Way More West

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by Edward Dorn


  even with cymbals, their ears

  have lifted the chalice of explosion

  a glass of straight malice, and

  we wander in Random in the alleys

  of their longfaced towns taking

  from their sickly mandibles handbills

  summoning our joint spirits.

  I sing Sousa.

  The desire to disintegrate the Earth

  is eccentric,

  And away from centre

  nothing more nor sizeable

  nor science

  nor ennobling

  no purity, no endeavor

  toward human grace.

  We were

  on a prominence though

  so lovely to the eye eyes

  of birds only caught

  all the differences

  of each house filled hill.

  And from the window a spire

  of poplar, windows

  and brown pater earth buildings.

  My eye on the circling bird

  my mind lost in the rainy hemlocks of Washington

  the body displaced, let it

  wander all the way to Random and dwell

  in those damp groves

  where stand the friends

  I love and left: behind me

  slumbering under the dark morning sky

  are my few friends.

  Oh, please

  cut wood to warm them

  and stalk never appearing animals

  to warm them,

  I hope they are warm tonight—

  bring salmonberries

  even pumpkinseed.

  Sousa,

  it can never be

  as my friend said

  “Why can’t it be like this all the time?”

  Her arms spread out before her

  gauging the alarm,

  (with that entablature)

  and the triumph of a march

  in which no one

  is injured.

  Like a Message on Sunday

  Sits

  the forlorn plumber

  by the river

  with his daughter

  staring at the water

  then, at her

  his daughter closely.

  Once World, he came

  to our house to fix the stove

  and couldn’t

  oh, we were arrogant and talked

  about him in the next room, doesn’t

  a man know what he is doing?

  Can’t it be done right,

  World of iron thorns.

  Now they sit by the meagre river

  by the water . . . stare

  into that plumber

  so that I can see a daughter in the water

  she thin and silent,

  he, wearing a baseball cap

  in a celebrating town this summer season

  may they live on

  on, may their failure be kindly, and come

  in small pieces.

  Prayers for the People of the World

  They were an exercise the ages go through

  smiling in the church one time

  banging and blowing in the street another

  where brother is a state very often of glue

  coming apart in the heat

  of British Guiana where

  the drainage and open canals

  make difficult the protection of the lower classes

  who have lands and moneys, food and shelter

  in the great escrow called Never.

  Though black cuban beards and armored cars shout contrary.

  Did America say give me your poor?

  Yes for poor is the vitamin not stored

  it goes out in the urine of all endeavor.

  So Poor came in long black flea coats

  and bulgarian hats

  spies and bombers

  and she made five rich while flies covered the rest

  who were suppressed or murdered

  or out-bred their own demise.

  If it should ever come

  And we are all there together

  time will wave as willows do

  and adios will be truly, yes,

  laughing at what is forgotten

  and talking of what’s new

  admiring the roses you brought.

  How sad.

  You didn’t know you were at the end

  thought it was your bright pear

  the earth, yes

  another affair to have been kept

  and gazed back on

  when you had slept

  to have been stored

  as a squirrel will a nut, and half

  forgotten,

  there were so many, many

  from the newly fallen.

  FROM HANDS UP

  Home on the Range, February, 1962

  Flutes, and the harp on the plain

  Is a distance, of pain, and waving reeds

  The scale of far off trees, notes not of course

  Upon a real harp but chords in the thick clouds

  And the wind reaching its arms toward west yellowstone.

  Moving to the east, the grass was high once, and before

  White wagons moved

  the hawk, proctor of the hills still is

  Oh god did the chunky westerner think to remake this in his own

  image

  Oh god did the pioneer society sanctify the responsible citizen

  To do that

  face like a plot of ground

  Was it iron locomotives and shovels were hand tools

  And barbed wire motives for each man’s

  Fenced off little promised land

  or the mind of bent

  Or of carson, oh earp

  These sherpas of responsible destruction

  Posses led by a promising girl wielding a baton upon the street

  A Sacagawea wearing a baseball cap, eating a Clark bar.

  And flutes and the harp are on the plain to

  Bring the last leading edge of stillness

  Brought no water, brought dead roots

  Like an allotment of tool handles to their premises—and they cry

  In pain over daily income—a hundred years of planned greed

  Loving the welfare state of new barns and bean drills

  Hot passion for the freedom of the dentist!

  Their plots were america’s first subdivisions called homesteads

  Lean american—gothic quarter sections gaunt look

  Managing to send their empty headed son who is a ninny

  To nebraska to do it, all over again, to the ground, a prairie

  Dog hole,

  And always they smirk at starvation

  And consider it dirty . . . a joke their daughters learn

  From their new husbands.

  On the Debt My Mother Owed to Sears Roebuck

  Summer was dry, dry the garden

  our beating hearts, on that farm, dry

  with the rows of corn the grasshoppers

  came happily to strip, in hordes, the first

  thing I knew about locust was they came

  dry under the foot like the breaking of

  a mechanical bare heart which collapses

  from an unkind an incessant word whispered

  in the house of the major farmer

  and the catalogue company,

  from no fault of anyone

  my father coming home tired

  and grinning down the road, turning in

  is the tank full? thinking of the horse

  and my lazy arms thinking of the water

  so far below the well platform.

  On the debt my mother owed to sears roebuck

  we brooded, she in the house, a little heavy

  from too much corn meal, she

  a little melancholy from the dust of the fields

  in her eye, the only title she ever had to lands—

  and man’s ways winged their way to he
r through the mail

  saying so much per month

  so many months, this is yours, take it

  take it, take it, take it

  and in the corncrib, like her lives in that house

  the mouse nibbled away at the cob’s yellow grain

  until six o’clock when her sorrows grew less

  and my father came home

  On the debt my mother owed to sears roebuck?

  I have nothing to say, it gave me clothes to

  wear to school,

  and my mother brooded

  in the rooms of the house, the kitchen, waiting

  for the men she knew, her husband, her son

  from work, from school, from the air of locusts

  and dust masking the hedges of fields she knew

  in her eye as a vague land where she lived,

  boundries, whose tractors chugged pulling harrows

  pulling discs, pulling great yields from the earth

  pulse for the armies in two hemispheres, 1943

  and she was part of that stay at home army to keep

  things going, owing that debt.

  Los Mineros

  Now it is winter and the fallen snow

  has made its stand on the mountains, making dunes

  of white on the hills, drifting over

  the flat valley floors, and the cold cover

  has got us out to look for fuel.

  Has got us first to Madrid which is 4 miles beyond Cerillos

  close to the Golden Mountains

  a place whose business once throve like the clamor in Heorot Hall;

  but this was not sporting business, The Mine Explosion of 1911.

  And on the wall in the mine office

  there in Madrid

  are two pictures of those blackbirds, but a time later;

  the thirties, and the bite of the depression is no bleaker

  on their faces than is the coming morning of the day they were took.

  These men whom we will never know are ranged 14 in number

  in one of those pictures that are very long, you’ve seen them.

  And the wonder is five are smiling Mexicanos, the rest

  could be English or German, blown to New Mexico on another

  winter’s snow. Hard to imagine Spanish as miners, their

  sense is good-naturedly above ground (and their cruelty).

  In a silly way they know their pictures are being taken,

  and know it isn’t necessary honor standing in line with their hands

  hiding

  in their pockets. I was looking to see if they are short

  as Orwell says miners must be, but they aren’t save two

  little Mexican boys. What caught my eye at first was the way

  they were so finely dressed in old double-breasted suit coats, ready

  for work.

  Then I looked into their faces and the races separated.

  The English or Germans wear a look which is mystic in its expectancy;

  able men underground,

  but the Spanish face carries no emergency

  and one of the little boys, standing behind a post

  looks right out of the picture faintly smiling: even today. Martinez

  whom I had gone with was waiting for the weight slip.

  When we got over to the giant black chute the man above waved

  as from the deck of a troubled ship and said no carbon

  amigos, and then climbed down the ladder.

  Madrid is a gaunt town now. Its houses stand unused

  along the entering road, and they are all green and white,

  every window has been abused with the rocks of departing children.

  In My Youth I Was a Tireless Dancer

  But now I pass

  graveyards in a car.

  The, dead lie,

  unsuperstitiously,

  with their feet toward me—

  please forgive me for

  saying the tombstones would not

  fancy their faces turned from the highway.

  Oh perish the thought

  I was thinking in that moment

  Newman Illinois

  the Saturday night dance—

  what a life! Would I like it again?

  No. Once I returned late summer

  from California thin from journeying

  and the girls were not the same.

  You’ll say that’s natural

  they had been dancing all the time.

  Hemlocks

  Red house. Green tree in mist.

  How many fir long hours.

  How that split wood

  warmed us. How continuous.

  Red house. Green tree I miss.

  The first snow came in October.

  Always. For three years.

  And sat on our shoulders.

  That clean grey sky.

  That fine curtain of rain

  like nice lace held our faces

  up, in it, a kerchief for the nose

  of softest rain. Red house.

  Those green mists rolling

  down the hill. Held our heads

  when we went walking on the hills

  to the side, with pleasure.

  But sad. That’s sad. That tall grass.

  Toggenburg goat stood in, looking, chewing.

  Time was its cud. Oh

  Red barn mist of our green trees of Him

  who locks our nature in His deep nature

  how continuous do we die to come down

  as rain; that land’s refrain

  no we never go there anymore.

  From Gloucester Out

  It has all

  come back today.

  That memory for me is nothing

  there ever was,

  That man

  so long,

  when stretched out

  and so bold

  on his ground

  and so much

  lonely anywhere.

  But never to forget

  that moment

  when we came out of the tavern

  and wandered through the carnival.

  They were playing

  the washington post march

  but I mistook it for manhattan beach

  for all around were the colored lights

  of delirium

  to the left the boats

  of Italians

  and ahead of us, past the shoulders

  of St. Peter the magician of those fishermen

  the bay

  stood, and immediately in it the silent

  inclined pole where tomorrow the young men

  of this colony

  so dangerous on the street

  will fall harmlessly

  into the water.

  They are not the solid

  but are the solidly built

  citizens, and they are about us

  as we walk across

  the square

  with their black provocative

  women

  slender, like whips of

  sex in the sousa filled night.

  Where edged

  by that man in the music

  of a transplanted time and

  enough of drunkenness

  to make you senseless of all

  but virtue

  (there is never

  no, there is never a small complaint)

  (that all things shit poverty,

  and Life, one wars on with

  many embraces) oh it was a time that was perfect

  but for my own hesitating

  to know all I had not known.

  Pure existence, even in the crowds

  I love

  will never be possible for me

  even with the men I love

  This is

  the guilt

  that kills me

  My adulterated presence

  but please believe with all men

  I love to be

&n
bsp; That memory

  of how he lay out

  on the floor in his great length

  and when morning came,

  late,

  we lingered

  in the vastest of all cities

  in this hemisphere

  and all other movement

  stopped, nowhere

  else was there a stirring known to us

  yet that morning I stood

  by the window up 3 levels

  and watched a game

  of stick ball, thinking of going away,

  and wondering what would befall that man

  when he returned to his territory.

  The street as you could guess

  was thick with their running

  and cars,

  themselves, paid that activity

  such respect I thought a ritual

  in the truest sense,

  where all time and all motion

  part around the space of men

  in that act

  as does a river flow past

  the large rock.

  And he slept.

  in the next room, waiting

  in an outward slumber

  for the time

  we climbed into the car, accepting all things

  from love, the currency of which is

  parting, and glancing.

  Then went

  out of that city to jersey

 

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