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I was as at the prison and we were writing about lying— about liars and lies told —when an instructor came by the classroom and said that the education building was being shut down, and the inmates needed to return to the units. So I gave everyone a homework assignment and the students left and I began packing up, when one of the students stuck her head back in the classroom and said, “It’s raining! You’ve got to see this!”

We’ve been in a hard, hard drought this year, and then, as of today, 23 straight days of over 100 degrees. It’s been rough.

I went out into the hallway and the instructor said, “Well, it’s trying to rain. Been a long time!”

One of the rules of the institution is that in times of thunder and lightning, inmates are restricted to the units, and so my students went all excited back to the barracks. I closed up my briefcase and went outside—and was half-blinded by dust. We’ve been so dry there’s not much but dirt and dust in this area, and the storm winds were picking up the dirt and blowing it around. I signed out at the security station and went to my car.  A few drops of mud came from the sky. There were sudden blasts of cool air—cool!—from downdrafts, followed by the buffets of hot air. I could smell rain.

I drove back through the neighborhood—the sky was sort of open to the north, and stormy in the east and south.  In this photo, looking north, you can see a field of dead grass. Texas right now is a sad, khaki-colored state….


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Then it really started to rain!  Amazing. I made a video of my drive home….
(Remember, I was a professional driver for six years—don’t try this at home!)

I stopped by the grocery store to get some supplies, and people were lined up under the awning gazing heavenward with looks of wonder on their faces.

Readers in damp climates, don’t take for granted the miracle of water from the sky.

And—why not?—some rock and roll….


Just hope I don't have to wait a long time to play this again.....
 
 
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A couple of weeks ago I visited San Quentin State Prison in California.  The trip was sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts, bringing teachers from federal prisons across the US (four of us) out to California to teach workshops with teachers in California state prisons.

At San Quentin, the little arts classroom faced a large courtyard fenced-up into small enclosures—these were areas where death row inmates and inmates segregated because of their violent tendencies would exercise.  The fences in each area are covered in canvas so that no one can see out or in, and there is a catwalk for the guards running over the exercise area, and over that, an aluminum roof.  (The roof has a number of large holes in it—an inmate explained to me that they were from warning shots fired by guards).  The sides are open, though, and vast numbers of birds flew in and out of the area.  I was entranced—the birds were amazing, fluttering around, chirping, singing.

I thought of a poem by Isaac Rosenberg.

Returning, We Hear the Larks 

Sombre the night is.
And though we have our lives, we know
What sinister threat lies there.

Dragging these anguished limbs, we only know
This poison-blasted track opens on our camp -
On a little safe sleep.

But hark! joy - joy - strange joy.
Lo! heights of night ringing with unseen larks.
Music showering our upturned list’ning faces.

Death could drop from the dark
As easily as song -
But song only dropped,
Like a blind man’s dreams on the sand
By dangerous tides,
Like a girl’s dark hair for she dreams no ruin lies there,
Or her kisses where a serpent hides.


The situations of this poem from the Great War and the reality I witnessed at San Quentin are vast, of course.  Yet for me there was that same unexpected intrusion of natural beauty into human desolation, jarring and intoxicating.  But song only dropped….

An inmate pointed out that many of the birds only had one foot.  The missing feet are damaged, supposedly, when the birds perch on the razor wire.  I assume they get by hopping around on one foot until it too gets sliced up, and then they die.

**

Note on birds: I saw crows, song sparrows, some sort of tern, and some unknown little dark things that were chirping madly.  I emailed the Marin County Audubon Society to see what kind of birds might be hanging around San Quentin this time of year, but they have not yet responded.

Note on photos: We weren’t allowed to bring cameras in, so the only photos I took were from outside the prison—a shot of the wire and a guard tower, above, and a shot of the bay looking out from the prison, below.  The physical location of San Quentin is incredibly beautiful.
 

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