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?