Showing posts with label The Plains of San Agustin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Plains of San Agustin. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

The Plains of San Agustin







Lawrence Mack Hall
Mhall46184@aol.com
From The Road to Magdalena, 2012


The Plains of San Agustin

“And lean upon a peasant’s staff”

-Wordsworth


But rather lean upon a pilgrim’s staff,
And trudge the road to Magdalena, yes,
With Rosary in hand, wearing old boots
From some lost war, some long-lost time ago;
A canvas vade mecum for his gear,
A worn-out boonie hat against the sun,
The high-plains sun against the stars, upon
The track to Magdalena in the fall,
To listen to the spirits converse with clouds
Upon the Plains of San Agustin where
A Very Large Array of idols listens for
A voice from space, from far beyond the skies;
For there, if anywhere, He can be heard,
But not from painted idols, no, but from
The haunted earth, and from the stars and back
Again.  And then – and then shuffle away,
Stick tapping on the rocks, boots treading dust;
For if some stranger finds that stick, those boots
Abandoned in the brush some desert noon
And bones upon the sands like scattered words,
He’ll know a pilgrim made a happy end.