Gary Snyder


photograph by Allen Ginsberg (1963)



I Went into the Maverick Bar


I went into the Maverick Bar   

In Farmington, New Mexico.

And drank double shots of bourbon

                         backed with beer.

My long hair was tucked up under a cap

I’d left the earring in the car.


Two cowboys did horseplay

                         by the pool tables,

A waitress asked us

                         where are you from?

a country-and-western band began to play   

“We don’t smoke Marijuana in Muskokie”   

And with the next song,

                         a couple began to dance.


They held each other like in High School dances   

                         in the fifties;

I recalled when I worked in the woods

                         and the bars of Madras, Oregon.   

That short-haired joy and roughness—

                         America—your stupidity.   

I could almost love you again.


We left—onto the freeway shoulders—

                         under the tough old stars—, and another:


In the shadow of bluffs

                         I came back to myself,

To the real work, to

                         “What is to be done.”



Been reading his poems here and there,

above is 

One I liked and another:


John Ashbery

  The New Spirit (excerpt) I thought that if I could put it all down, that would be one way. And next the thought came to me that to leave a...