[We've just returned, driving east, but for a man my age, yesterday's Writers Almanac poem, "Driving West," feels personal, drawn to the past as I am.]
Driving West
by Linda Pastan
Though the landscape subtly changes,
the mountains are marching in place.
The grasses take on the fading
yellows of the sun,
and cows with their sumptuous eyes
litter the fields as if they had grown there.
We have driven for hours
through bluing shadows,
as if the continent itself leaned west
and we had no choice but to follow the old ruts-
through bluing shadows,
as if the continent itself leaned west
and we had no choice but to follow the old ruts-
the wagons and horses, the iron snort
of a locomotive.
We are the pioneers
of our own histories, drawn
to the horizon as if it waited just for us
the way the young are drawn
to the future, the old to the past.
_______________________________
"Driving West" by Linda Pastan from Traveling Light. © Norton, 2011. reprinted by and broadcast on Writers Almanac, August 14, 2015.
"Driving West" by Linda Pastan from Traveling Light. © Norton, 2011. reprinted by and broadcast on Writers Almanac, August 14, 2015.
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