November 9,1963 The Great Cuilded Star I cannot reach it; it will not come to me! The great guilded star was Hung against the sky And its puissent glory obliterated tne might ot all darkness Inere was lignt, a testimony ot strength Up and up, still higuer, making mock of the nelpless fixity of branches Tweaking tne brancnes—swaymg, rhythmic hold me, help me Alone 1 shall tall The great guilded star had no struggle against vectural suction For it was accompanied by the omnivorous, tne inexorable, invisible But darkness also is masterful Down and down, still deeper, fell the great guilded star It received no sympathy trom an unfeeling sky Nor the vendictive tree-crests But the quiet, quiescent leaves of the universe wept Wept when the great guilded star was brutally brushed by the earth The leaves shared the same semi-cycle As did I —l grabbled betore this universe, and grasped this hemisphere too It was mine Distant dread and distinct destiny All are incongruous allies against the great unseen foe. A synthetic, serrated nightmare—hosted by the cosmos Behind the rim of the earth the star convulsed in desperation, frus tration. The rim was a massive, meaningless arc of futile symmetry From whose corner a wnisper or gold trom tne gunued star was echoed by a goidpiece A little gompiece which rolled under a large grooven groundpiece. It tell down and nestled in darkness under a merry-go-round Tnere it would rest torever, unnoticed, uncared ror, Wnile over its inert lorm would run tne great form-wheel of life A regenerate skip and trolic to a relegated tune And wooden horses would gallop in eternal dumb glee I loved the great guilded star And so I sougnt its child I will fetch you; I will save you I crawled beneath the great wheel And touched the golden hope Here I am. See, I could find you I stretched my arm till the sinews begged for mercy Just a little farther . . . almost And then . . . Tilted sideways my head just fit under the big wheel My ear scraped the ground I tried to crawl back Hurry, hurry! Go back, crawl out! Escape—that is in retreat A long nail bit through my matted hair It dug into the back of my head And i was not free I could not retreat to escape 1 was bayonetted by a rusty nail Crucified by splinters Impaled under the giant lazy-susan. And the music began a jaded tune. Little bug, I didn't mean to step on you Little bug? Forgive me Please forgive me The wind wedged under the welding wheel A dead leaf was blown against the nape of my neck Forgive me mother, forgive me father. Churning, churning Help me! My head hurts Help me! Mother don't cry Nebulous images, forgotten lands Molted shell of life's livery What does my mother look like? I can't remember any more Who loves me? I remember you. You don't love me. Children gigled Mothers laughed And scolded And gossiped The ground complained and the great wheel rumbled Thoughts and body grated gound on gound under wheel dashed to ashes crushed to dust Blood frozen to liquid freon, body numb Mind a retina of upside-down images Eyes evaporated Agony's frieze Poor little Icarus Crucifixus pro nobis; Passus est sepultus est Holy infant so gentle and mild, Sleep in heavenly peace, Sleep in heavenly . . . SocietySufefeCemeat THE GUILFORDI AN Help me, please Don't cry mother. The music stopped The big men came and lifted the emense sundial They dragged me from its base I couldn't stand Or swallow Or cry Or thank—l meant to say thank you and I love you In my hand was the prize Whose face is this Who are you why are you here about me do you love me No, you don't love me My hair trikled into my face You'll be all right, kid go home sit down feel better soon But I will never be well again Never, never. I am like the ball of earth We are both made of rubber I am young. If you hit me I will bounce back I kissed the prize And hurled it with my hopes and dreams and love And then its master, the great guilded star sailed up and up Still higher, making mock of the helpless fixity of branches Tweaking the branches—swaying, rnythmic And the black sky became blue PAULA MICHAELOV Futility I feel my days are numbered from this hour; For eacn brief moment flees this wrmkled shell With haste undue; though caught beneath the flower Of death, I lie awaiting still the bell To mark my soul's returning to its source. And yet I feel those hours left behind Are unformed moments tempered in their course By trust; and as a seer fast growing blind I clutch each fragmentary hope and waste The very bright of day in lusting for Unceasing light and one unhurried taste Of lasting truth; and thirst while wanting more. For life is time unwritten on the page. Parched skin and limpid eyes are more than age. —WILLIAM P. STEIN (10/19/63) Once . . . between the beginning and the end in that hiatus of time a race of fantasies . . . was and they believed in good guys, in bad guys, in apple-pie (but only with cheese — else it would be a "kiss without a squeeze") and in motherhood, and in the-girl-next-door (who liked to bake) but mostly in the system and the wind rustled through the birches and the messiah came and they could not find their reading glasses and they lived—or something and they died —but not in vain for there were oceans of Ego (and superego, and id) and there was ME —myself ALEXANDER BOULTON The Search Life is from within And the tree from the ground begins The tree we see Cuts into the soul of me And people are from without And today is today today And tomorrow is tomorrow somehow So look at the tree and watch The wheels turn round by the clock And go slower than the clay before the morning of today And in the evening sputter to the ground And the tree And the fish on the beach are dead And man has often died For life only comes from within And the fish in the sun smell bad So we turn and leave them be And walk small into the second after the minuet Of now RUSTY CRUMP Ich bin der Nacht begegnet Wandernd in heimlichen Orten Unter den Ecken und Haken Von dem Tage bin ich Der Nacht begegnet. Es zieht zuriick Dnd in die immer besitzende Erde, Das es verschling, Geht es zuriick. — WILLIAM P. STEIN (Übersetzung von englisch von Donald M. Smitn ) Prologue There is a time of day When even Dawn's dark sister Holds her breath. The pines throw long furrows On the unplowed field; And each unspoken sound Lingers along the leafy ground. There is a moment When the ear Is keenly tuned To nothingness . . . When each instant sighs And outlives its time With anxious eyes. — WILLIAM P. STEIN (10/3/63) A Rusty Sword I feel the crease beneath my chin And my light is growing dim. A thousand hours have passed, Melt, and now, at last, The thinning moments Are more precious For what they lack. The laughing and the young faces Laugh from their places; I am ushered into Another room . . . Out of sight, out of sound. A rusty sword Left sticking in the ground; A seer unheeded, unheard— The echo from an ancient word. . . I have lost to the moments. I have lost, and the fire Flickers and is consumed: For waining life is the still of doom. Like echoes in an empty room. — WILLIAM P. STEIN (10/3/63) Crow Call Crow call, Caw the dead summer. Mourn the skeletal season Of stiff, brittle grav. Derelict bird. Cry a dirge For wind-bleached masts Dragging down the bloody sun In black ropes and torn sails. Fly swift in smoke And dance on the fire-drv Mones of Yesterdav. ROBERTA DAVIES hot searing— you pursue me. Sol's face has lost its grin. you loved us once, our emerald sphere. now shrinking trees grow thin. my life a stalk deep-rooted in earth that's cracked and dry. your yellow eye swells up with blood. oh God! why must I die? SUELLEN MALONEY Someone buried grandma And someone cried a lot But there was then no need to be troubled By all this anxiety and confusion Grandma stayed whole through all the long winter It was not until the trees sprouted leaves That grandma reallv began to fall apart RUSTY CRUMP Page Three