender feet. When the others Had been replaced, Fogler bent suddenly and kissed Clare`s knee, where the coat had slipped back. He looked at her face, His own burning, but in hers nor fear nor laughter, Nor desire nor aversion showed. He said "good-by," And hurried away.                             Clare travelled northward, and sometimes Half running, more often loitering, and the sheep fed. In the afternoon she led them into the willows, And choosing a green pool of the shallow stream Bathed, while the sheep bleated to her from the shoals. They made a pleasant picture, the girl and her friends, in the green shade Shafted with golden light falling through the alder branches. Her body, the scarecrow garments laid by, Though hermit-ribbed and with boyishly flattened flanks hardly a woman`s, Was smooth and flowing, glazed with bright water, the shoulders and breasts beautiful, and moved with a rapid confidence That contradicted her mind`s abstractions. She laughed aloud and jetted handfuls of shining water At the sheep on the bank; the old ram stood blinking with pleasure, shaking his horns. But after a time Clare`s mood Was changed, as if she thought happiness must end. She shivered and moved heavily out of the stream And wept on the shore, her hands clasping her ankles, Her face bowed on her knees, her knotted-up coils Of citron-colored hair loosening. The ewe That she called Nosie approached behind her and pressed Her chin on the wet shoulder; Clare turned then, moaning, And drew the bony head against the soft breasts. "Oh what will you do," she whispered laughing and sobbing, "When all this comes to an end?"                                                     She stood and stroked off The drops of water, and dressed hastily. They went On farther; now there was no more forest by the road, But open fields. The river bent suddenly westward And made a pond that shone like a red coal Against the shore of the ocean, under the sundown Sky, with a skeleton of sandbar Between the pond and the sea.                                                 When deepening twilight Made all things gray and made trespass safe, Clare entered The seaward fields with her flock. They had fed scantly In the redwood forest, and here on the dead grass The cattle had cropped all summer they could not sleep. She led them hour after hour under the still stars. Once they ran down to the glimmering beach to avoid The herd and the range bull; they returned, and wandered The low last bluff, where sparse grass labors to live in the windheaped sand. Silently they pastured northward, Gray file of shadows, between the glimmer and hushing moan of the ocean and the dark silence of the hills. The erect one wore a pallor of starlight woven in her hair. Before moonrise they huddled together In a hollow cup of old dune that opened seaward, but sheltered them from the nightwind and from morning eyes. III The bleating of sheep answered the barking of sea-lions and Clare awoke Dazzled in the broad dawn. The land-wind lifted the light-spun manes of the waves, a drift of sea-lions Swung in the surf and looked at the shore, sleek heads uplifted and great brown eyes with a glaze of blind Blue sea-light in them. "You lovely creatures," she whispered. She went to the verge and felt the foam at her ankles. "You lovely creatures come closer." The sheep followed her And stopped in the sand with lonesome cries. Clare stood and trembled at the simple morning of the world; there was nothing But hills and sea, not a tree on the shore nor a ship on the sea; an edge of the hill kindled with gold, And the sun rose. Then Clare took home her soul from the world and went on. When she was wandering the flats Of open pasture between the Sur Hill sea-face and the great separate sea-dome rock at Point Sur, Forgetting, as often before, that she and her flock were trespassers In cattle country: she looked and a young cowboy rode down from the east. "You`ll have to get off this range. Get out of this field," he said, "your tallow-hoofed mutton." "Oh," she answered trembling, "I`m going. I got lost in the night. Don`t drive them." "A woman?" he said. He jerked the reins and sat staring. "Where did you drop from?" She answered faintly, With a favor-making smile, "From the south." "Who`s with you?" "Nobody." "Keep going, and get behind the hill if you can Before Nick Miles the foreman looks down this way." She said to the ram, "Oh Saul, Oh hurry. Come Leader. Tiny and Frannie and Nosie, we have to go on. Oh, hurry, Fern." They huddled bleating about her, And she in the midst made haste; they pressed against her And moved in silence. The young cowboy rode on the east As hoping to hide the flock from Nick Miles his foreman, Sidelong in the saddle, and gazed at Clare, at the twisting Ripple of pale bright hair from her brown skin Behind the temples. She felt that his looks were friendly, She turned and timidly smiled. Then she could see That he was not a man but a boy, sixteen Or seventeen; she felt more courage. "What would your foreman Do if he saw us?" "He`d be rough. But," he said, "You`ll soon be behind the hill. Where are you going?" She made no answer. "To Monterey?" "Oh . . . to nowhere!" She shivered and sought his face with her eyes. "To nowhere, I mean." "Well," he said sulkily, "where did you sleep last night? Somewhere?" She said with eagerness, "Ah, two miles back, On the edge of the sand; we weren`t really in the field." He stared. "You`re a queer one. Is that old coat All you`ve got on?" "No, no, there`s a dress under it. But scrubbed so often," she said, "with sand and water Because I had no soap, it`s nothing but rags." "You needn`t hurry, no one can see you now. ... My name`s Will Brighton," he said. "Well, mine is dare." "Where do you live when you`re at home, Clare?" "I haven`t any." They rounded the second spur of the hill. Gray lupine clothed the north flank, a herd of cattle stared down From the pale slope of dead grass above the gray thicket. Rumps high, low quarters, they were part of the world`s end sag, The inverted arch from the Sur Hill height to the flat foreland and up the black lava rock of Point Sur; In the open gap the mountain sea-wall of the world foam-footed went northward. Beyond the third spur Clare saw A barn and a house up the wrinkled hill, oak-scrub and sycamores. The house built of squared logs, time-blackened, Striped with white plaster between the black logs, a tall dead cube with a broken chimney, made her afraid; Its indestructible crystalline shape. "Oh! There`s a house. They`ll see us from there. I`ll go back . . ." "Don`t be afraid," He answered smiling, "that place has no eyes. There you can turn your sheep in the old corral, Or graze them under the buckeyes until evening. No one will come." She sighed, and then faintly: "Nobody ever lives there, you`re sure?" "Not for eight years. You can go in," he said nervously: "maybe You haven`t been inside a house a good while?" She looked up at his pleasant unformed young face, It was blushing hot. "Oh, what`s the matter with the house?" "Nothing. Our owner bought the ranch, and the house Stands empty, he didn`t want it. They tell me an old man Claiming to be God ... a kind of a preacher boarded there, And the family busted up." She said "I don`t believe Any such story." "Well, he was kind of a preacher. They say his girl killed herself; he washed his hands With fire and vanished." "Then she was crazy. What, spill Her own one precious life," she said trembling, "She`d nothing but that? Ah! no! No matter how miserable, what goes in a moment, You know . . . out . . ." Her head bowed, and her hand Dug anxiously in the deep pads of wool On the shoulder of the ram walking against her side; When her face lifted again even the unwatchful boy Took notice of tears.                                 They approached the house; the fence in front was broken but the windows and doors were whole, The rose that grew over the rotted porch steps was dead; yet the sleep of the house seemed incorruptible, It made Clare and the boy talk low. He dropped out of the saddle and made the bridle hang down To serve for tether. "Come round by the back," he whispered, "this door is locked." "What for?" "To go in," he whispered. "Ah no, I have to stay with my sheep. Why in the world should I go in to your dirty old house?" His face now he`d dismounted was level with hers; she saw the straw-colored hairs on his lip, and freckles, For he`d grown pale. "Hell," he said, narrowing his eyes, hoping to be manly and bully her: but the heart failed him, He said sadly, "I hoped you`d come in." She breathed, "Oh," her mouth twitching, But whether with fear or laughter no one could tell, And said, "You`ve been kind. Does nobody ever come here? Because I`d have to leave my poor friends outdoors, Someone might come and hurt them." "The sheep?         Oh, nobody No one can see them. Oh, Clare, come on. Look here," He ran and opened a gate, "the corral fence Is good as new and the grass hasn`t been touched." The small flock entered gladly and found green weeds In the matted gray. Clare slowly returned. The boy Catching her by the hand to draw her toward the house, She saw his young strained face, and wondered. "Have you ever Been, with a woman?" "Ah," he said proudly, "yes." But the honesty of her gaze dissolving his confidence He looked at the ground and said mournfully, "She wasn`t white. And I think she was quite old . . ." Clare in her turn Reddened. "If it would make you happy," she said. "I want to leave glad memories. And you`ll not be sorry After I`m gone?"                           The sheep, missing their mistress, Bleated and moved uneasily, forgetting to feed, While Clare walked in the house. She said, "Oh, not yet. Let`s look at the house. What was the man`s name Whose daughter ... he said he was God and suddenly vanished?" "A man named Barclay," he said, "kind of a preacher." They spoke in whispers, peering about. At length Clare sighed, And stripped off the long brown coat.                                                           When they returned outdoors, Blinking in the sun, the boy bent his flushed face Toward Clare`s pale one and said, "Dear, you can stay here As long as you want, but I must go back to work." She heard the sheep bleating, and said, "Good-by. Good luck, Will Brighton." She hurried to her flock, while he Mounted, but when he had ridden three strides of a canter Clare was crying, "Oh help. Oh help. Oo! Oo!" He returned, And found her in the near corner of the corral On hands and knees, her flock huddling about her, Peering down a pit in the earth. Oak-scrub and leafless Buckeyes made a dark screen toward the hill, and Clare Stood up against it, her white face and light hair Shining against it, and cried, "Oh, help me, they`ve fallen, Two have fallen." The pit was an old well; The hand-pump had fallen in, and the timbers That closed the mouth had crumbled to yellow meal. Clare lay and moaned on the brink among the dark nettles, Will Brighton brought the braided line that hung at his saddle And made it fast and went down.                                                     The well-shaft was so filled up With earth-fall and stones and rotting timbers, it was possible for the boy and girl to hoist up the fallen Without other contrivance than the looped rope. The one came smiiHriiiur and sobbing, Clare cried her name, "Oh, Fern, Fern, Fern." She stood and fell, and scrambled up to her feet, and plunged on three legs. The other Came flaccid, it slipped in the rope and hung head downward, Clare made no cry. When it was laid by the well-brink A slime of half-chewed leaves fell from its mouth. The boy climbed up. "While I was making your pleasure," Clare said, "this came. While I was lying there. What`s punished is kindness." He touched the lifeless ewe with his foot, Clare knelt against her and pushed him away. He said, "It fell the first and its neck was broken." And Clare: "This was the one that would nudge my hands When I was quiet, she`d come behind me and touch me, I called her Nosie. One night we were all near frozen And starved, I felt her friendly touches all night." She lifted the head. "Oh, Nosie, I loved you best. Fern`s leg is broken. We`ll all be like you in a little while." The boy ran and caught Fern, and said "The bones are all right. A sprain I guess, a bad sprain. I`ll come in the evening, Clare, if you`re still here. I`m sorry." She sat with the head on her lap, and he rode away. After a time she laid it on the earth. She went and felt Fern`s foreleg and went slowly up the hill; her small flock followed. IV                                   Fern lagged and lagged, Dibbling the dust with the mere points of the hoof Of the hurt foreleg, and rolling up to her shepherdess The ache of reproachful eyes. "Oh, Fern, Oh, Fern, What can I do? I`m not a man, to be able to carry you. My father, he could have carried you." Tears from Clare`s eyes Fell in the roadway; she was always either joyful or weeping. They climbed for half the day, only a steep mile With many rests, and lay on the Sur Hill summit. The sun and the ocean were far down below, like fire in a bowl; The shadow of the hills lay slanting up a thin mist Into the eastern sky, dark immense lines Going out of the world.                                     Clare slept wretchedly, for thirst And anxious dreams and sorrow. She saw the lighthouse Glow and flash all night under the hill; The wind turned south, she smelled the river they had left, Small flying clouds from the south crossed the weak stars. In the morning Fern would not walk.                                                         Between noon and morning A dark-skinned man on a tall hammer-headed Flea-bitten gray horse rode north on the hill-crest. Clare ran to meet him. "Please help me. One of my sheep Has hurt her leg and can`t walk. . . . Entiendes ingles?" She faltered, seeing him Indian-Spanish, and the dark eyes Gave no sign whether they understood, gazing through her with a blue light across them Like the sea-lions` eyes. He answered easily in English, "What can I do?" in the gentle voice of his people; And Clare: "I thought you might carry her down. We are very thirsty, the feed is all dry, here is no water, And I`ve been gathering the withered grasses to feed her." He said, "We could tie her onto the horse." "Ah, no, She`d be worse hurt. . . . She`s light and little, she was born in the hills." The other sheep had followed their shepherdess Into the road and sadly looked up, the man smiled and dismounted among them. "Where are you going?" She answered, "North. Oh, come and see her. Unless you carry her I don`t know what we can do." "But it`s two miles Down to the river." The lame ewe, whether frightened By the stranger and his horse, or rested at length, Now rose and went quietly to Clare, the hurt foreleg Limping but serving. Clare laughed with pleasure. "Oh, now, We can go down by ourselves. Come Fern, come Saul, Fay, Frannie, Leader . . ." She was about to have called The name of the one that died yesterday; her face Changed and she walked in silence, Fern at her thigh. The friendly stranger walked on the other side, And his horse followed the sheep. He said: "I have seen Many things, of this world and the others, but what are you?" "My name`s Clare Walker." "Well, I am Onorio Vasquez. I meant, what are you doing? I think that I`d have seen you or heard of you If you live near." "I`m doing? I`m taking care of my sheep." She looked at his face to be sure of kindness, And said, "I`m doing like most other people; take care of those that need me and go on till I die. But I know when it will be; that`s the only . . . I`m often afraid." Her look went westward to the day moon, Faint white shot bird in her wane, the wings bent downward, falling in the clear over the ocean cloud-bank. "Most people will see hundreds of moons: I shall see five. When this one`s finished." Vasquez looked intently at her thin young face, turned sideways from him, the parted Sun-scarred lips, the high bridge of the nose, dark eyes and light hair; she was thin, but no sign of sickness; her eyes Met his and he looked down and said nothing. When he looked down he remembered chiefly the smooth brown throat And the little hollow over the notch of the breast-bone. He said at length, carefully, "You needn`t be afraid. I often," he murmured shyly, "have visions. I used to think they taught me something, but I was a fool. If you saw a vision, or you heard a voice from heaven, it is nothing." She answered, "What I fear really`s the pain. The rest is only a kind of strangeness." Her eyes were full of tears and he said anxiously, "Oh, never Let visions nor voices fool you. They are wonderful but we see them by chance; I think they mean something in their own country but they mean Nothing in this; they have nothing to do with our lives and deaths." She answered in so changed a voice that Vasquez Stared; the tears were gone and her eyes were laughing. "Oh, no, it was nothing," she said, "in the way of that. Visions? My trouble is a natural thing. But tell me about those visions." He muttered to himself With a shamed face and answered, "Not now." The south wind That drove the dust of the little troop before them Now increased and struck hard, where the road gained A look-out point over the fork of the canyon And the redwood forest below. The sheep were coughing In the whirl of wind. At this point the lame ewe Lay down and refused to rise, "Oh, now, now, now," Clare wrung her hands, "we`re near the water too. We`re all so thirsty. Oh, Fern!" Vasquez said sadly, "If she`d be quiet Over my shoulders, but she won`t." He heard a hoarse voice Cry in the canyon, and Clare softly cried answer And ran to the brink of the road. She stood there panting Above the pitch and hollow of the gorge, her grotesque cloak Blown up to her shoulders, flapping like wings About the half nakedness of the slender body. Vasquez looked down the way of her gaze, expecting To see some tragical thing; he saw nothing but a wide heron Laboring thwart wind from the shore over the heads of the redwoods. A heavy dark hawk balanced in the storm And suddenly darted; the heron, the wings and long legs wavering in terror, fell, screaming, the long throat Twisted under the body; Clare screamed in answer. The pirate death drove by and had missed, and circled For a new strike, the poor frightened fisherman Beat the air over the heads of the redwoods and labored upward. Again and again death struck, and the heron Fell, with the same lost cry, and escaped; but the last fall Was into the wood, the hawk followed, both passed from sight Under the waving spires of the wood.                                                             Clare Walker Turned, striving with the gesture of a terrified child To be quiet, her clenched fist pressed on her mouth, Her teeth against the knuckles, and her blonde hair Wild on the wind. "Oh, what can save him, can save him? Oh, how he cried at each fall!" She crouched in the wind At the edge of the road, trembling; the ewe called Tiny Crossed over and touched her, the others turned anxious looks From sniffing the autumn-pinched leaves of the groundling blackberries. When she was quieted Vasquez said, "You love All creatures alike." She looked at his face inquiringly With wide candid brown eyes, either not knowing Or not thinking. He said, "It is now not far Down to the running water; we`d better stretch her Across the saddle" he nodded toward the lame ewe "You hold her by the forelegs and I by the hind ones, She`ll not be hurt." Clare`s voice quieted the sheep And Vasquez` the indignant horse. They came down at length To dark water under gigantic trees. V She helped Fern drink before herself drooped eagerly Her breast against the brown stones and kissed the cold stream. She brought from the bundle what food remained, and shared it With Vasquez and the munching sheep. There were three apples From Fogler`s trees, and a little jar of honey And crumbled comb from his hives, and Clare drew a net Of water-cress from the autumn-hushed water to freshen The old bread and the broken biscuits. She was gay with delight At having something to give. They sat on the bank, where century After century of drooping redwood needles had made the earth, as if the dark trees were older Than their own mother.                                       Clare answered Vasquez` question and said she had come from the coast mountains in the south; She`d left her home a long time ago; and Fogler, the farmer by the Big Sur, had given her this food Because he was sorry his dogs had worried the sheep. But yesterday she was passing Point Sur, and Fern Had fallen into a well by the house. She said nothing of the other ewe, that had died; and Vasquez Seemed to clench himself tight: "What were you doing at Point Sur, it`s not on the road?" "The sheep were hungry, And I wandered off the road in the dark. It was wicked of me to walk in the pasture, but a young cowboy Helped me on the right way. We looked into the house." He said, "Let no one go back there, let its mice have it. God lived there once and tried to make peace with the people; no peace was made." She stared in silence, and Vasquez: "After that time I bawled for death, like a calf for the cow. There were no visions. My brothers watched me, And held me under the hammers of food and sleep." He ceased; then Clare in a troubled silence Thought he was lying, for she thought certainly that no one Ever had desired death. But, for he looked unhappy And said nothing, she said Will Brighton had told her Something about a man who claimed to be God, "Whose daughter," she said, "died." Vasquez stood up And said trembling, "In the ruin of San Antonio church I saw an owl as big as one of your sheep Sleeping above the little gilt Virgin above the altar. That was no vision. I want to hear nothing Of what there was at Point Sur." He went to his horse That stood drooping against the stream-bank, and rode The steep soft slope between the broad butts of trees. But, leaving the undisturbed air of the wood For the rough wind of the roadway, he stopped and went back. "It will rain," he said. "You ought to think of yourself. The wind is digging water since we came down. My father`s place is too far. There`s an old empty cabin A short ways on." She had been crouching again Over the stream to drink, and rose with wet lips But answered nothing. Vasquez felt inwardly dizzy For no reason he knew, as if a gray bird Turned in his breast and flirted half-open wings Like a wild pigeon bathing. He said, "You`ll see it Above the creek on the right hand of the road Only a little way north." He turned and rode back, Hearing her call "Good-by," into the wind on the road. This man was that Onorio Vasquez Who used to live on Palo Corona mountain With his father and his six brothers, but now they lived Up Mill Creek Canyon beside the abandoned lime-kiln On land that was not their own. For yearly on this coast Taxes increase, land grows harder to hold, Poor people must move their places. Onorio had wealth Of visions, but those are not coinable. A power in his mind Was more than equal to the life he was born to, But fear, or narrowing fortune, had kept it shut From a larger life; the power wasted itself In making purposeless visions, himself perceived them To have no meaning relative to any known thing: but always They made him different from his brothers; they gave him A kind of freedom; they were the jewels and value of his life. So that when once, at a critical time, they failed And were not seen for a year, he`d hungered to die. That was nine years ago; his mind was now quieter, But still it found all its value in visions. Between them, he hired out his hands to the coast farms, Or delved the garden at home. Clare Walker, when he was gone, forgot him at once. She drank a third draught, then she dropped off her shoes And washed the dust from her feet. Poor Fern was now hobbling Among the others, and they`d found vines to feed on At the near edge of the wood, so that Clare felt Her shepherdess mind at peace, to throw off The coat and the rags and bathe in the slender stream, Flattening herself to find the finger`s depth water. The water and the air were cold now, she rubbed her body Hastily dry with the bleached rags of her dress And huddled the cloak about her, but hung the other Over a branch to dry. Sadly she studied The broken shoes and found them useless at last, And flung them into the bushes. An hour later She resumed the dress, she called her flock to go on Northward. "Come Fern, come Frannie. Oh, Saul. Leader and Hoinie and Tiny, we have to go on." VI The sky had blackened and the wind raised a dust When they came up to the road from the closed quiet of the wood, The sun was behind the hill but not down yet. Clare passed the lichen-plated abandoned cabin that Vasquez Had wished her to use, because there was not a blade of pasture about it, nothing but the shafted jealousy. And foodless possession of the great redwoods. She saw the gray bed of the Little Sur like a dry bone Through its winter willows, and on the left in the sudden Sea-opening V of the fcanyon the sun streaming through a cloud, the lank striped ocean, and an arched film Of sand blown from a dune at the stream`s foot. The road ahead went over a bridge and up the bare hill In lightning zigzags; a small black bead came down the lightning, flashing at the turns in the strained light, A motor-car driven fast, Clare urged her flock into the ditch by the road, but the car turned This side the bridge and glided down a steep driveway. When Clare came and looked down she saw the farmhouse Beside the creek, and a hundred bee-hives and a leafless orchard, Crossed by the wheeling swords of the sun. A man with a gray mustache covering his mouth Stood by the road, Clare felt him stare at the sheep And stare at her bare feet, though his eyes were hidden In the dark of his face in the shadow of the turbid light. She smiled and murmured, "Good evening." He giggled to himself Like a half-witted person and stared at her feet She passed, in the swirls of light and dust, the old man Followed and called, "Hey: Missy: where will you sleep?" "Why, somewhere up there," she answered. He giggled, "Eh, Eh! If I were you. Ho," he said joyfully, "If I were in your shoes, I`d look for a roof. It`s big and bare, Serra Hill. You from the south?" "I`ve been in the rain before," she answered. She laid Her hand on a matted fleece. "I`ve got to find them Some feeding-place, they`re hungry, they`ve been in the hungry Redwoods." He stopped and peered and giggled: "One`s lame, But," he said chuckling, "you could go on all night And never muddy your shoes. Ho, ho! Listen, Missy. You ain`t a Mexican, I guess you`ve had bad luck. I`ll fix you up in the hay-shed and you`ll sleep dry, These fellows can feed all night." "The owner," she said, "Wouldn`t let me. They`d spoil the hay." "The owner. Bless you, the poor old man`s too busy to notice. Paying his debts. That was his sharp son Drove in just now. They hated the old man But now they come like turkey-buzzards to watch him die." "Oh! Is he dying?" "Why, fairly comfortable. As well as you can expect." "I think, we`ll go on," She murmured faintly. "Just as you like, Missy. But nobody cares whether you spoil the hay. There`s plenty more in the barn, and all the stock’ll soon be cleared out. I don`t work for his boys. Ho, it`s begun already." Some drops were flying, and the sun Drowned in a cloud, or had set, suddenly the light was twilight. The old man waved his hand in the wind Over the hives and the orchard. "This place," he giggled, "meant the world to old Warfield: Hey, watch them sell. It means a shiny new car to each of the boys." He shot up the collar of his coat, and the huddling sheep Tucked in their rumps; the rain on a burst of wind, small drops but many. The sheep looked up at their mistress, Who said, feeling the drift like needles on her cheek, and cold drops Run down by her shoulder, "If nobody minds, you think, about our lying in the hay." "Hell no, come in. Only you`ll have to be out in the gray to-morrow, before the sharp sons get up." He led her about By the bridge, through the gapped fence, not to be seen from the house. The hay-shed was well roofed, and walled southward Against the usual drive of the rain. Clare saw in the twilight Wealth of fodder and litter, and was glad, and the sheep Entered and fed.                           After an hour the old man Returned, with a smell of fried grease in the gray darkness. Clare rose to meet him, she thought he was bringing food, But the odor was but a relic of his own supper. "It`s raining," he said; as if she could fail to hear The hissing drift on the roof; "you`d be cosy now On Serra Hill." He paused and seemed deeply thoughtful, And said, "But still you could walk all night and never Get your shoes wet. Ho, ho! You`re a fine girl, How do you come to be on the road? Eh? Trouble?" "I`m going north. You`re kind," she said, "people are kind." "Why, yes, I`m a kind man. Well, now, sleep cosy." He reached into the dark and touched her, she stood Quietly and felt his hand. A dog was heard barking Through the hiss of rain. He said, "There`s that damn` dog. I tied him up after I let you in, Now he`ll be yelling all night." The old man stumped off Into the rain, then Clare went back to her sheep And burrowed in the hay amongst them.                                                               The old man returned A second time; Clare was asleep and she felt The sheep lifting their heads to stare at his lantern. "Oh! What do you want?" "Company, company," he muttered. "They`ve got an old hatchet-faced nurse in the house . . . But he`s been dying for a month, he makes me nervous. The boys don`t mind, but I’m nervous." He kicked One of the sheep to make it rise and make room, Clare murmured sadly, "Don`t hurt them." He sat in the hay In heavy silence, holding the lantern on knee As if it were a fretful baby. The fulvous glimmer Through one of his hands showed the flesh red, and seemed To etch the bones in it, the gnarled shafts of the fingers And scaly lumps in the skin. Clare heard the chained dog howling, And the rain had ceased. She reached in pitying tenderness And touched the old man`s illuminated hand and said "How hard you have worked." "Akh," he groaned, "so has he. And gets . . ." He moved his hand to let the warm light Lie on her face, so that her face and his own were planets To the lantern sun; hers smooth except the wind-blistered lips, pure-featured, pitying, with large dark eyes The little sparkles of the reflected lantern had room to swim in; his bristly and wrinkled, and the eyes Like sparks in a bush; the sheep uneasily below the faces moved formless, only Saul`s watchful head With the curled horns in the halo of light. The faint and farther rays of that sun touched falling spheres Of water from the eaves at the open side of the shed, or lost themselves at the other in cobwebbed corners And the dust of space. In the darkness beyond all stars the little river made a noise. The old man muttered, "I heard him choking night before last and still he goes on. It`s a hell of a long ways to nothing . . . You know the best thing to do? Tip this in the straw," He tilted the lantern a little, "end in a minute, In a blaze and yell." She said, "No! no!" and he felt The hay trembling beside him. The unconscious motion of her fear Was not inward but toward the sheep. He observed Nothing of that, but giggled to himself to feel The hay trembling beside him. He dipped his hand And caught her bare foot; clutching it with his fingers He scratched the sole with his thumb, but Clare sat quiet In pale terror of tipping the lantern. The old man Groaned and stood up. "You wouldn`t sit like a stone If I were twenty years younger. Oh, damn you," he said, "You think we get old? I`m the same fresh flame of youth still, Stuck in an old wrinkled filthy rawhide That soon`ll rot and lie choking." She stammered, "Ah, no, no, You oughtn`t to think so. You`re well and strong. Or maybe At last it`ll come suddenly or while you sleep, Never a pain." He swung up the lantern Before his hairy and age-deformed face. "Look at me. Pfah! And still it`s April inside." He turned to go out, Clare whispered, "Oh! Wait." She stood wringing her hands, Warm light and darkness in waves flushing and veiling Her perplexed face, the lantern in the old man`s fist Swinging beyond his body. "Oh, how can I tell?" She said trembling. "You see: I`ll never come back: If anything I could do would give you some pleasure; And you wouldn`t be sorry after I`m gone." He turned, Stamping his feet. "Heh?" He held up the lantern And stared at her face and giggled. She heard the sheep Nestling behind her and saw the old man`s mouth Open to speak, a black hole under the grizzled thatch, And close again on round silence. "I`d like to make you Happier," she faltered. "Heh?" He seemed to be trembling Even more than Clare had trembled; he said at length, "Was you in earnest?" "I had a great trouble, So that now nothing seems hard . . . That a shell broke and truly I love all people. I`ll . . . it`s a little thing . . . my time is short." He stood giggling and fidgeting. "Heh, heh? You be good. I`ve got to get my sleep. I was just making the rounds. He makes me nervous, that old man. It`s his stomach Won`t hold nothing. You wouldn`t play tricks to-night And the old man puking his last? Now, you lie down. Sleep cosy," he said. The lantern went slowly winking away, And she was left among the warm sheep, and thoughts Of death, and to hear the stream; and again the wind Raved in the dark.                             She dreamed that a two-legged whiff of flame Rose up from the house gable-peak crying, "Oh! Oh!" And doubled in the middle and fled away on the wind Like music above the bee-hives.                                                   At dawn a fresh burst of rain Delayed her, and two of the sheep were coughing. She thought that no unfriendly person would come in the rain, And hoped the old man might think to bring her some food, she was very hungry. The house-dog that all night long Had yapped his chain`s length, suddenly ran into the shed, then Clare leaped up in fear for the sheep, but this Was a friendly dog, loving to fondle and be fondled, he shook his sides like a mill-wheel and remained amongst them. The rain paused and returned, the sheep fed so contentedly Clare let them rest all morning in the happy shelter, she dulled her own hunger with sleep. About noon She lifted her long staff from the hay and stood up. "Come Saul, come little Hornie, Fay, Fern and Frannie and Leader, we have to go on. Tiny, Tiny, get up. Butt and Ben, come on": These were the two old wethers: and she bade the dog "Good-by, good-by." He followed however; but at length Turned back from the crooked road up the open hill When cold rain fell. Clare was glad of that, yet she wished She`d had something to give him. VII                                               She gained the blasty hill-top, The unhappy sheep huddling against her thighs, And so went northward barefoot in the gray rain, Abstractedly, like a sleepwalker on the ridge Of his inner necessity, or like Some random immortal wish of the solitary hills. If you had seen her you`d have thought that she always Walked north in the rain on the ridge with the sheep about her. Yet sometimes in the need of a little pleasure To star the gray, she`d stop in the road and kiss One of the wet foreheads: but then run quickly A few steps on, as if loitering were dangerous, You`d have pitied her to see her.                                                     Over Mescal Creek High on the hill, a brook in a rocky gulch, with no canyon, Light-headed hunger and cold and the loneliness unlocked Her troubled mind, she talked and sang as she went. "I can`t eat the cold cress, but if there were acorns, Bitter acorns. Ai chinita que si, Ai que tu dami tu amor. Why did you Have to go dry at the pinch, Frannie? Poor thing, no matter. Que venga con migo chinita A donde vivo yo. I gave them all my bread, the poor shipwrecked people, and they wanted more." She trembled and said, "They`re cruel, But they were hungry. They`ll never catch us I think. Oh, hurry, hurry." With songs learned from the shepherd she came to the fall of the road into Mill Creek Canyon. Two of the sheep were sick and coughing, and Clare looked down. Flying bodies of fog, an unending fleet Of formless gray ships in a file fled down the great canyon Tearing their keels over the redwoods; Clare watched them and sang, "Oh, golondrina, oh, darting swallow," And heard the ocean like the blood in her ears. The west-covered sun stared a wan light up-canyon Against the cataract of little clouds.                                                           The two coughing sheep Brought her to a stand; then she opened their mouths and found Their throats full of barbed seeds from the bad hay Greedily eaten; and the gums about their teeth Were quilled with the wicked spikes; which drawn, thin blood Dripped from the jaw. The folds of the throat her fingers Could not reach nor relieve; thereafter, when they coughed, Clare shook with pain. Her pity poisoned her strength.                                                                   Unhappy shepherdess, Numbed feet and hands and the face Turbid with fever: You love, and that is no unhappy fate. Not one person but all, does it warm your winter? Walking with numbed and cut feet Along the last ridge of migration On the last coast above the not-to-be-colonized Ocean, across the streams of the people Drawing a faint pilgrimage As if you were drawing a line at the end of the world Under the columns of ancestral figures: So many generations in Asia, So many in Europe, so many in America: To sum the whole. Poor Clare Walker, she already Imagines what sum she will cast in April.                                                           She came by the farmhouse At Mill Creek, then she wavered in the road and went to the door> Leaving her sheep in the road; the day was draining Toward twilight. Clare began to go around the house, Then stopped and returned and knocked faintly at the door. No answer; but when she was turning back to the road The door was opened, by a pale slight young man With no more chin than a bird, and Mongol-slanted Eyes; he peered out, saying, "What do you want?" Clare stood Wringing the rain from her fingers. "Oh, oh," she stammered, "I don`t know what. I have some sheep with me. I don`t know where we can stay." He stood in the door And looked afraid. The sheep came stringing down Through the gate Clare had left open. A gray-eyed man With a white beard pushed by the boy and said "What does she want? What, are you hungry? Take out your beasts, We can`t have sheep in the yard." Clare ran to the gate, "Come Leader, come Saul." The old man returned indoors, Saying, "Wait outside, I`ll get you some bread." Clare waited, Leaning against the gate, it seemed a long while; The old man came back with changed eyes and changed voice: "We can`t do anything for you. There isn`t any bread. Move on from here." She said through her chattering teeth, "Come Saul, come Leader, come Frannie. We have to go on. Poor Fern, come on." They drifted across the Mill Creek bridge And up the road in the twilight. "The ground-squirrels," she said, "hide in their holes All winter long, and the birds have perches but we have no place." They tried to huddle in the heart of a bush Under a redwood, Clare crouched with the sheep about her, her thighs against her belly, her face on her knees, Not sleeping, but in a twilight consciousness, while the night darkened. In an hour she thought she must move or die. "Ah little Hornie," she said, feeling with shrivelled fingers the sprouts of the horns in the small arched forehead, "Come Fern: are you there, Leader? Come Saul, come Nosie . . . Ah, no, I was dreaming. Oh, dear," she whispered, "we`re very Miserable now." She crept out of the bush and the sheep followed; she couldn`t count them, she heard them Plunge in the bush and heard them coughing behind her. They came on the road In the gray dark; there, though she`d meant to go north She went back toward the farmhouse. Crossing the bridge She smelled oak-smoke and thought of warmth. Grown reckless Clare entered the farmhouse yard with her fleeced following, But not daring enough to summon the door Peered in a window. What she saw within Mixed with her fever seemed fantastic and dreadful. It was nothing strange: The weak-faced youth, the bearded old man, and two old women Idle around a lamp on a table. They sat on their chairs in the warmth and streaming light and nothing Moved their faces. But Clare felt dizzy at heart, she thought they were waiting for death: how could they sit And not run and not cry? Perhaps they were dead already? Then, the old man`s head Turned, and the youth`s fingers drummed on his chair. One of the blank old women was sewing and the other Frowned and breathed. She lifted and spoke to white-beard, then the first old woman Flashed eyes like rusty knives and sheathed them again And sewed the cloth; they grew terribly quiet; Only the white beard quivered. The young man stood up And moved his mouth for a good while but no one Of those in the room regarded him. He sighed and saw Clare`s face at the window. She leaped backward; the lamplight Had fed her eyes with blindness toward the gray night, She ran in a panic about the barren garden,
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