Animas, Hidalgo County, New Mexico (Hidalgocounty.org wikimedia)
One winter's night in that first year he woke to hear wolves in the low hills to the west of the house and he knew that they would be coming on to the plain in the new snow to run the antelope in the moonlight. He pulled the breeches off the footboard of the bed and got his shirt and his blanketlined ducking coat and got his boots from under the bed and went out to the kitchen and dressed in the dark by the faint warmth of the stove and held the boot to the window light to pair them left and right and pulled them on and rose and went to the kitchen door and stepped out and closed the door behind him."
The Crossing, Cormac McCarthy 1994
Most of the key elements of this novel are here in the beginning paragraphs, the characters of Billy Parham and his brother Boyd, the landscape, the details of a spare practical daily life, of youth and loss. This was a country where men needed to work with nature.
Billy was then still a child, but "an hour later he was crouched in the dry creek bed where he knew the wolves had been using by their tracks in the sand of the washes, by their tracks in the snow... ..They were running on the plain harrying the antelope and the antelope moved like phantoms in the snow and circled and wheeled and the dry powder blew about them in the cold moonlight and their breath smoked palely in the cold as if they burned with some inner fire and the wolves twisted and turned and leapt in a silence such that they seemed of another world entire."
He makes three crossings into Mexico, the first alone aged sixteen, to set free in the Sierra de la Madera mountains a wounded shewolf he has captured in a trap; people help him despite themselves. "People hear about me givin first aid to a damn wolf I won't be able to live in this county."
On his second crossing into Mexico Billy goes with his younger brother Boyd, after their parents are killed by Indians, determined to find the family's stolen horses. In this wild border country, the teenagers meet danger from nature and from men, hardship and evil, but most people they meet on their travels, despite extreme poverty, share what they have with the brothers.
Boyd finds a girl and stays in Mexico, leaving his brother, while Billy goes home to the States to enlist for WWII, but is rejected. In his final border crossing many years later, a widely travelled and much older Billy, now a homeless solitary man, returns to Mexico to find his brother's grave and bring his body back to Animas.
"He slept that night in his own country and he had a dream wherein he saw God's pilgrims labouring…When he woke in the round darkness about, he thought that something had indeed passed in the desert night and he was awake a long time but he had no sense that it would ever return again."
[All quotations from The Crossing, Vol. 2 of the Border trilogy © Cormac McCarthy]
* Piers Plowman, William Langland's medieval allegory: "Of alle manner of men, the mene and the riche, Working and wandring as the world asketh."
Mexican Grey Wolf, National Wildlife Refuge Society, New Mexico
He makes three crossings into Mexico, the first alone aged sixteen, to set free in the Sierra de la Madera mountains a wounded shewolf he has captured in a trap; people help him despite themselves. "People hear about me givin first aid to a damn wolf I won't be able to live in this county."
All through this first journey, his youth and dogged integrity sustains him through hardship and danger, and he meets much kindness.
On his second crossing into Mexico Billy goes with his younger brother Boyd, after their parents are killed by Indians, determined to find the family's stolen horses. In this wild border country, the teenagers meet danger from nature and from men, hardship and evil, but most people they meet on their travels, despite extreme poverty, share what they have with the brothers.
The Chihuahua Desert, Mexico (wikimedia)
South of Animas, Hidalgocounty.org
"He slept that night in his own country and he had a dream wherein he saw God's pilgrims labouring…When he woke in the round darkness about, he thought that something had indeed passed in the desert night and he was awake a long time but he had no sense that it would ever return again."
The border today: "The soul of Mexico is very old, said Quijada. Whoever claims to know it is either a liar or a fool. Or both."
* Piers Plowman, William Langland's medieval allegory: "Of alle manner of men, the mene and the riche, Working and wandring as the world asketh."
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