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Collected Poems 1947-1997 - Ginsberg Allen - Страница 101


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101

      Paid for the lost French war in Algeria

          overthrew the Guatemalan polis in ’54

      maintaining United Fruit’s banana greed

                         another thirteen years

          for the secret prestige of the Dulles family lawfirm?

Here’s Marysville—

      a black railroad engine in the children’s park,

                         at rest—

and the Track Crossing

      with Cotton Belt flatcars

                    carrying autos west from Dallas

      Delaware & Hudson gondolas filled with power stuff—

      a line of boxcars far east as the eye can see

                    carrying battle goods to cross the Rockies

          into the hands of rich longshoremen loading

                         ships on the Pacific—

      Oakland Army Terminal lights

                    blue illumined all night now—

Crash of couplings and the great American train

          moves on carrying its cushioned load of metal doom

      Union Pacific linked together with your Hoosier Line

               followed by passive Wabash

                         rolling behind

               all Erie carrying cargo in the rear,

          Central Georgia’s rust colored truck proclaiming

                         The Right Way, concluding

      the awesome poem writ by the train

               across northern Kansas,

      land which gave right of way

      to the massing of metal meant for explosion

                         in Indochina—

Passing thru Waterville,

      Electronic machinery in the bus humming prophecy—

          paper signs blowing in cold wind,

                    mid-Sunday afternoon’s silence in town

          under frost-gray sky

                              that covers the horizon—

That the rest of earth is unseen,

                         an outer universe invisible,

                    Unknown except thru

                                   language

                                        airprint

                                             magic images

      or prophecy of the secret

                    heart the same

                    in Waterville as Saigon one human form:

          When a woman’s heart bursts in Waterville

                    a woman screams equal in Hanoi—

On to Wichita to prophesy! O frightful Bard!

      into the heart of the Vortex

          where anxiety rings

                    the University with millionaire pressure,

          lonely crank telephone voices sighing in dread,

      and students waken trembling in their beds

          with dreams of a new truth warm as meat,

          little girls suspecting their elders of murder

                    committed by remote control machinery,

          boys with sexual bellies aroused

                    chilled in the heart by the mailman

      with a letter from an aging white haired General

          Director of selection for service in Deathwar

          all this black language

                         writ by machine!

               O hopeless Fathers and Teachers

               in Hue do you know

                              the same woe too?

I’m an old man now, and a lonesome man in Kansas

      but not afraid

          to speak my lonesomeness in a car,

          because not only my lonesomeness

               it’s Ours, all over America,

                         O tender fellows—

               & spoken lonesomeness is Prophecy

               in the moon 100 years ago or in

                    the middle of Kansas now.

It’s not the vast plains mute our mouths

               that fill at midnite with ecstatic language

          when our trembling bodies hold each other

               breast to breast on a mattress—

      Not the empty sky that hides

                         the feeling from our faces

      nor our skirts and trousers that conceal

          the bodylove emanating in a glow of beloved skin,

               white smooth abdomen down to the hair

                              between our legs,

      It’s not a God that bore us that forbid

          our Being, like a sunny rose

                         all red with naked joy

          between our eyes & bellies, yes

All we do is for this frightened thing

          we call Love, want and lack—

      fear that we aren’t the one whose body could be

101

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Ginsberg Allen - Collected Poems 1947-1997 Collected Poems 1947-1997
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