vanishing with it, mustached long haired
   Italian youths, regular types coming in
   the bar for their morning shot of wine,
   huge bumbling bankers in expensive suits
   fishing for newspaper pennies in their
   palms (bumping into women at the bus
   stop), piped jews with packages, a
   lovely redhead with dark glasses pip pip
   pip on her heels trots to work bus, a
   waitress slopping mop water in the old old
   gutter, ravishing brunettes with tightfitting
   skirts succeeding in making you want to
   grab their rounded ass (tho they dont deign
   to look), goofely plup plup schoolgirlies
   with long boyish bobs plirping lips over
   books & memorizing lessons fidgetly, lovely
   young girls of 17 on corners who walk
   off with low-heeled sure-strides in long
   red coats to downtown Paris smokepot
   Old Napoleon wonders — leading a dog,
   an apparent East Indian, whistling, with
   books — bearded bus riders riding to
   accounting school — dark similar-lipped
   serious young lovers, boy arming girlshoulders
   — statue of Danton pointing nowhere —
   — Paris hepcat in dark glasses waiting there,
   faintly mustached — little suited boy in
   black beret, with well off father — English
   Flag waving, red and white crisscrossing on
   a blue field — (for Queen’s visit)
   PARIS PARK
   Sitting in a little park in Place Paul Painlevé
   — a curving row of beautiful rosy tulips rigid
   and swaying, fat shaggy sparrows, beautiful
   shorthaired mademoiselles (one shd. never be
   alone at night in Paris, boy or girl, but I’m
   an evil old man & world hater who will
   become the greatest writer who ever lived)
   RESTING BY A WINDOW IN THE LOUVRES
   — Seine outside, Carrousel Bridge, gray
   rain clouds, pushing overhead, blue sky
   holes, Seine ripple silver, old dark
   stone & houses, distant domes, skeletal
   Eiffel, people on sidewalks like Guardini’s
   little brushstroke people — (with black
   dot heads) — In this Vast hall where I
   sit, more’n 600 feet long, with dream
   giant canvases everywhere, the murmur
   blur of hundreds of voices — Seine waters
   restlessly greening near the bridge, trees
   blooming, tomorrow London —
   Downtown London Spring 1957 (sketch) —
   hammering of iron, banging of planks, a
   drill, rrrttt, humbuzz of traffic, morble
   of voices, peet of bird, dling of wrench
   falling on pavement (or of bolt screwer),
   truck going brruawp, squeak of brakes,
   the impersonal bangbang & beep beep
   of London still building long after
   Shakespeare & Blake lie bedded in
   stone & sheep — April in London,
   Where is Gray?
   TRAIN TO SOUTHAMPTON
   Brain trees growing out of Shakespeare’s fields
   — dreaming meadows full of lamb-dots —
   The dreary town of St. Denys, a church with a
   pasted-on concrete arch on the roof, the
   crowded row of redbrick houses, old man in
   a garden blossoming a new English Spring
   which seems to me hope-devoid. . . . .
   SOUTHHAMPTON — ridiculous little boxcars in the
   yards . . . cranes in the haze . . . cyclists . . .
   little boy sitting a wall horse style, with boots
   ... fweet of our engine —
   BACK TO AMERICA AND MEXICO SKETCH SATURDAY MEXICO 1957
   For a long time I didnt notice that
   a big dog was laying in the grass
   six feet behind me, completely
   licenseless, no collar, naked &
   glad the true dog sleeps, when
   I call him he pays no attention,
   right in the middle of the city
   park he stretches & enjoys —
   Meanwhile 2 little girls play
   with a ball (too small to throw
   it) as the mother waits patiently
   standing with shopping bag — 2
   boys kick the soccer ball &
   then quit, one falls flat on
   his back in the grass arms outspread
   to the sky while the other
   dances little steps & sings —
   An ordinary man carrying an
   empty pail — Two guys pulling
   a roll truck with one tire on
   it, talking — A little boy
   comes by playing with a
   plastic bottle tied around
   his neck with straps —
   Gangs of little children
   rush up to push the park-
   worker’s lawnmower with
   him, he grins — A dark
   Mexican kid with handfulstring
   of huge balloons blowing
   his little air tweeter —
   The dog is up, near the
   ball boys, watching nobly —
   he hops on 3 legs, his right
   front foot is broken or hurt,
   now he hops up to see a
   ragged boy’s white dog on
   rope leash & a short fight
   breaks out — The little boy
   brings his dog over to tell me
   the whole story (in Spanish)
   of his wounds & bravery —
   The ordinary man returns with
   full pail, hobbling — The mother
   & little girls, sit now on the
   old iron cannon, she reads
   as they crawl gladly — (I’m not
   interested much in sex anymore, but
   in that mother smiling patiently while
   the little girls play)
   SKETCH OF BEGGAR
   The strange Allen Ansen-looking
   but fat chubby Mexican beggar standing
   in front of Woolworth’s on Coahuila
   behaving spastically, with short haircut
   of bangs, brown suitcoat, white shirt,
   big pot belly, rocking back & forth
   jiggling his hand (left or right, as / according
   to which other he rests in his pocket)
   & he really makes it, / I just saw 3 people give him
   money in one minute, as one
   charitied him he turned away &
   scratched his brow (murmured something?)
   — He cant conceive that
   someone (as I) can be watching from
   across the street 2nd story window
   & so I see all his in-between
   actions & attitudes, a definite
   (holy) phoney, (I mean his
   life is harder than mine by far),
   when it came time for him to
   blow his nose after sneezing
   he didnt shake spastically
   but efficiently withdrew a
   napkin from his coat & blew
   his nose hard 3 times then
   put it back in his pocket
   — Even poor women give him
   coins & he places all of them
   in a funny space behind his back
   belt — His feet are tired, he
   whomps them up in a dance &
   down —
   When fat businessman glides
   by blowing smoke contemptly
   at him he hangs his head in
   contemplative shame — He
   looks up, scratches his neck,
   feels his coat pocket, sways,
   & waits beneath the light
   (as I)
   (Who’ve just finished a T-bon 
					     					 			e
   steak
   in Kuku’s)
   Above him I see dim
   figures in the Woolworth
   storerooms as of dance-
   class-ing & mamboing
   Being as I am now off drugs,
   after a fine meal I feel like
   I did as a kid in Lowell, an
   excited happy mind — It’s
   Saturday in Mex City & the streets
   lead to all kinds of fascinating
   lighted vistas, movies, stores, pepsi
   colas, whorehouses, nightclubs,
   children playing in brownstreet
   lamps & the sleep of the
   Fellaheen dog in some old
   grand doorway
   YES, the end to a perfect meal
   is always the grand cup of
   black coffee, here or in
   Sweets Seafood Restaurant, NY
   or in Paree, anywhere, the
   warm rich comforter (which
   prepares the appetite for chocolates
   on the homeward walk, preferably
   milk chocolate & nuts) —
   It’s the exciting hour in MCity
   or anycity, 8 on Sat nite, when
   the 5 & 10’s closing & the show
   crowds rush & newsboys shout,
   trolley bells clang, like soft
   like Lowell long ago when
   I had that swarming vision
   PENGUIN POETS
   JOHN ASHBERY
   Selected Poems
   Self-Portrait in a
   Convex Mirror
   TED BERRIGAN
   The Sonnets
   JIM CARROLL
   Fear of Dreaming:
   The Selected Poems
   Living at the Movies
   Void of Course
   ALISON HAWTHORNE
   DEMING
   Genius Loci
   CARL DENNIS
   New and Selected
   Poems 1974-2004
   Practical Gods
   Ranking the Wishes
   DIANE DI PRIMA
   Loba
   STUART DISCHELL
   Dig Safe
   STEPHEN DOBYNS
   Mystery, So Long
   Velocities:
   New and Selected
   Poems: 1966-1992
   AMY GERSTLER
   Crown of Weeds
   Ghost Girl
   Nerve Storm
   EUGENE GLORIA
   Drivers at the Short-
   Time Motel
   Hoodlum Birds
   DEBORA GREGER
   Desert Fathers,
   Uranium Daughters
   God
   Western Art
   TERRANCE HAYES
   Hip Logic
   Wind in a Box
   ROBERT HUNTER
   Sentinel and Other
   Poems
   MARY KARR
   Viper Rum
   JACK KEROUAC
   Book of Blues
   Book of Haikus
   Book of Sketches
   ANN LAUTERBACH
   Hum
   If in Time:
   Selected Poems,
   1975-2000
   On a Stair
   CORINNE LEE
   PYX
   PHYLLIS LEVIN
   Mercury
   WILLIAM LOGAN
   Macbeth in Venice
   Night Battle
   The Whispering
   Gallery
   MICHAEL MCCLURE
   Huge Dreams:
   San Francisco
   and Beat Poems
   DAVID MELTZER
   David’s Copy:
   The Selected Poems
   of David Meltzer
   CAROL MUSKE
   An Octave Above
   Thunder
   Red Trousseau
   ALICE NOTLEY
   The Descent of Alette
   Disobedience
   Mysteries of Small
   Houses
   PATTIANN ROGERS
   Generations
   STEPHANIE
   STRICKLAND
   V: WaveSon.nets/
   Losing L’una
   ANNE WALDMAN
   Kill or Cure
   Marriage: A Sentence
   Structure of the
   World Compared
   to a Bubble
   JAMES WELCH
   Riding the Earthboy
   40
   PHILIP WHALEN
   Overtime: Selected
   Poems
   ROBERT WRIGLEY
   Lives of the Animals
   Reign of Snakes
   MARK YAKICH
   Unrelated Individuals
   Forming a Group
   Waiting to Cross
   JOHN YAU
   Borrowed Love Poems   
    
   Jack Kerouac, Book of Sketches  
     (Series:  # ) 
    
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