Monday, 17 June 2013

To Elsie

                The pure products of America
                go crazy --
                mountain folk from Kentucky

                or the ribbed north end of
                Jersey
                with its isolate lakes and

                valleys, its deaf-mutes, thieves
                old names
                and promiscuity between

                devil-may-care men who have taken
                to railroading
                out of sheer lust of adventure --

                and young slatterns, bathed
                in filth
                from Monday to Saturday

                to be tricked out that night
                with gauds
                from imaginations which have no

                peasant traditions to give them
                character
                but flutter and flaunt

               sheer rags -- succumbing without
               emotion
               save numbed terror

               under some hedge of choke-cherry
               or viburnum --
               which they cannot express --

                Unless it be that marriage
                perhaps
                with a dash of Indian blood

                will throw up a girl so desolate
                so hemmed round
                with disease or murder

               that she'll be rescued by an
               agent --
               reared by the state and

               sent out at fifteen to work in
               some hard pressed
               house in the suburbs --

                some doctor's family, some Elsie --
                voluptuous water
                expressing with broken

                brain the truth about us --
                her great
                ungainly hips and flopping breasts

                addressed to cheap
                jewelry
                and rich young men with fine eyes

                as if the earth under our feet
                were
                an excrement of some sky

                and we degraded prisoners
                destined
                to hunger until we eat filth

                while the imagination strains
                after deer
                going by fields of goldenrod in

                the stifling heat of September
                Somehow
                it seems to destroy us

                It is only in isolate flecks that
                something
                is given off

                No one
                to witness
                and adjust, no one to drive the car
 
--William Carlos Williams, 1923

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