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	<title>Wild Violet online literary magazine &#187; Judy Bebelaar</title>
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		<title>Stern Grove</title>
		<link>https://www.wildviolet.net/2013/06/24/stern-grove/</link>
		<comments>https://www.wildviolet.net/2013/06/24/stern-grove/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Jun 2013 02:10:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Judy Bebelaar]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1960s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[concerts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[society]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.wildviolet.net/?p=3427</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We are all women of a certain age— at seventy, mine more certain than others’. I’ve been somewhere much like this eons ago: Love-ins, Be-ins, we called them then, but the young girls in short skirts or long, the couples, the children, the music: almost the same. We filed down a steep, shady path, orange [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img src="http://www.wildviolet.net/aimages/2013/stern_grove.jpg" alt="Folk festival with hippies and modern dancers" /></p>
<p>We are all women of a certain age—<br />
at seventy, mine more certain than others’.<br />
I’ve been somewhere much like this eons ago:<br />
Love-ins, Be-ins, we called them then,<br />
but the young girls in short skirts or long,<br />
the couples, the children, the music: almost the same.</p>
<p>We filed down a steep, shady path,<br />
orange nasturtiums lacing through dark ferns<br />
on either side as if lighting our way<br />
to where musicians are setting up<br />
on a stage under tall redwoods.<br />
On either side of us the earth angles up,<br />
terraced to the west for seating on the ground.<br />
We’re early, but every space is full, blanket to blanket.</p>
<p>The meadow beyond is a living quilt.<br />
On an avocado square, two lovers lie<br />
in one another’s arms, eyes closed,<br />
blissful faces turned up to the sun<br />
which has broken through the fog just now.<br />
A circle of children and adults<br />
make a center patch: a yellow ruffled skirt,<br />
hot pink pants, a red shirt against the grassy field.<br />
Two toddlers, boy and girl, hold hands<br />
and do a wobbly, zig-zag waltz around the center,<br />
binding it to the quilting blocks around, where girls in long skirts<br />
and men in hats sit on the green.</p>
<p>On a rose patch, two babies sleep through<br />
the Afro-Cuban afternoon, and when the music begins,<br />
two dancers begin to twirl on the asphalt border:<br />
she, shapely in black, a low-slung belt, and spiked heels,<br />
and he, in baggy blue jeans, a T-shirt covering his sizable paunch.<br />
If you couldn’t see them dancing together,<br />
you might wonder what she saw in him.<br />
A three-year-old runs the salsa gauntlet<br />
between their legs as they sidestep and sway.</p>
<p>I think back to those gatherings in Golden Gate Park.<br />
My husband John, gone these twenty years now,<br />
danced like an angel too,<br />
and he and I moved in the same easy sync,<br />
with Kristy, two or three then, twirling between us.</p>
<p>Next to my friends and me, on a white patch,<br />
a blind Asian woman, white-haired, frail,<br />
kneels as she meditates or prays, head down.<br />
Her tall son is her staff when she walks,<br />
reaching up to hold on to one of his broad shoulders.</p>
<p>Our piece is tiny flowers on white, the quilt off Amy’s bed.<br />
A yellow butterfly lights in my tipped wine cup on the grass,<br />
takes a sip, and flutters on past paired dragonflies<br />
and floating bubbles. Amy says it’s good luck for me.</p>
<p>On a blue patch a four-year-old<br />
moves to the music in nothing but her lovely skin.<br />
Two young men, laughing and tossing compliments,<br />
follow a pare of pretty bare shoulders<br />
down a path. As she smiles, I think one of them<br />
will get lucky too. A baby in braids,<br />
bouncing along in her mother’s arms,<br />
stares fascinated at the stranger walking behind<br />
as he waves and makes silly faces at the child.</p>
<p>Outside this green bowl rimmed by sequoia and eucalyptus,<br />
wars—now, as then—take their toll; brain-damaged soldiers<br />
beg on dirty city streets, children go hungry,<br />
homes fall into foreclosure, and people lose hope.<br />
But here, strangers offer champagne,<br />
bountiful picnics are spread, children play,<br />
and no one is poor, not even the lady scavenging cans—<br />
she’s found a treasure trove.<br />
And as for me, I make my way to the crowded floor<br />
below the stage, and dance.</p>
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