Read Paterson (Revised Edition) Online
Authors: William Carlos Williams
house and men working the field, cut them
off! they having left their arms in the block-
house, and—without defense—carry them away
into captivity. One old man .
Forget it! for God’s sake, Cut
out that stuff .
Walking —
he rejoins the path and sees, on a treeless
knoll—the red path choking it—
a stone wall, a sort of circular
redoubt against the sky, barren and
unoccupied. Mount. Why not?
A chipmunk,
with tail erect, scampers among the stones.
(Thus the mind grows, up flinty pinnacles)
. but as he leans, in his stride,
at sight of a flint arrow-head
(it is not)
—there
in the distance, to the north, appear
to him the chronic hills .
Well, so they are.
He stops short:
Who’s here?
To a stone bench, to which she’s leashed, within the wall a man in tweeds—a pipe hooked in his jaw—is combing out a new-washed Collie bitch. The deliberate comb-strokes part the long hair—even her face he combs though her legs tremble slightly—until it lies, as he designs, like ripples in white sand giving off its clean-dog odor. The floor, stone slabs, she stands patiently before his caresses in that bare “sea chamber”
. to the right
from this vantage, the observation tower
in the middle distance stands up prominently
from its pubic grove
D
EAR
B. Please excuse me for not having told you this when I was over to your house. I had no courage to answer your questions so I’ll write it. Your dog
is
going to have puppies although I prayed she would be okey. It wasn’t that she was left alone as she never was but I used to let her out at dinner time while I hung up my clothes. At the time, it was on a Thursday, my mother-in-law had some sheets and table cloths out on the end of the line. I figured the dogs wouldn’t come as long as I was there and none came thru my yard or near the apartment. He must have come between your hedge and the house.
Every few
seconds I would run to the end of the line or peek under the sheets to see if Musty was alright. She was until I looked a minute too late. I took sticks and stones after the dog but he wouldn’t beat it. George gave me plenty of hell and I started praying that I had frightened the other dog so much that nothing had happened. I know you’ll be cursing like a son-of-a-gun and probably won’t ever speak to me again for not having told you. Don’t think I haven’t been worrying about Musty. She’s occupied my mind every day since that awful event. You won’t think so highly of me now and feel like protecting me. Instead I’ll bet you could kill …
And still the picnickers come on, now
early afternoon, and scatter through the
trees over the fenced-in acres .
Voices!
multiple and inarticulate . voices
clattering loudly to the sun, to
the clouds. Voices!
assaulting the air gaily from all sides.
—among which the ear strains to catch
the movement of one voice among the rest
—a reed-like voice
of peculiar accent
Thus she finds what peace there is, reclines,
before his approach, stroked
by their clambering feet—for pleasure
It is all for
pleasure . their feet . aimlessly
wandering
The “great beast” come to sun himself
as he may
. . their dreams mingling,
aloof
Let us be reasonable!
Sunday in the park,
limited by the escarpment, eastward; to
the west abutting on the old road: recreation
with a view! the binoculars chained
to anchored stanchions along the east wall—
beyond which, a hawk
soars!
—a trumpet sounds fitfully.
Stand at the rampart (use a metronome
if your ear is deficient, one made in Hungary
if you prefer)
and look away north by east where the church
spires still spend their wits against
the sky . to the ball-park
in the hollow with its minute figures running
—beyond the gap where the river
plunges into the narrow gorge, unseen
—and the imagination soars, as a voice
beckons, a thundrous voice, endless
—as sleep: the voice
that has ineluctably called them—
that unmoving roar!
churches and factories
(at a price)
together, summoned them from the pit .
—his voice, one among many (unheard)
moving under all.
The mountain quivers.
Time! Count! Sever and mark time!
So during the early afternoon, from place
to place he moves,
his voice mingling with other voices
—the voice in his voice
opening his old throat, blowing out his lips,
kindling his mind (more
than his mind will kindle)
—following the hikers.
At last he comes to the idlers’ favorite
haunts, the picturesque summit, where
the blue-stone (rust-red where exposed)
has been faulted at various levels
(ferns rife among the stones)
into rough terraces and partly closed in
dens of sweet grass, the ground gently sloping.
Loiterers in groups straggle
over the bare rock-table—scratched by their
boot-nails more than the glacier scratched
them—walking indifferent through
each other’s privacy .
—in any case,
the center of movement, the core of gaiety.
Here a young man, perhaps sixteen,
is sitting with his back to the rock among
some ferns playing a guitar, dead pan .
The rest are eating and drinking.
The big guy
in the black hat is too full to move .
but Mary
is up!
Come on! Wassa ma’? You got
broken leg?
It is this air!
the air of the Midi
and the old cultures intoxicates them:
present!
—lifts one arm holding the cymbals
of her thoughts, cocks her old head
and dances! raising her skirts:
La la la la!
What a bunch of bums! Afraid somebody see
you?
Blah!
Excrementi!
—she spits.
Look a’ me, Grandma! Everybody too damn
lazy.
This is the old, the very old, old upon old,
the undying: even to the minute gestures,
the hand holding the cup, the wine
spilling, the arm stained by it:
Remember
the peon in the lost
Eisenstein film drinking
from a wine-skin with the abandon
of a horse drinking
so that it slopped down his chin?
down his neck, dribbling
over his shirt-front and down
onto his pants—laughing, toothless?
Heavenly man!
—the leg raised, verisimilitude .
even to the coarse contours of the leg, the
bovine touch! The leer, the cave of it,
the female of it facing the male, the satyr—
(Priapus!)
with that lonely implication, goatherd
and goat, fertility, the attack, drunk,
cleansed .
Rejected. Even the film
suppressed : but . persistent
The picnickers laugh on the rocks celebrating
the varied Sunday of their loves with
its declining light—
Walking—
look down (from a ledge) into this grassy
den
(somewhat removed from the traffic)
above whose brows
a moon! where she lies sweating at his side:
She stirs, distraught,
against him—wounded (drunk), moves
against him (a lump) desiring,
against him, bored .
flagrantly bored and sleeping, a
beer bottle still grasped spear-like
in his hand .
while the small, sleepless boys, who
have climbed the columnar rocks
overhanging the pair (where they lie
overt upon the grass, besieged—
careless in their narrow cell under
the crowd’s feet) stare down,
from history!
at them, puzzled and in the sexless
light (of childhood) bored equally,
go charging off .
There where
the movement throbs openly
and you can hear the Evangelist shouting!
—moving nearer
she—lean as a goat—leans
her lean belly to the man’s backside
toying with the clips of his
suspenders .
—to which he adds his useless voice:
until there moves in his sleep
a music that is whole, unequivocal (in
his sleep, sweating in his sleep—laboring
against sleep, agasp!)
—and does not waken.
Sees, alive (asleep)
—the fall’s roar entering
his sleep (to be fulfilled)
reborn
in his sleep—scattered over the mountain
severally .
—by which he woos her, severally.
And the amnesic crowd (the scattered),
called about — strains
to catch the movement of one voice .
hears,
Pleasure! Pleasure!
—feels,
half dismayed, the afternoon of complex
voices its own—
and is relieved
(relived)
A cop is directing traffic
across the main road up
a little wooded slope toward
the conveniences:
oaks, choke-cherry,
dogwoods, white and green, iron-wood :
humped roots matted into the shallow soil
—mostly gone: rock out-croppings
polished by the feet of the picnickers:
sweetbarked sassafras .
leaning from the rancid grease:
deformity—
—to be deciphered (a horn, a trumpet!)
an elucidation by multiplicity,
a corrosion, a parasitic curd, a clarion
for belief, to be good dogs :
NO DOGS ALLOWED AT LARGE IN THIS PARK
Blocked.
(Make a song out of that: concretely)
By whom?
In its midst rose a massive church. . . And it all came to me then—that those poor souls had nothing else in the world, save that church, between them and the eternal stony, ungrateful and unpromising dirt they lived by …..
Cash is mulct of them that others may live
secure
. . and knowledge restricted.
An orchestral dullness overlays their world
I see they—the Senate, is trying to block Lilienthal and deliver “the bomb” over to a few industrialists. I don’t think they will succeed but . . that is what I mean when I refuse to get excited over the cry, Communist! they use to blind us. It’s terrifying to think how easily we can be destroyed, a few votes. Even though Communism is a threat, are Communists any
worse
than the guilty bastards trying in that way to undermine us?
We leap awake and what we see
fells us .
Let terror twist the world!
Faitoute, sick of his diversions but proud of women,
his requites, standing with his back
to the lions’ pit,
(where the drunken
lovers slept, now, both of them)
indifferent,
started again wandering—foot pacing foot outward
into emptiness . .
Up there.
The cop points.
A sign nailed
to a tree: Women.
You can see figures
moving beyond the screen of the trees and, close
at hand, music blurts out suddenly.
Walking —
a
cramped arena has been left clear at the base
of the observation tower near the urinals. This
is the Lord’s line: Several broken benches
drawn up in a curving row against the shrubbery
face the flat ground, benches on which
a few children have been propped by the others
against their running off .
Three middle aged men with iron smiles
stand behind the benches—backing (watching)
the kids, the kids and several women—and
holding,
a cornet, clarinet and trombone,
severally, in their hands, at rest.
There is also,
played by a woman, a portable organ . .
Before them an old man,
wearing a fringe of long white hair, bareheaded,
his glabrous skull reflecting the sun’s
light and in shirtsleeves, is beginning to
speak—
calling to the birds and trees!
Jumping up and down in his ecstasy he beams
into the empty blue, eastward, over the parapet
toward the city . .
. . . . . . .
There are people—especially among women—who can speak only to one person. And I am one of those women. I do not come easily to confidences (though it cannot but seem otherwise to you). I could not possibly convey to any one of those people who have crossed my path in these few months, those particular phases of my life which I made the subject of my letters to you. I must let myself be entirely misunderstood and misjudged in all my economic and social maladjustments, rather than ever attempt to communicate to anyone else what I wrote to you about. And so my having heaped these confidences upon you (however tiresome you may have found them and however far I may yet need to go in the attainment of
complete
self-honesty which is difficult for anyone) was enough in itself to have caused my failure with you to have so disastrous an effect upon me.
Look, there lies the city!
—calling with his back
to the paltry congregation, calling the winds;
a voice calling, calling .
Behind him the drawn children whom his suit
of holy proclamation so very badly fits,
winkless, under duress, must feel
their buttocks ache on the slats of the sodden