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 — In the shadow of bluffs I came back to myself, To the real work, to “What is to be done.”
The Call Of The Wild
The heavy old man in his bed at night Hears the Coyote singing in the back meadow. All the years he ranched and mined and logged. A Catholic. A native Californian. and the Coyotes howl in his Eightieth year. He will call the Government Trapper Who uses iron leg-traps on Coyotes, Tomorrow. My sons will lose this Music they have just started To love. The ex acid-heads from the cities Converted to Guru or Swami, Do penance with shiny Dopey eyes, and quit eating meat. In the forests of North America, The land of Coyote and Eagle, They dream of India, of forever blissful sexless highs. And sleep in oil-heated Geodesic domes, that Were stuck like warts In the woods. And the Coyote singing is shut away for they fear the call of the wild. And they sold their virgin cedar trees, the tallest trees in miles, To a logger Who told them, “Trees are full of bugs.” The Government finally decided To wage the war all-out. Defeat is Un-American. And they took to the air, Their women beside them in bouffant hairdos putting nail-polish on the gunship cannon-buttons. And they never came down, for they found, the ground is pro-Communist. And dirty. And the insects side with the Viet Cong. So they bomb and they bomb Day after day, across the planet blinding sparrows breaking the ear-drums of owls splintering trunks of cherries twining and looping deer intestines in the shaken, dusty, rocks. All these Americans up in special cities in the sky Dumping poisons and explosives Across Asia first, And next North America, A war against earth. When it’s done there’ll be no place A Coyote could hide. envoy I would like to say Coyote is forever Inside you. But it’s not true.
© Copyright 1974 by Gary Snyder. Reprinted from Gary Snyder’s Turtle Island by permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation.




