Read The Apple Trees at Olema Online
Authors: Robert Hass
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Tomales Bay is flat blue in the Indian summer heat.
This is the time when hikers on Inverness Ridge
Stand on tiptoe to pick ripe huckleberries
That the deer can't reach. This is the season of lullsâ
Egrets hunting in the tidal shallows, a ribbon
of sandpipers fluttering over mudflats, white,
Then not. A drift of mist wisping off the bay.
This is the moment when bliss is what you glimpse
From the corner of your eye, as you drive past
Running errands, and the wind comes up,
And the surface of the water glitters hard against it.
“Palo Alto: The Marshes”
Mariana Richardson was the daughter of William Richardson, a sailor from Liverpool who became the first harbormaster of San Francisco Bay and married the daughter of a Mexican officer at the Presidio. The story of John Frémont's order to Kit Carson to execute Sr. Berryessa and the de Haro brothers can be found in a number of accounts of “the Bear Flag Revolt,” one of the earliest accounts of which is Josiah Royce's
California
. There are also a number of accounts of the destruction of the Klamath fishing village of Dokdokwass near what is now the Oregon-California border. A recent one is by Hamilton Sides,
Blood and Thunder
, 2006. Frémont and Carson undertook the massacre and the burning of the village as revenge for attacks on their party. Historians have established that they attacked the Klamaths by mistake for harryings against them carried out by young men of a nearby Modoc tribe. I first read the story when the U.S. Army was doing the same thing to villages in Vietnam.
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“Concerning the Afterlife, the Indians of Central California Had Only the Dimmest Notions”
The title is taken from a sentence in Hubert Bancroft's
History of California
, 1889.
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“Like Three Fair Branches From One Root Deriv'd”
A description of the three graces in
The Faerie Queen
. The book I was reading at the time, which seemed to help with the subjects of desire and beauty and sexuality, was Edgar Wind's
Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance
, 1968, a study of, among other things, the neo-Platonist symbolism in Pre-Raphaelite painting.
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“Santa Lucia”
Santa Lucia is the name of the virgin saint and martyr to whom several early Christian legends are attached, and also the name of a mountain range on the central California coast. There is, in the Mission Santa Ynez near Santa Barbara, a Native American painting of a young Indian-looking St. Lucy offering her plucked-out eyes to the viewer on a small plate, something the legendary St. Lucy was said to have done to the Roman patrician who wished to force her into marriage.
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“
Rusia en 1931
”
is the original title of a book about the Soviet Union published in Paris in 1931 by César Vallejo. The archbishop is the Reverend Oscar Romero. Since this poem was written, his assassination has been clearly linked to El Salvador's right-wing death squads.
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“Santa Lucia II”
See the note on “Santa Lucia.
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I seem to have imagined the speaker as a woman professionally involved with art.
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“Berkeley Eclogue”
The phrase “a century of clouds” is borrowed, of course, from Guillaume Apollinaire, but also from a book of stories with that title by Bruce Boone, published by Black Star Press.
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“Dragonflies Mating”
Jaime de Angulo was a well-known folklorist and collector of native California myths and stories. I owe this story about him to my friend Malcom Margolin.
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“Regalia for a Black Hat Dancer”
The shrine of the Buddha of Sokkaram is situated on a mountaintop near Kyongju, forty miles inland from Pusan and the site of one of Korea's oldest Buddhist monasteries.
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“Jatun Sacha”
The title comes from the name of a biological study center in the Ecuadorian rain forest on the Rio Napo near the town of Tena. This poem is for my son Luke, who was working there.
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“English: An Ode”
The lines in Spanish come from a poem by the Mexican poet Pura López Colomé in her book
Un Cristal en Otro
, Ediciones Toledo, Mexico City, 1989.
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“The Seventh Night”
I borrowed the phrase “staggering tarts” from Mary Karr, with her permission.
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“Art and Life”
Vermeer's
Woman Pouring Milk
can be seen at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, but I have a distinct memory of having seen it in The Hague at the Mauritshuis Museum in 1976. Perhaps it was on loan. In any case, I have been faithful to my memory.
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“I Am Your Waiter Tonight and My Name Is Dmitri”
Fyodor Dostoevsky mistakenly describes Grushenkaâin the Constance Garnett translationâas a “brunette.” Alfred Nobel died in 1896. His German company Dynamitakiengesellschaft (DAG) and its subsidiaries, including the Nobel-Dynamite Trust Company in London, manufactured munitions, as did Bofors, the Swedish armaments company he owned until his death.
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“A Poem”
“Leon Goure” See Frances Fitzgerald,
Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam
, Boston: Atlantic Little Brown, 1972, pp. 166â67.
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“whole races/Of tropical birds” See
The Air War in Indochina
, ed. Raphael Littauer and Norman Uphoff
,
Air War Study Group, Cornell University, revised edition, Boston: Beacon Press, 1972, pp. 94â95, 256â60. Also, generally, Sven Lindqvist,
A History of Bombing
, translated by Linda Haverty Rugg, New York: The New Press, 2000.
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Thanks to the editors of the many journals in which these poems have appeared over the years. Thanks to the Guggenheim, Lannan, Whiting, and MacArthur Foundations which, at different times, gave me the gift of time. And infinite thanks to my editor, Daniel Halpern.
R
OBERT
H
ASS
was born in San Francisco in 1941. He attended St. Mary's College and Stanford University. His books of poetry include
Time and Materials
, for which he received the Pulitzer Prize in 2007 and the National Book Award in 2008;
Sun Under Wood
, for which he received the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1996;
Human Wishes
;
Praise
, for which he received the William Carlos Williams Award in 1979; and
Field Guide
, which was selected by Stanley Kunitz for the Yale Younger Poets Series. Hass also worked with CzesÅaw MiÅosz to translate a dozen volumes of MiÅosz's poetry, including the book-length
Treatise on Poetry
and, most recently,
A Second Space
. His translations of the Japanese haiku masters have been collected in
The Essential Haiku: Versions of Basho, Buson, and Issa
. His books of essays include
Twentieth Century Pleasures: Prose on Poetry
, which received the National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism in 1984, and
Now and Then: The Poet's Choice Columns, 1997â2000.
From 1995 to 1997 he served as poet laureate of the United States. He lives in northern California with his wife, the poet Brenda Hillman, and teaches English at the University of California at Berkeley.
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Time and Materials: Poems, 1997â2005
Field Guide
Praise
Human Wishes
Sun Under Wood
Twentieth Century Pleasures: Prose on Poetry
Now and Then: The Poet's Choice Columns, 1997â2000
Poet's Choice: Poems for Everyday Life
The Essential Haiku: Versions of BashÅ, Buson, and Issa
Czeslaw Milosz, The Separate Notebooks
(with the author, Robert Pinsky, and Renata Gorczynski)
Czeslaw Milosz, Unattainable Earth
(with the author)
Czeslaw Milosz, Facing the River
(with the author)
Czeslaw Milosz, Provinces
(with the author)
Czeslaw Milosz, Road-side Dog
(with the author)
Czeslaw Milosz, Treatise on Poetry
(with the author)
Czeslaw Milosz, New and Collected Poems
(with the author and various hands)
Czeslaw Milosz, Second Space: New Poems
(with the author)
Rock and Hawk: A Selection of Shorter Poems by Robinson Jeffers
Tomas Tranströmer: Selected Poems, 1954â1986
Into the Garden: A Wedding Anthology
(with Stephen Mitchell)
The Addison Street Anthology: Berkeley's Poetry Walk
(with Jessica Fisher)
Czeslaw Milosz, Selected Poems, 1931â2004
Jacket design by Laura Klynstra
Jacket images © The Natural History Museum / Alamy
THE APPLE TREES AT OLEMA.
Copyright © 2010 by Robert Hass. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data has been applied for.
EPub Edition © February 2010 ISBN: 978-0-06-198615-4
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