I don’t write in a journal everyday, but I have accumulated many entries over the past 50+ years beginning in 1966. Some items evolved into longer works. Among the leftovers little pieces survived. I thought a collection of these with a piece culled from the same date in a past year would make an interesting yearbook. The consistencies and inconsistencies of mind, skipping back and forth across time, provide varied perspectives. It is difficult to remember the context of the past we’ve lived; we also make suppositions about times that predate ourselves.

The few alterations from original drafts were to improve clarity. The worst of my work is not included. There remains enough mediocrity and immaturity to make me feel humble and you feel smart. There are also moments of accidental insight and incidental humor.

Author Stephen Crane referred to his little pieces as pills…apparently they were small and somewhat hard to swallow, but good for you.


Comments Welcome!

Friday, February 7, 2020

When only a boy in northern Minn


February 7, 1972  (I was 27)

When only a boy in northern Minn
I first climbed through the barbed wire
edged up to an iron ore pit for a look
Later at the Grand Canyon I thought
Yeah but a man didn’t dig it
Down deep my pit had groaning trucks
red lakes prehistoric cranes spiral roads
and the myth books in school had pictures
Zeus looking down on the Greeks
Later it was Dante’s hole
or like a shot out of 2001
Anyway from the beginning it impressed me
and I grew to climbing around in it
Depths of it were un-worked and abandoned
You could walk miles on the bottom
stupidly swim or skate its lakes
There were also hell holes
deep drill test wells wide as a kid
It made you feel the world was hollow
to lay at the lip of one and drop rocks down
They clonged donged echo prolonged
down until you could hear them no more
diminished sound of a small gong
When mine cops came you’d have to run
dodging the unmarked holes a sweet terror
compared now to the acrid pitfalls of surface life

No comments:

Post a Comment