backed with bomb murder,

  backed with Propaganda—

  Soldiers on this train think they’re fighting China

  Soldiers on this train think Ho Chi Minh’s Chinese

  Soldiers on this train don’t know where they’re going

  John Steinbeck stop the war John Steinbeck stop

  the war John Steinbeck stop the war.

  And the French Army surrounded Madrid,

  and the Spanish Army’d marched simultaneously surrounded Paris.

  Then they found out

  it was hopeless.

  Generals sent messages,

  Call off the attack!

  and the Armies rushed to a neutral place confronted

  & killed each other.

  They just wanted to fight,

  no question of Madrid or Paris, then.

  —& Johnson backed

  Saigon’s latest conditions:

  N. Vietnam withdraw all aid,

  Dissolve Withdraw Viet Cong.

  These are conditions,

  contradicting Johnson’s Unconditionals.

  These languages are gibberish.

  John Steinbeck thy language is gibberish,

  thou’st lost the language war,

  cantankerous phantom!

  Newspaper language ectoplasm fades—

  Everybody sneeze!

  Lightning’s blue glare fills Oklahoma plains,

  the train rolls east

  casting yellow shadow on grass

  Twenty years ago

  approaching Texas

  I saw

  sheet lightning

  cover Heaven’s corners

  Feed Storage Elevators in gray rain mist,

  checkerboard light over sky-roof

  same electric lightning South

  follows this train

  Apocalypse prophesied—

  the Fall of America

  signaled from Heaven—

  Ninety nine soldiers in uniform paid by the Government to Believe—

  ninety nine soldiers escaping the draft for an Army job, ninety nine soldiers shaved

  with nowhere to go but where told,

  ninety nine soldiers seeing lightning flash

  a thousand years ago

  Ten thousand Chinese marching on the plains

  all turned their heads to Heaven at once to see the Moon.

  An old man catching fireflies on the porch at night

  watched the Herd Boy cross the Milky Way

  to meet the Weaving Girl…

  How can we war against that?

  How can we war against that?

  Morning song, waking from dreams

  brown grass, city edge nettle

  wild green stinkweed trees

  by railroad thru niggertown, carlot, scrapheap

  auto slag bridge outskirts,

  muddy river’s brown debris

  passing Eton Junction

  fine rainmist over green fields—

  Trees standing upside down

  in lush earth approaching Mississippi

  green legs waving to clouds,

  seed pods exposed to birds & rain bursting,

  tree heads drinking in the ground.

  Unfold stones like rag dolls & the Astral

  body stares with opal eyes,

  —all living things before my spectacles.

  In the diner, the Lady

  “These soldiers so nice, clean faces

  and their hair combed so short—

  Ugh its disgusting the others

  —down to their shoulders & cowboy boots—”

  aged husband spooning cantaloupe.

  Too late, too late

  the Iron Horse hurrying to war,

  too late for laments

  too late for warning—

  I’m a stranger alone in my country again.

  Better to find a house in the veldt,

  better a finca in Brazil—

  Green corn here healthy under sky

  & telephone wires carry news as before,

  radio bulletins & television images

  build War—

  American Fighter Comic Books

  on coach seat.

  Better a house hidden in trees

  Mississippi bank

  high cliff protected from flood

  Better an acre down Big Sur

  morning path, ocean shining

  first day’s blue world

  Better a farm in backland Oregon,

  roads near Glacier Peak

  Better withdraw from the Newspaper world

  Better withdraw from the electric world

  Better retire before war cuts my head off,

  not like Kabir—

  Better to buy a Garden of Love

  Better protect the lamb in some valley

  Better go way from taxicab radio cities

  screaming President,

  Better to stop smoking

  Better to stop jerking off in trains

  Better to stop seducing white bellied boys

  Better to stop publishing Prophecy—

  Better to meditate under a tree

  Better become a nun in the forest

  Better turn flapjacks in Omaha

  than be a prophet on the electric Networks—

  There’s nothing left for this country but doom

  There’s nothing left for this country but death

  Their faces are so plain

  their thoughts so simple,

  their machinery so strong—

  Their arms reach out 10,000 miles with lethal gas

  Their metaphor so mixed with machinery

  No one knows where flesh ends and

  the robot Polaris begins—

  “Waves of United States jetplanes struck at North Vietnam

  again today in the face of…”

  Associated Press July 21st—

  A summer’s day in Illinois!

  Green corn silver watertowers

  under the viaduct windowless industry

  at track crossing white flowers,

  American flowers,

  American dirt road, American rail,

  American Newspaper War—

  in Galesburg, in Galesburg

  grocery stove pipes and orange spikeflowers

  in backyard lots—TV antennae

  spiderweb every poor house

  Under a smokestack with a broken lip

  magnetic cranes drop iron scrap like waterdrops.

  Thirtytwo years ago today, the woman in the red

  dress outside the Biograph Theatre in Chicago

  didn’t wanna be sent back to Rumania.

  Ambushed Dillinger fell dead on the sidewalk

  hit by 4 bullets

  FBI man Purvis quit in ’35—

  Feb 29, 1960 he shot & killed himself in his home

  Army Colonel in World War II

  Breakfast Cereal Manufacturer.

  Dillinger’s eyes and Melvin Purvis’—

  Dillinger grim, Purvis self-satisfied,

  Both died of bullets.

  Football field, suburb streets, gray-sheeted clouds

  stretched out to the City ahead

  Myriad pylons, telegraph poles, a lavender boiler.

  Fulbright broadcast attacks war money

  Crushed stone mounds, earth eaten

  Henry Crown’s & General Dynamics’

  dust rising from rubble

  Sawdust burners

  topped by black cloud—

  sulphurous yellow

  gas rising from red smokestacks

  Power stations netted

  with aluminum ladders and ceramic balls

  rusty scrapheaps’ cranes

  stub chimneys puffing gray air

  Coalbarges’ old Holland dusk in a canal,

  railroad tracks banded to the city

  watertowers’ high legs walking the horizon

  The Chinese Foreign Minister makes his pro
nouncement,

  Thicker thicker metal

  lone bird above phonepole

  Thicker thicker smokestack wires

  Giant Aztec factories, red brick towers

  feeder-noses drooped to railyard

  “All human military activity” suspended

  says radio—

  Campbell’s soups a fortress here,

  giant can raised high over Chicago

  forest of bridge signs

  Church spires lifted gray

  hazy towers downtown

  a belfried cross beneath

  dynamo’d smoke-cathedrals,

  The train rolls slower

  past cement trucks’

  old cabs resting in produce flats

  over city streets, rumbling

  on a canal’s green mirror

  past the blue paint factory,

  Thicker thicker the wires

  over cast iron buildings, black windows

  local bus passing viaduct stanchions

  a lone wino staggers down Industrial Thruway

  This nation at war

  sun yellowing gray clouds,

  beast trucks down the

  Garage’s bowels—

  Bright steam

  muscular puffing from an old slue

  Meadowgold Butter besmeared with coal dust,

  creosote wood bulwarks

  Oiltank cars wait their old engine

  tracks curve into the city’s heart

  windowed hulks downtown

  where YMCA beckons the homeless unloved,

  the groan of iron tons inching against

  whitened rail,

  giant train so slowly moved

  a man can touch the wheels.

  II

  Bus outbound from Chicago Greyhound basement

  green neon beneath streets Route 94

  Giant fire’s orange tongues & black smoke

  pouring out that roof,

  little gay pie truck passing the wall—

  Brick & trees E. London, antique attics

  mixed with smokestacks

  Apartments apartments square windows set like Moscow

  apartments red brick for multimillion population

  out where industries raise craned necks

  Gas station lights, old old old old traveler

  “put a tiger in yr tank—”

  Fulbright sang on the Senate floor

  Against the President’s Asian War

  Chicago’s acrid fumes in the bus

  A-1 Outdoor Theatre

  ’gainst horned factory horizon,

  tender steeples ringing Metropolis

  Thicker thicker, factories

  crowd iron cancer on the city’s throat—

  Aethereal roses

  distant gas flares

  twin flue burning at horizon

  Night falling on the bus

  steady ear roar

  between Chicago and New York

  Wanderer, whither next?

  See Palenque dream again,

  long hair in America,

  cut it for Tehuantepec—

  Peter’s golden locks grown gray,

  quiet meditation in Oaxaca’s

  old backyard,

  Tonalá or Angel Port warm nights

  no telephone, the War

  rages North

  Police break down the Cross

  Crowds screaming in the streets—

  on Pacific cliff-edge

  Sheri Martinelli’s little house with combs and shells

  Since February fear, she saw LSD

  Zodiac in earth grass, stood

  palm to cheek, scraped her toe

  looking aside, & said

  “Too disturbed to see you

  old friend w/ so much Power”

  —ten years later.

  Yajalón valley, bougainvillea flares

  against the Mayor’s house—

  Jack you remember the afternoon

  Xochimilco with Fairies?

  Green paradise boats

  flower laden poled upriver

  Pulque in the poop

  stringed music in air—

  drunkenness, & happiness

  anonymous

  fellows without care from America—

  Now war moves my mind—

  Villahermosa full of purple flowers

  Merida hath cathedral & cheap hotels

  —boat to Isla Cosumel

  Julius can wander thru Fijijiapan

  forgetting his dog peso Nicotinic Acid—

  Bus seat’s white light shines on Mexico map,

  quietness, quietness over countryside

  palmfrond insects, cactus ganja

  & Washington’s Police 5 thousand miles away?

  Ray Charles singing from hospital

  “Let’s go get stoned.”

  Durango-Mazatlán road’s built over

  Sierra Madre’s moon valleys now

  Children with quartz jewels climbing highway cliff-edge

  Jack you bought crystals & beer—

  Old houses in Panama City

  La Barranca gray canyon under Guadalajara,

  Tepic for more candy.

  I wanna go out in a car

  not leave word where I’m going—

  travel ahead.

  Or Himalayas in Spring

  following the pilgrim’s path

  10,000 Hindus

  to Shiva temples North

  Rishikesh & Laxman Jula

  Homage to Shivananda,

  the Guru heart—

  thru green canyons, Ganges gorge—

  carrying a waterpot

  to Kedernath & Badrinath

  & Gangotri in the ice

  —Manasarovar forbidden,

  Kailash forbidden,

  the Chinese eat Tibet.

  Howl for them that suffer broken bone

  homeless on moody balconies

  Jack’s voice returning to me over & over

  with prophecy

  “Howl for boys sleeping hungry on tables in cafés with their long hair

  to the sea” in Hidalgo de Parral,

  Hermosillo & Tetuán—

  The masses prepare for war

  short haired mad executives

  young flops from college

  yellow & pink flesh gone mad

  listening to radio news.

  & Johnson was angry with Fulbright

  for criticizing his war.

  And Hart Crane’s myth and Whitman’s—

  What’ll happen to that?

  The Karma

  accumulated bombing Vietnam

  The Karma bodies napalm-burned

  Karma suspicion

  where machinery’s smelt the heat of bodies trembling

  in the jungle

  The Karma of bullets in the back of the head by thatched walls

  The Karma of babies in their mothers’ arms

  bawling destroyed

  The Karma of populations moved from center to center of

  Detention

  Karma of bribery, Karma blood-money

  Must come home to America,

  There must be a war

  America has builded herself a new body.

  Peaceful young men in America get out of the Cities & go to

  the countryside & the trees—

  Bearded young men in America hide your hair & shave your

  beards & disappear

  The destroyers are out to destroy—

  Destroyers of Peking & Washington stare face to face

  & will hurl their Karma-bombs

  on the planet.

  Get thee to the land,

  leave the cities to be destroyed.

  Only a miracle appearing in Man’s eyes

  only boys’ flesh singing

  can show the warless way—

  or miracle

  Radium destruction over Earth

  seed Planet with New Babe.

  Brillia
nt green lights

  in factory transom windows.

  Beautiful!

  as eyes close to sleep,

  beautiful as undersea sunshine

  or valleybottom fern.

  Why do I fear these lights?

  & smoking chimneys’ Industry?

  Why see them less godly

  than forest treetrunks

  & sunset orange moons?

  Why these cranes less Edenly than Palmfronds?

  these highway neons unequal in beauty

  to violet starfish anemone & kelp

  in Point Lobos’

  tidepools’ transparency?

  It’s these neon Standard Gastation

  cars of men whose faces are dough

  pockets full of 58 billion dollar

  abstract budget money—

  these green lights illuminate

  goggled eyes fixing blowtorches on metal wings

  flying off to war—

  Because these electric structures rear tin machines

  that will kill Bolivian marchers

  or flagellate Vietnam adolescents’ thighs—

  Because my countrymen make this structure to make War

  Because this smoke over Toledo’s advertised in the Toledo Blade

  as energy burning to destroy China.

  Baghavan Sri Ramana Maharshi

  in his photo has a fine white halo of hair,

  thin man with a small beard

  silver short-cropped skull-fur

  His head tilted to one side,

  mild smile, intelligent eyes

  “The Jivan-Mukta is not a Person.”

  Morning sunrise over Tussie Hills,

  earth covered with emerald-dark fur.

  Cliffs to climb, a little wilderness,

  a little solitude,

  and a long valley you could call a home.

  Came thru here with Peter before & noticed

  green forest,

  What a place to walk & look

  thru cellular consciousness

  —Near Nealyton or Dry Run

  Waterfall or Meadow Gap, or Willow Hill.

  Sunrays filtering thru clouds like a negative photograph,

  smoky bus window, passengers asleep

  over Susquehanna River’s morning mist.

  Ike at Gettysburg found himself a nice spot—

  all these places millions of trees’ work

  made green

  as millions of workmen’s labor raised the buildings of NY,

  Corn here in fields, dollars in the fields of New York.

  Morning glow, hills east Harrisburg, bright

  highways, red factory smoke, fires burning

  upriver in garbage lots—

  Philadelphia Inquirer: “Perry County 113 acres

  of woodland, $11,300. Ideal locations for

  cabins, quarters, township road, springs &

  roads on track, best of hunting, call 1-717 …”

  —Dangerous to want possessions

  and for so short a time.

  Shoulda had it in 1945, or ’53,