Reading Donald Justice’s “Lorca in California”
essay
Reading Donald Justice’s “Lorca in California”
Lorca in California
1 Song of the State Troopers
Blue are the cycles,
Dark blue the helmets.
The blue sleeves shine
With the rainbows of oil slicks,
And why they don’t cry is
Their hearts are leather
Their skulls are hard plastic.
They come up the roads.
By night they come,
Hunched over headlamps,
Leaving behind them
A silence of rubber
And small fears like beach sand
Ground underheel.
Look, concealed by their helmets
The vague outlines
Of pistols are forming.
They go by—let them pass.
O town of the moonflower,
Preserve of the orange
And the burst guava,
Let them pass!
2 Song of the Hours
Three cyclists pass under
Christina’s window.
How far out she leans!
But tonight she ignores
The flowering goggles.
Tonight she sees nothing
Of fumes, of bandanas.
And the breeze of eight-thirty
Comes fumbling the curtain,
Clumsy, uncertain.
[Pause: guitar chord.]
O, the scent of the lemons!
Two hikers pass under
Christina’s window.
How far out she leans!
But tonight she ignores
The bronze of their torsos.
Tonight she hears nothing
Of radios, of sirens.
And the breeze of nine-thirty
Encircles her waist.
How cool it is, how chaste!
[Pause: guitar chord.]
O, the bitter groves!
A young man stands under
Christina’s window.
How far out she leans!
But tonight she ignores
The shadow in the shadow.
She hears and sees nothing
But night, the dark night.
And the breeze of ten-thirty
Comes up from the south,
Hot breath on her mouth.
[Pause: guitar chord.]
O, the teeth of their branches!
«««
This two-part poem comes from the new poems included in Donald Justice’s New and Selected Poems (Knopf, 1995) and is a relatively late poem as well as a rather curious example of the poet’s use of a prior text on which to create his “Platonic shadow,” as he called the poems he created out of—or based on—a prior text. This was a technique often employed by the poet, who was extremely wide ranging in the texts he used and adapted. These could be anything from ancient Chinese text to poems by Weldon Kees, although his usual preference was for twentieth-century Hispanic poets, particularly César Vallejo and Rafael Alberti, both of these poets known for their experimental techniques, tending to Surrealism. And if the same can be said for their Spanish contemporary Federico García Lorca, who met and encouraged Vallejo in Madrid in the early 1930s, shortly before his own death in 1936 (Vallejo died shortly after in 1938), his poetry had deeper sources.
Unlike many experimental poets of the interwar years, Lorca was profoundly influenced by popular folk culture (where other poets used jazz, say) in the sense of a commitment to folklore and folk song, including his famous use of the cante jondo (“deep song”) in the flamenco vocal tradition (see his Poema del Cante Jondo, 1921). In “Lorca in California” we see Donald Justice picking up on two of Lorca’s folkloristic tinged poems, the first containing surreal imagery, and both hiding deeper meanings under a . . .
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