Wanderlino
Arruda
Earlier
than usual, Olimpia woke me
up, before six, and told me
that it was raining. She wanted
to know if I had brought in
the clothes off the clothesline,
as she had asked me to do last
night, when I arrived from the
University.
Being the perfect husband, I
sleepily mumbled yes, and was
suddenly taken by a wonderfully
peaceful feeling, remembering
breathing in the sweet perfume
of the fresh, clean clothes,
so grateful for my cherished
family life. All of us, mortals,
I thought to myself, should
sing a daily hymn, in homage
to washerwomen, gentle creatures
that permit us to live in comfort,
cleanliness and health. How
wonderful it is to awake, feeling
like this. Nothing beats happiness…especially
in the early morning.
Then, already up and about,
I strolled around the backyard.
It was growing daylight. Even
though a misty fog was coming
down, a delicious smell of rain
swept across the hillside, beginning
of the rainy season after the
long, bitter drought. Great!
Except for one thing. I had
overlooked some towels on the
clothesline last night. They
were hung on the dark side of
the yard, hidden where the spotlight
doesn’t reach. Even more,
I had also purposely left some
of the kids’ jeans there,
which were still a little damp
at the time. Well, by this time,
everything was dripping wet,
tiny, translucent, much welcome
drops of silver, rebirth of
spring, generous, full, worthy
of gratitude, both ours and
Nature’s. A spectacle
of life that, even if not that
interesting to a housewife;
to me – always the dreamer
– it is and always will
be…a poetic enchantment!
Once again, all is at peace…
Once, I don’t know why,
in the middle of a conversation
at the office, my friend Pedro
Narciso, began telling me about
his marvelous farm life, and
commented on how, after only
a few days of rain, there was
already enough pasture to feed
the herd. He told how his cattle
voraciously devoured the first
tender green sprouts of spring.
One insignificant blade of grass,
however small, is a motive of
glee to these docile beings.
A branch, garnished with luscious
leaves, no matter how high up,
is enough motive for a cow’s
instinctive urges to come into
play. With outstretched necks
and tongues dripping with desire,
relishing new flavors in the
living emerald pastures, still
feeling the insistent hunger
pains inside, intensified by
months of drought and famine.
These are grateful scenes, the
docile animals demonstrating
joy, Man experiencing it like
this, and, naturally, without
mysticism, thanking God for
the return of the newly painted,
dark-green pastures, substituting
the brown-grays and ash-yellows
of the dry season with vibrant
living colors, transforming
the pale tones and dust into
new life.
During a few minutes of the
next day, standing in the window,
watching the morning rain and
reminiscing about past experiences,
I wove the canvas of this tale.
Joyful, so joyful, giving grace
for this transcendental vision,
the poetic, the artistic, a
reality offered to me at the
moment. I then returned and
thanked my wife for the favor
of waking me up so early....
In any case, are there any better
moments for us to be grateful
for than for those of joy?