An Interpretation of Ezra Pound’s “Canto 1”
And we broke camp
and packed up the Jeep
with a sadness that is felt
only with a sunrise
and a sip of medium ground coffee.
The River beckoned us back
to Her shores, but the Sunset
called for us in the West;
the Idahoan landscape was silent
and sleeping when the dirt road
turned to black ink -
We drove for days.
Kerouac called to me.
He said this is the way,
but the fields of corn he had warned
would burn and buildings grew
from the ashes.
The horizon filled
with temples of Commerce.
In Seattle we poured a bottle of bourbon
for those who came before me -
Keats, Ginsberg, Whitman, Pound -
Your words are swallowed
by concrete.
We searched for a respite.
A dark basement bar
with Monks moniker - I questioned
the cool cat in slurred speech,
"You play some sweet sax,
why are You in this dank dive."
"Everyone must pay the toll."
"But what is the price for art."
"I play what they pay me for;
The gods are dead.
The masses wish for three-chord, Campbell's can pop."
I succumbed to the pulse of the piano.
In the in in between of cheap whiskey
and wine
Kerouac appeared once again.
Urgency resonates off his tongue,
"You must follow the tracks -
Through the fields, mountains, and cities -
They call to you.
They will hear your words
And sing your songs."