Air ' ' THE THREE GREAT RINGS CLOSE IN UPON THEMSELVES REVEALING -DARK PLACES capture the sound of toppling waves a small boy burning eyes shut tightly races back and forth back and forth feet lost in the white swirl of insane water The great moon of the planet earth balances on an edge of water a vase so ancient it can no longer hold its cargo of light which spills out across the sky to our outstretched bodies losing heat through the cold sand. laying as still as crabs do just before they scuttle sideways into their small empty places to hide Steven F. Daly 4 * 4 i :9 -1 0 i A TERRIBLE STORY TRAIN RIDE We will voyage up the hills To where the river's power lies Scalloped in beds And crusted by ages into rock. Our climb will drain the fields To plains of snow and straw And we will go to lands where The track is kissed as god And where the wind will bless us, Rustling through our locks Of drying hair And down the beds of centuries. Kirk Hampton Fall/69 When he was seven, he got a black Lionel train. All that night he was laying tracks in the cellar, stopping and starting, trying the patience of Wabash Pacific Great Northern, and Texas Chief. Their hum cleared the dark like a candle. They ran all night, till the legs of chairs kicked them over like centipedes. In six months they'd nosed through the walls. He heard them tapping the wires, pleating the asbestos and shaking the beams. They always brought back news of the interior: sounds of plaster in transit, his mother talking to herself, the teeth of love. So he kept he passage open; they came and went like cats. Growing older, he set them free. Now he goes to the gameroom. Pulling a silver nose, he maddens the pinballs to light his fortune. Always he listens for trains, telling him what to do. Somewhere are temples built to the worship of travel and under them, trains buried in tracked cells are combing the earth and playing his life away. Nancy Willard DETROIT I have seen a cool river which flows among the red and yellow pennants of the gas stations, and through the black brick of the car factories when I see through them. Smoke does not dirty it. It does not disturb the drought which burns the evergreens on the square lawns of foremen. Here willows grow from the moss on the bank. Under the mist of the branches I recognize William Blake, Thomas Jefferson, Huckleberry Finn, and Henry James. They are thinking about fish. They are watching the river: it flows through the city of America without fish. ° .r ;may .i f T ,' : .I III[ N,)M .. .. _... 'C '.Nt G R'J i +( l 4 t , .Q33 . _ .. . t' P l i "; , 4P 'j4.a /,/ n J ., PHOTO Donald Hall the picture showed him standing by the car, stiff as he always was for pictures, squinting sadly in the light. he did not want to show his age, he had begun to back into the shade beside the porch when he saw the camera risen and he knew it was too late. pride had not deserted him, and he refused to smile. i had said,-the day before, that i would not be home again. his-eyes grew dull, but he remembered --he was always quick- to cough before he'spoke again. "i will come to visit you,' he said. his thinning hair was turning grey, he hated parties and could not even -give his love away. eyes," i said, "that would be nice." the picture does not show the night before. my mother says he came to bed as usual. he must have lain awake, his grey hairs flying before the open window as the rain fell in the garden, dreaming of his three years at college and smiling to himself: that he could love an unathletic son. after,i remembered our first baseball game and other little things i had not counted on. THE FREAK SHOW I am Giuletta, the bird woman. I the rain man and learned to fly. Together we walked the high wir( over trees, churches, bridges, green straight into heaven. We saw the' after a child blows it, and were m Though I had nothing but him, I Even in falling he blazed like a sta The next night I went on, knowir A brave girl, the clowns told me." I knew that people who never fall danger is all and their blood goes c Listen, the ring-man said to me o You've lost your shape. You've gc You're old. Waiting in the dark trucks I am c to nibble the sweet fruits that the We walk among the orchards and the silence of tensed feet on the b So much walking affects the appe says-the dwarf with a sucking leei And so much sorrow gives enorm I am round and simple as a Persiai so earth-shaped now no wire coul or support the weight of my. falle When you hear the dwarf crying of my marvellous flesh, you will c Blinded by footlights, I hear you and whisper in the pit below my My God ! Arms like tree trunks ci Must be hard on the heart, a womr O friends, it is very hard on the h For your.delight I devour loaf aft of stale breadtill the. silken tents and wide-eyed children, bogeyed remember my cavernous mouth Sometimes I pick at my food like The taste of the wire in the apple e-. ,' Steve Daniels Winter/b7 Page 14