Sometimes I suspect I’m a country man marooned in the city, though I grew up in the suburbs. Years ago I read an anthropologist who theorized that our species’ ideal setting, given our birth on the plains of Africa, is a pasture, meadow or prairie bordered by forest. We can hunt – and find shelter among the trees. That’s how I picture the perfect surroundings. Always with trees and optional water, which is why deserts seem so disturbing. The absence of green. A crew of Guatemalans trimmed our trees last week, juggling chain saws while suspended by ropes. They evened up three oaks and one pine in the front and a lone oak in the back. Our Houston neighborhood is called Oak Forest.
In the essay “The City
Shepherd’s Calendar” (Innocent Bystander: The Scene from the 70s, 1975),
L.E. Sissman writes as a lifelong city dweller who has moved with his wife to
the country and adapted Edmund Spenser’s The Shepheardes Calender (1579).
For the month of May in the North he writes:
“All flower names: iris,
including the incomparably haughty blue flags in the stream bed; lilac, sweet
white, not quite cloying lavender, grape purple; tulips, all looking
forbiddingly manmade; dandelions [much celebrated by Chesterton], tough,
independent, beautiful; last daffodils; first buttercups. The sound of cows;
the smell, cutting across the lilacs, of fields freshly fertilized. At night,
the largest and pearliest of possible moons.”
A pastoral dream, one
likely derided today. We’re fortunate: Houston, to my amazement twenty-two
years ago on first arriving, is an enormously green city. From the air that’s
what you first see: a carpet of dark green, mostly live oaks and water oaks. They
flank the streets, their branches meeting overhead, creating a dappled tunnel
effect. In the cloud-diffused light of late afternoon, it feels like a vast
theme park devoted to photosynthesis. I’ve read evolutionary explanations for
the soothing qualities possessed by green. I don’t know about that, though I
know that massed quantities of green buoy my spirits. I associate it in some
pre-rational way with solace and contentment. In “Green” (Collected Poems
1943-2004, 2004), Richard Wilbur calls it “a great largesse”:
“Tree leaves which, till
the growing season’s done,
Change into wood the
powers of the sun,
“Take from that radiance
only reds and blues.
Green is a color that they
cannot use,
“And so their rustling
myriads are seen
To wear all summer an
extraneous green,
"A green with no apparent
role, unless
To be the symbol of a
great largesse
“Which has no end, though
autumns may revoke
That shade from yellowed
ash and rusted oak.”