Peaceful Transition
By Tony Hoagland
The wind comes down from the northwest, cold in September,
and flips over the neighbor’s trash receptacles.
The Halifax newspaper says that mansions are falling into the sea.
Storms are rising in the dark Pacific.
Pollution has infiltrated the food chain down to the jellyfish level.
The book I am reading is called “The End of the Ascent of Man.”
It says the time of human dominion is done,
but I am hoping it will be a peaceful transition.
It is one thing to think of buffalo on Divisadero Street,
of the Golden Gate Bridge overgrown in a tangle of vine.
It is another to open the door of your own house to the waves.
I am hoping the humans will be calm in their diminishing.
That the forests grow back with patience, not rage;
I am hoping the flocks of geese increase their number only gradually.
Let it be like an amnesia that we don’t even notice;
the hills forgetting the name for our kind. Then the sky.
Let the fish rearrange their green governments
as the rain spatters slant on their roof.
It is important that we expire.
It is a kind of work we have begun in order to complete.
Today out of the north the cold wind comes down,
and I go out to see
the neighbor’s trash bins have toppled in the drive.
I see the unpicked grapes have turned to small sweet raisins on their vine.
I see the wren has found a way to make its little nest
inside the cactus thorns.