comin down that
   way. I better
   make a turn race.
   No — ” adjusting
   curvetrack to straight
   track — “no, gotta
   git anodder race
   track — You
   better help me
   Jackie.”
   “Why?”
   “Cause — Cause
   this is a hard track.
   Sure. Sure is.
   Now let me put a
   track right here.
   Hard. This hard.”
   “Now it’s goin
   right around that
   tunnel. Paul we’re
   gonna have a whole
   lot. We have
   crow-co-dals — ”
   “If you mess up
   that train track
   one more — I’ll
   shoot ya!”
   Jackie: “Talkin to me?”
   Paul: “Shoo — flooshy you.”
   Outside, in gold
   day, the weeping
   willows of Buddy Tom
   Harris hang heavy
   & languid & beauteous
   in the hour of life;
   the little boys are
   not aware of
   God, of Universal
   Love, & the vast
   earth bulging in
   the sun — they
   are a part of
   the swarming mystery
   and of the salvation
   — their eyes reflect
   humanity & intelligence
   —
   In the kitchen the
   little mother, letting
   them play, bustles
   & bangs around for
   supper. Something
   in the air presages
   the arrival of the
   father old man —
   Soft breeze puffs
   the drapes in Paul’s
   room as he & Jackie
   wriggle on the floor
   “Hey Jackie — you
   got it on the wrong way
   aint ya? Now
   put this in the back
   — now fix it.
   (Singing) I think
   I’ll get on this train,
   I think I’ll get
   on that train,
   I think I’ll get
   on the ca-buss.
   Broom! briam!”
   lofting his wood
   plane — screaming —
   “Eee- yall —
   gweyr! ” On
   his belly, smiling, —
   suddenly thinking
   silently . . .
   In the kitchen
   changed to yellow
   tailored shorts,
   tailored gray vest
   shirt, & white sandals
   the little housewife
   prepares supper. She
   stands at the white
   tile sink washing the
   small squash under
   the faucet — preliminary
   maneuvers for
   a steak supper she
   decided upon at the
   last minute —
   “Hello Geneva —
   he went to Henderson this
   noon — I think he’ll
   be back — bye — ”
   — She slices them into
   a glass bowl, standing
   idly on one foot
   with the other out-
   thrust at rest —
   the little boys now
   playing outside —
   The screendoor
   slams out front —
   “Hey!” cries
   CaB not moving from
   her work
   “Hey Moe” greets
   her husband —
   He comes into the
   kitchen, Panama
   hat, white shirt, tie
   — casual — tall,
   husky, blond, hand-
   some — smooth moving,
   slow moving, relaxed
   Southerner — He
   has mail & that afternoon
   at his mother’s
   house in Henderson
   50 miles away, while
   on a business trip for the
   tel. co., he went
   thru his grandmother’s
   trunk & found old
   letters & a pair of
   old diamond studded
   cuff links, he stands
   in the middle of the
   kitchen reading the
   old letter — written
   by a lost girl to
   his uncle Ed also
   now lost — the sadness
   of long lost enthusiasms
   on ruled paper, in
   pencil —
   But now a storm
   is coming — “It’s
   gonna storm,” says
   Jack — From the
   west the ranked
   forward-leaning
   clouds come parading
   — stationary puff
   clouds of the calm
   are snuffed &
   taken up — From
   the East big black
   thunderhead with
   his misty gloom
   forms hugeing —
   Directly above
   the embattled roof
   of the Blake’s the
   sea of dark has
   formed — the first
   light snaps — the
   first thunder crackles,
   rolls, & suddenly
   drops to the bottom
   with a shake-earth
   boom — More &
   more the rushing
   clouds are gray, a
   forlorn airplane in
   the southeast hurries
   home — Far in
   the northeast
   the remnant afternoon’s
   still soft
   & fleecy gold, still
   rich, calm, clouds
   still make noses &
   have huge maws
   of incomprehensible
   comedy in their
   sides — Thunder
   travels in the West
   heavens — “parent
   power dark’ning in
   the West” — A
   straycloud hangs
   upsidedown & helpless
   in the thunderhead
   glooms, still retaining
   white —
   Mrs. Langley nextdoor
   swiftly removes her
   sheets & wash from
   the wire line — looks
   around timidly —
   absent in her work,
   frowning in the glare,
   peaceful in the
   stillness before storm
   (as one birdy tweets
   in the forest across
   to the North) — Grass,
   flowers, weeds wave
   with dull expectancy
   — The first spray
   drops wetten the
   little Langley girl
   in her garden
   play — “Hey” she
   says — Children
   call from all sides
   as the rain begins
   to patter — Still
   a bird sings.
   Still in the NE
   the clouds are
   creampuff soft &
   afternoon dreamy.
   Some blues show
   in the horizon grays
   — Now the rain
   pelts & hums —
   gathers to a wind —
   a hush — a mighty
   wash — the
   trees are showing
   signs of activity — ,
   the corn rattles,
   the wall of the
   forest is dimmed
   by smokeshroud
   rains — a solitary
   bee rises, the
   road glistens. It
   is hot & muggy. Cars
   that come from
   up the road roll on
   their own sad images
					     					 			/>
   gray & dumb —
   The cooling thirsting
   earth sighs up a
   cucumber freshness
   mixed with steams
   of tar & warp danks
   of wood — Toads
   scream in the meadow
   ditch, the Harris rooster
   crows. A new
   atmosphere like the
   atmosphere of screened
   porches in Maine in
   March, on cold
   gray days; &
   not like sunny Carolina
   in July, is seen
   thru the windows
   above the kitchen
   sink: dark wet
   leaves are shaking
   like iron. A tiny
   ant pauses to rub
   its threads on a
   spine of leaf —
   the fly solemnly
   jumps from the
   bedspread to the
   screen hook — as
   breezes rush into
   the house from that
   perturbed West.
   “Close that door!”
   cries the mother —
   doors slam —
   “Paul I said you
   stay here!”
   Rain nails kiss
   the dance of the shiny
   road.
   The parched tobacco is
   dark as grass.
   Behind the storm the
   blue reappears — it was
   just a passing shower —
   CB doesnt even bother
   to close her windows.
   Inside an hour the
   grass is almost dry
   again, vast areas of
   open blue firmament
   show the cottonball
   horizons low & bright
   over the darknesses
   of the pine wall woods,
   up the road in clean
   white shirt & pale overalls
   that looked
   almost washed by the
   rain, comes the pure
   farmer, a Negro,
   limping, as orgones dance
   in the electric washed
   new air.
   All is well in
   Rocky Mount, North
   Carolina, as 5 o’clock
   in the afternoon shudders
   on a raindrop leaf,
   & the men’ll be coming
   home.
   AVILA BEACH, CALIF. (WRITTEN YEAR LATER)
   Seethe rush
   longroar of sea
   seething in floor
   of sand — distant
   boom of world
   shaking breakers
   — sigh & intake
   of sea — income,
   outgo — rumors
   of sea —
   hushing in air —
   hot rocks
   in the sand —
   the earth shakes
   & dances to the
   boom — I think
   I hear propellers
   of the big union
   oil Tanker
   warping in at
   pier — A great
   lost rock sits
   upended on
   the skeely sand
   — — Who the
   fuck cares
   1954 RICHMOND HILL SKETCH ON VAN WYCK BOULEVARD
   Before my eyes I see
   “Faultless Fuel Oil” written
   in white letters on a green
   board, with “11-30” in
   small numbers on each
   side to indicate the street
   address of the company.
   The building is small,
   modern, redbrick, square,
   with curious outjutting
   new type triangular
   screens that I cant really
   examine from this side
   of the boulevard but look
   like protection from
   oldfashioned robbers &
   stones — The garage door
   entrance for the oil
   trucks: green. The
   building sits upon the
   earth under a gray
   radiant sky — I see
   vague boxes in the right
   front window — Cars
   are going by with a
   sound like the sea in
   the superhiway below it
   — It is very bleak
   & I only give you the
   picture of this bleakness.
   By bleakness I mean:
   unnatural, stiff, lost
   in a void it cant
   understand, — in a
   void to which it has no
   relation because of the
   transiency of its function,
   to earn money by delivering
   oil. But it has
   a neat Tao of its
   own. In any case this
   scene is of no interest
   to me. & is only an
   example. A scene
   should be selected by
   the writer, for haunted-
   ness-of-mind interest.
   If you’re not haunted
   by something, as by a
   dream, a vision, or
   a memory, which are
   involuntary, you’re not
   interested or even involved.
   SKETCH WRITTEN IN OUELLETTE’S LUNCH IN LOWELL MASS. 1954
   “Ya rien plus pire qu’un
   enfant malade —
   a lava les runs — j’aita assez découragez
   j brauilla avec — ”
   “Un ti peu d gravy*
   d tu?” — “Staussi bien . . . Mourire
   chez nous que mourire
   la” — “L’matin
   yava les yieux griautteux”
   — “J fa jama deux
   journée d’suite” —
   “J mallez prende
   une marche — ” “Comme
   qui fa beau apramidi ha?”
   “A tu lavez les vites?”
   — “J ai lavez toute les
   vites du passage” —
   “Qui mange dla
   marde”
   “A lava les yeux
   pochées — tsé quand
   qu’on s leuve des foit?”
   CAT SKETCH ON THE CONCORD RIVER (1954)
   The Perfect Blue Sky
   is the Reality, all 6
   Essential Senses abide
   there in perfect
   indivisible Unity
   Forever — but
   here down on the
   stain of earth the
   ethereal flower in
   our minds, dead
   cats in the Concord,
   it’s a temporary
   middle state between
   Perfection of
   the Unborn & Perfection
   of the
   Dead — the Restored
   to Enlightened
   Emptiness — Compromise
   me no more, “Life”
   — the cat had no
   self, was but the
   victim of accumulated
   Karma, made
   by Karma, removed
   by Karma (death)
   — What we
   call life is just
   this lugubrious
   false stain in the
   crystal emptiness
   — The cat in waters
   “hears” Diamond
   Samadhi, “sees”
   Transcendental Sight —
   “smells” Trans. odor,
   “tastes” Trans. taste,
   “feels” Trans. feeling,
   “thinks” Trans. thot
   the one Thot
   — So I am not
   sad for him —
   Concord River RR
   Bridge
   Sunday Oct 24 ’54
   Lowell
   5 PM
   A ridiculous N E
   tumbleweed danced
   across the RR Bridge
   Thoreau’s Concord
   is b 
					     					 			lue aquamarine
   in October red
   sereness — little
   Indian hill towards
   Walden, is orange
   brown with Autumn —
   The faultless sky
   attests to T’s solemn
   wisdom being correct
   — but perfect Wisdom
   is Buddha’s
   Today I start teaching
   by setting the example
   not words only
   ROCKY MOUNT 1952 (again) WHILE HITCH HIKING BACK FROM NORFOLK VA.
   “You done lost the
   man’s hole . . . Smart
   Alex.”
   N.C. — Near Woodland N.C.
   Hams hanging by wild
   bulb-bugs in hot
   N.C. nite — sad dust
   of driveway, scattered
   softdrink hot-day
   bottles, old crates
   sunk in earth for
   steps, pumps (Premium
   & Pure Pep) —
   hillbilly music in car
   — trucks growling
   thru — old tire,
   rake — old concrete
   block — old bench —
   & tufts of green
   grass seen au bord du
   chemin quand les
   machines passes —
   L —
   ROCKY MOUNT CAR SHOP (RAILROAD)
   Yard in afternoon of
   August — bright red
   drum shining in bright green
   & yellow grass-weeds, buds, —
   old used rusty brakeshoes
   & parts piled —
   Sooty old woodwarp
   ramp — in weeds —
   fat RR clerk with
   baseball hat walking
   across, cigar, scratching
   head, removing hat —
   will go home to dogs,
   radio, wife, blond boy
   on a tricycle in white
   bungalow — Old A.C.L.
   Railway Exp Ag. 441
   weather-brown
   Cracked cars — 2, 3
   of them — nameless
   parts arranged in
   weeds by tired Negro
   workers — Puff sweet
   Carolina clouds in sultry
   blue over head — my
   eyes smarting from fresh
   paint in office, from
   no sleep — drowsy
   office like school days,
   with sleepy rustles of
   desk papers & lunch-in-
   the-belly — hate it —
   SP is in cool, dry
   Western, romantic Frisco
   of bays — with —
   hills of purple eve &
   mystery — & Neal
   — — here is fuzzy,
   unclear, hot, South,
   hot turpentined poles
   at tracks that lead
   to Morehead City, Sea &
   Africa — & impossible
   lead tho — just dull
   fat cops & people in
   heat — Easonburg is
   better.
   DIDNT HAVE PENCIL with
   me to sketch the
   bluebells that climb
   up from beautiful
   fields of weeds to
   curl around the old
   dead cornstalk that
   is rattly crackly