Thursday, March 09, 2006

What in the Sandhill



Last night's rain shower accentuated this cold, brisk morning. Lingering rain clouds still hovered mischievously on the horizon as I headed north on State Route 99. It would have been the usual Thursday morning commute, except for a rare sighting of a Sandhill Crane. It grazed nonchalantly about a rill at the Delicato Vineyard.

The hustled highway of life passes by too quickly. To have seen the Grus canadensis outside of the conservatory was a special treat. Indeed, the bucolic impressions such as that penned by Po Chu-i (白居易) days are rare in this technologic and impersonal age.

The Cranes
by Po Chu-i

The western wind has blown but a few days;
Yet the first leaf already flies from the bough.
On the drying paths I walk in my thin shoes;
In the first cold I have donned my quilted coat.
Through shallow ditches the floods are clearing away;
Through sparse bamboos trickles a slanting light.
In the early dusk, down an alley of green moss,
The garden-boy is leading the cranes home.

3 comments:

Alcuin Bramerton said...

Do you mean technocractic? Or do you mean technocratic? Another term might be mechanocerebral.

L'envoi said...

sorry about the misspelling. It's corrected now, thanks.

史路比 said...

you like poem very much! :)