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    Reality Sandwiches

    Page 2
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      sleeping on the table

      will open its eyes in a moment

      and be looking at me --.

      One might sit in this Chiapas

      recording the apparitions in the field

      visible from a hammock

      looking out across the shadow of the pasture

      in all the semblance of Eternity

      . . . a dwarfed thatch roof

      down in the grass in a hollow slope

      under the tall crowd of vegetation

      waiting at the wild edge:

      the long shade of the mountain beyond

      in the near distance,

      its individual hairline of trees

      traced fine and dark along the ridge

      against the transparent sky light,

      rifts and holes in the blue air

      and amber brightenings of clouds

      disappearing down the other side

      into the South . . .

      palms with lethargic feelers

      rattling in presage of rain,

      shifting their fronds

      in the direction of the balmy wind,

      monstrous animals

      sprayed up out of the ground

      settling and unsettling

      as in water . . .

      and later in the night

      a moment of premonition

      when the plenilunar cloudfilled sky

      is still and small.

      So spent a night

      with drug and hammock

      at Chichen Itza on the Castle:--

      I can see the moon

      moving over the edge of the night forest

      and follow its destination

      through the clear dimensions of the sky

      from end to end of the dark

      circular horizon.

      High dim stone portals,

      entablatures of illegible scripture,

      bas-reliefs of unknown perceptions:

      and now the flicker of my lamp

      and smell of kerosene on dust-

      strewn floor where ant wends

      its nightly ritual way toward great faces

      worn down by rain.

      In front of me a deathshead

      half a thousand years old

      -- and have seen cocks a thousand

      old grown over with moss and batshit

      stuck out of the wall

      in a dripping vaulted house of rock --

      but deathshead's here

      on portal still and thinks its way

      through centuries the thought

      of the same night in which I sit

      in skully meditation

      -- sat in many times before by

      artisan other than me

      until his image of ghostly change

      appeared unalterable --

      but now his fine thought's vaguer

      than my dream of him:

      and only the crude skull figurement's

      gaunt insensible glare is left,

      with its broken plumes of sensation

      and indecipherable headdresses of intellect

      scattered in the madness of oblivion

      to holes and notes of elemental stone,

      blind face of animal transcendency

      over the holy ruin of the world

      dissolving into the sunless wall of a blackened room

      on a time-rude pyramid rebuilt

      in the bleak flat night of Yucatan

      where I come with my own mad mind to study

      alien hieroglyphs of Eternity.

      A creak in the rooms scared me.

      Some sort of bird, vampire or swallow,

      flees with little paper wingflap

      around the summit in its own air unconcerned

      with the great stone tree I perch on.

      Continual metallic

      whirr of chicharras,

      then lesser chirps

      of cricket: 5 blasts

      of the leg whistle.

      The creak of an opening

      door in the forest,

      some sort of weird birdsong

      or reptile croak.

      My hat woven of hennequin

      on the stone floor

      as a leaf on the waters,

      as perishable;

      my candle wavers continuously

      and will go out.

      Pale Uxmal,

      unhistoric, like a dream,

      Tuluum shimmering on the coast in ruins;

      Chichen Itza naked

      constructed on a plain;

      Palenque, broken chapels in the green

      basement of a mount;

      lone Kabah by the highway;

      Piedras Negras buried again

      by dark archaeologists;

      Yaxchilan

      resurrected in the wild,

      and all the limbo of Xbalba still unknown --

      floors under roofcomb of branch,

      foundation to ornament

      tumbled to the flowers,

      pyramids and stairways

      raced with vine,

      limestone corbels

      down in the river of trees,

      pillars and corridors

      sunken under the flood of years:

      Time's slow wall overtopping

      all that firmament of mind,

      as if a shining waterfall of leaves and rain

      were built down solid from the endless sky

      through which no thought can pass.

      A great red fat rooster

      mounted on a tree stump

      in the green afternoon,

      the ego of the very fields,

      screams in the holy sunlight!

      -- I can't think with that

      supersonic cock intensity

      crucifying my skull

      in its imaginery sleep.

      -- was looking back

      with eyes shut to

      where they crawled

      like ants on brown old temples

      building their minute ruins

      and disappearing into the wild

      leaving many mysteries

      of deathly volition

      to be divined.

      I alone know the great crystal door

      to the House of Night,

      a legend of centuries

      -- I and a few indians.

      And had I mules and money I could find

      the Cave of Amber

      and the Cave of Gold

      rumored of the cliffs of Tumbala.

      I found the face of one

      of the Nine Guardians of the Night

      hidden in a mahogany hut

      in the Area of Lost Souls

      -- first relic of kind for that place.

      And I found as well a green leaf

      shaped like a human heart;

      but to whom shall I send this

      anachronistic valentine?

      Yet these ruins so much

      woke me to nostalgia

      for the classic stations

      of the earth,

      the ancient continent

      I have not seen

      and the few years

      of memory left

      before the ultimate night

      of war.

      As if these ruins were not enough,

      as if man could go

      no further before heaven

      till he exhausted

      the physical round

      of his own mortality

      in the obscure cities

      hidden in the ageing world

      . . . the few actual

      ecstatic conscious souls

      certain to be found,

      familiars . . .

      returning after years

      to my own scene

      transfigured:

      to hurry change

      to hurry the years

      bring me to my fate.

      So I dream nightly of an embarcation,

      captains, captains,

      iron passageways, cabin lights,

      Brooklyn across the waters,

      the grea
    t dull boat, visitors, farewells,

      the blurred vast sea --

      one trip a lifetime's loss or gain:

      as Europe is my own imagination

      -- many shall see her,

      many shall not --

      though it's only the old familiar world

      and not some abstract mystical dream.

      And in a moment of previsioning sleep

      I see that continent in rain,

      black streets, old night, a

      fading monument . . .

      And a long journey unaccomplished

      yet, on antique was

      rolling in gray barren dunes under

      the world's waste of light

      toward ports of childish geography

      the rusty ship will

      harbor in . . .

      What nights might I not see

      penniless among the Arab

      mysteries of dirty towns around

      the casbahs of the docks?

      Clay paths, mud walls,

      the smell of green cigarettes,

      creosote and rank salt water --

      dark structures overhead,

      shapes of machinery and façade

      of hull: and a bar lamp

      burning in the wooden shack

      across from the dim

      mountain of sulphur on the pier.

      Toward what city

      will I travel? What wild houses

      do I go to occupy?

      What vagrant rooms and streets

      and lights in the long night

      urge my expectation? What genius

      of sensation in ancient

      halls? what jazz beyond jazz

      in future blue saloons?

      what love in the cafes of God?

      I thought, five years ago

      sitting in my apartment,

      my eyes were opened for an hour

      seeing in dreadful ecstasy

      the motionless buildings

      of New York rotting

      under the tides of Heaven.

      There is a god

      dying in America

      already created

      in the imagination of men

      made palpable

      for adoration:

      there is an inner

      anterior image

      of divinity

      beckoning me out

      to pilgrimage.

      O future, unimaginable God.

      Finca Tacalapan de San

      Leandro, Palenque,

      Chiapas, Mexico 1954 --

      San Francisco1955

      II.

      Jump in time

      to the immediate future,

      another poem:

      return to the old land

      penniless and with

      a disconnected manuscript,

      the recollection of a few

      sensations, beginning:

      logboat down Rio Michol

      under plantain

      and drifting trees

      to the railroad,

      darkness on the sea

      looking toward the stations

      of the classic world --

      another image descending

      in white mist

      down the lunar highway

      at dawn, above

      Lake Catemaco on the bus

      -- it woke me up --

      the far away likeness

      of a heavenly file

      of female saints

      stepping upward

      on miniature arches

      of a gold stairway

      into the starry sky,

      the thousands of little

      saintesses in blue hoods

      looking out at me

      and beckoning:

      SALVATION!

      It's true,

      simple as in the image.

      Then the mummies

      in their Pantheon

      at Guanajuato --

      a city of Cortesian

      mines in the first

      crevasse of the Sierras,

      where I rested --

      for I longed to see their

      faces before I left:

      these weren't mythical rock

      images, tho stone

      -- limestone effigies out

      of the grave, remains

      of the fatal character --

      newly resurrected,

      grasping their bodies

      with stiff arms, in soiled

      funeral clothes;

      twisted, knock-kneed,

      like burning

      screaming lawyers --

      what hallucinations

      of the nerves? --

      indecipherable-sexed;

      one death-man had

      raised up his arms

      to cover his eyes,

      significant timeless

      reflex in sepulchre:

      apparitions of immortality

      consumed inward,

      waiting openmouthed

      in the fireless darkness.

      Nearby, stacked symmetrically,

      a skullbone wall ending

      the whitewashed corridor

      under the graveyard

      -- foetid smell reminiscent

      of sperm and drunkenness --

      the skulls empty and fragile,

      numerous as shells,

      -- so much life passed through

      this town . . .

      The problem is isolation

      -- there in the grave

      or here in oblivion of light.

      Of eternity we have

      a numbered score of years

      and fewer tender moments

      -- one moment of tenderness

      and a year of intelligence

      and nerves: one moment of pure

      bodily tenderness --

      I could dismiss Allen with grim

      pleasure.

      Reminder: I knelt in my room

      on the patio at San Miguel

      at the keyhole: 2 A.M.

      The old woman lit a candle.

      Two young men and their girls

      waited before the portal,

      news from the street. She

      changed the linen, smiling.

      What joy! The nakedness!

      They dance! They talk

      and simper before the door,

      they lean on a leg,

      hand on a hip, and posture,

      nudity in their hearts,

      they clap a hand to head

      and whirl and enter,

      pushing each other,

      happily, happily,

      to a moment of love. . .

      What solitude I've

      finally inherited.

      Afterward fifteen hours

      on rubbled single lane,

      broken bus rocking along

      the maws and continental crags

      of mountain afternoon,

      the distant valleys fading,

      regnant peaks beyond

      to days on the Pacific

      where I bathed --

      then riding, fitful,

      gazing, sleeping

      through the desert

      beside a wetback

      sad-faced old-man-

      youth, exhausted

      to Mexicali

      to stand

      near one night's dark shack

      on the garbage cliffs

      of bordertown overhanging

      the tin house poor

      man's village below,

      a last night's

      timewracked brooding

      and farewell,

      the end of a trip.

      -- Returning

      armed with New Testament,

      critic of horse and mule,

      tanned and bearded

      satisfying Whitman, concerned

      with a few Traditions,

      metrical, mystical, manly

      . . . and certain characteristic flaws

      -- enough!

      The nation over the border

      grinds its arms and dreams

      of war: I see


      the fiery blue clash

      of metal wheels

      clanking in the industries

      of night, and

      detonation of infernal bombs

      . . . and the silent downtown

      of the States

      in watery dusk submersion.

      Guanajuato -- Los Angeles, 1954

      [NOTE: Uxmal and other proper names mentioned in the first part of the poem are those of ruined cities. Xbalba, translatable as morning Star in Region Obscure, or Hope, and pronounced Chivalvá, is the area in Chiapas between the Tobasco border and the Usumascintla River at the edge of the Peten Rain Forest; the boundary of lower Mexico and Guatemala today is thereabouts. The locale was considered a Purgatory or Limbo, the legend is vague, in the (Old) Mayan Empire. To the large tree at the crest of what is now called Mount Don Juan, at the foot of which this poem was written, ancient craftsmen came to complete work left unfinished at their death.]

      ON BURROUGHS' WORK

      The method must be purest meat

      and no symbolic dressing,

      actual visions & actual prisons

      as seen then and now.

      Prisons and visions presented

      with rare descriptions

      corresponding exactly to those

      of Alcatraz and Rose.

      A naked lunch is natural to us,

      we eat reality sandwiches.

      But allegories are so much lettuce.

      Don't hide the madness.

      San Jose 1954

      LOVE POEM ON THEME BY WHITMAN

      I'll go into the bedroom silently and lie down between the bridegroom and the bride,

      those bodies fallen from heaven stretched out waiting naked and restless,

      arms resting over their eyes in the darkness,

      bury my face in their shoulders and breasts, breathing their skin,

      and stroke and kiss neck and mouth and make back be open and known,

      legs raised up crook'd to receive, cock in the darkness driven tormented and attacking

      roused up from hole to itching head,

      bodies locked shuddering naked, hot lips and buttocks screwed into each other

      and eyes, eyes glinting and charming, widening into looks and abandon,

      and moans of movement, voices, hands in air, hands between thighs,

      hands in moisture on softened lips, throbbing contraction of bellies

      till the white come flow in the swirling sheets,

      and the bride cry for forgiveness, and the groom be covered with tears of passion and compassion,

      and I rise up from the bed replenished with last intimate gestures and kisses of farewell --

      all before the mind wakes, behind shades and closed doors in a darkened house

      where the inhabitants roam unsatisfied in the night,

      nude ghosts seeking each other out in the silence.

      OVER KANSAS

      Starting with eyeball kicks

      on storefronts from bus window

      on way to Oakland airport:

      I am no ego

      these are themselves

      stained grey wood and gilded

      nigger glass and barberpole

      thass all.

      But then, Kiss Me Again

     


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