Lost in perfect poetry of San Miguel de Allende
- Share via
Patricia Dreyfus
The morning is crisp, and the weather here is like Southern
California. I wear my rebozo and good walking shoes to navigate the
ancient cobblestone streets of San Miguel de Allende in Mexico. The
shopkeepers are washing the sidewalks before they open for the day. I
see no neon signs, fast-food restaurants, billboards or traffic
lights.
In the Jardin, the central plaza of the town, vendors are setting
up shop under the sheltering fig trees, and the pink morning light
glows on the facade of La Parroquia, the central church.
I am on my way to the Belles Artes, the Fine Arts Institute of San
Miguel, to attend the San Miguel Poetry Week. Poets from all over the
United States and a handful from Mexico, 30 in all, are gathered to
attend a workshop and read their poems.
The Belles Artes is a Moorish-style building. Two stories of
colonnades surround a garden and central fountain. Classes in
ceramics, music, sculpture, painting and writing take place here
daily. On the first floor is a coffee and pastry shop with tables in
the garden, where a gypsy guitarist sits in the sun and plucks his
own poetry.
Attendance at the workshop is by invitation. I provided four poems
to the jury, and to my surprise and pleasure, I received an
invitation. Had I known what caliber of company I would be entering,
I would have added terror to my list of emotions. As the week
progresses, I find that one of my classmates is the Poet Laureate of
Colorado, another, head of the poetry department at a major
university, and another publishes regularly in the Paris Review. In
fact, I am the only nonpublished poet in attendance. It is like
getting to play tennis with Serena Williams, satisfying but humbling.
Every night at 7 p.m., a crowd of about 100 people, many from the
town, gather to listen to X.J. Kennedy, Ruth Fainlight, Forest
Gander, C.D. Wright and several Mexican poets. On Friday night, the
workshop participants, meaning me, read their poems. The polite
applause after my reading feels like a standing ovation.
One night, a group of us head to La Gruta, the mineral hot springs
outside of town. It is exquisite to sit in the bubbling water under
the stars and listen to the mandolin of a local musician.
It seems every cafe in San Miguel has live music in the evening.
We hear everything from old-time jazz to Willie and Lobo. There is so
much going on in this small town that I can hardly decide what to do.
On Thursday night, I join a salsa dance class at Cafe Mama Mia. On
Friday afternoon, I attend a cooking class where I learn to create
chocolate mole sauce.
It is a one-hour drive to nearby Guanajuato, where on Saturday
afternoon, keeping the theme of the week, I check into El Meson do
los Poetas. Down the block is a marvelous museum, once the home of
famous Mexican painter Diego Rivera.
The University in Guanajuato specializes in music. Every Saturday
night, the students dress in medieval costumes and lead a serenade of
locals and visitors. I follow the music and join in the song, then
head to the hotel to dream in Spanish.
Sunday morning, after mass in the great church, I drive to Leon
and my flight home. It is a week of perfect poetry.
* PATRICIA DREYFUS is a resident of Corona del Mar.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.