We hear acorns hitting the roof of the house and the cars. It makes the cats nervous and sounds like slow hail. The crop this year is prodigious. The patio is covered with them, more than the squirrels can keep up with. Stomping on them makes a satisfying crack/pop sound. I’ve watched the dog try to eat them but the tannin in acorns is bitter and his limit seems to be one. As a kid I tried eating an acorn that had fallen from the black oak in the backyard – once.
In our yard
are three water oaks, each about seventy-five feet tall. They’re at least as old
the house, which was built in 1962. Houston is a city of oaks, a dark green carpet when viewed from the air. Our neighborhood is called Oak Forest. Ten years ago, the
late Helen Pinkerton wrote to me about the oaks that grew near her home in
Northern California:
“One
characteristic of a Live Oak, growing over our swimming pool, was that it
dropped its leaves on the hard surface of the pool surround, which when dry
were very sharp, as the Latin name indicates. When small bare feet emerged from
the water, they often were distressed by the very sharp dry leaves as they
stepped on them. [Yvor] Winters refers to all three types [live, black, valley]
in his elegiac nature poem "The California Oaks”.” He is, I believe,
prematurely anxious about their survival, when he writes:
“Then the
invasion! and the soil was turned,
The hidden
waters drained, the valleys dried;
And whether
fire or purer sunlight burned,
No matter!
one by one the old oaks died.
Died or are
dying! The archaic race--
Black oak,
live oak, and valley oak--ere long
Must crumble
on the place which they made strong
And in the
calm they guarded now abide.”
“The
California Oaks” seems not to be available online. You can find it in The Selected Poems of Yvor Winters (ed.
R.L. Barth, Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, 1999), which has a wonderful
introduction by Pinkerton; and in Yvor
Winters: Selected Poems (ed. Thom Gunn, Library of America, 2003). In the
poem, Winters speculates on the possibility that Chinese explorers visited
California late in the fifth century A.D. Here
are Winters’ first four lines:
“Spreading
and low, unwatered, concentrate
Of years of
growth that thickens, not expands,
With leaves
like mica and with roots that grate
Upon the
deep foundations of these lands . . .”
Helen
continued: “Thousands of all types growing in the hills around Woodside and in
the Stanford hills, and elsewhere on the SF Peninsula are still flourishing as
far as I can see. However, Winters might be even more pessimistic about their
future had he known about the recent epidemic of the fatal ‘sudden oak death’
disease, Phytophthora ramorum, which has spread like a plague
through the oaks in San Mateo county (where we lived). Nature is never done
changing, is it?”
Some of us feel
a peculiar kinship with trees; in my case, oaks, with their strength and
vulnerability. A character in Walter de la Mare’s novel The Return (1910; rev. 1945) says:
“After all,
what is every man? A horde of ghosts – like a Chinese nest of boxes – oaks that
were acorns that were oaks. Death lies behind us, not in front – in our
ancestors, back and back until . . .”
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