Wage Twelve PERSPECTIVES Page Twelve PERSPECTIVES VICO .Dan La~adie Marie Antoinette sat in the gardens of Rouen eating fungus bread, giving up the cake as dullness. Marie Antoinette sat watching crude bronze statues, ancient walls, wondering who had bothered to build, River Run down run through the town, carry the Stonehenge, Egyptian, the jew, the Greek, the Roman, Byzantine, European, home to the fields, reform from dissolution; the Greeks who lost Sophrosyne to bow to Atropos are altered to a chanting commissar within a sterile cell the Jew who turned upon his God becomes barbarian Christian, the Stoic Roman's sons accepting country as a gift change to Americans in a last rebellion. A king walks down the years on solid ground; the people follow in revolt, a little course before recourse upon the river. The wind drys out the burned and blackened seed, mixes the death and tearsof centuries into the hope of life. America, you have been too long; tears are not lost in the growing. Where is the brother now that the wind will only blow over water?- A last deluge begins; all tributaries overflow their banks in final dirge and flow together in incessance. The soil trembles and breaks, is thrown skyward on a windless day, returns as liquid without form. How long shall we cry how long keep our wake before the last to die? Pioneers saw beginnings to the west till tycoons jumped from bluffs at end of land to conquer sea; the few remain, decay, or rise decadent, holding to their unproductive coin as if to build on nothing. Machines follow the man; slogans blur his view with melting all around him. Security stirs within its towers, casts out a worthless glance to guard its separated birthright, returning to the fruits. The stench of ripeness grows as holes become perceptible in protest. The new rise up to rise no more; the old do not remit their promise of decay but cheat the rebels of their latency, in final gesture throw machined destruction in the midst of this, the midst of all rebellion birth. The end and the beginning meet within the final end and all go down the overflowing river. The unity of states within a state dissolves, the unity of larger states, the larger hope, as all are thrown skyward at a burst and down to liquid, flowing down and down the river. River run down over the town. Silence over water covers one human cry of hope and passing, covers the liquid quiet of death in Rouen gardens. This history was a little movement of the hand toward a belief. -Don LaBadie Letter To Biak: Fragment "I have skirted the way streams run along the arroyo beds and at dusk not gone alone on the trail to the spring. I have left untasted the wild-honey and winter-green and the wild choke-cherries; and the partridge-berries that you told me of I have neither touched nor tasted." 0 love for you these lips untasting for you this tongue unstained of honey. "At the maple there are many bees, the honey-musk is thick about their bodies. So shall you know this April through my mind folded in these certain squares and censored in an envelope ... if dogwood comes or April brings in hyacinth. "Since you left I have wandered once only in the bottom land. It was the first cutting and the alfalfalay thick like hair. The honey-musk sill clings about the maple but the bees are gone ..." (I am stronger now and brave) I will set aside against your coming dried berries of the winter-green and sweet seed-cakes with wild honey for them. -Virgil Clark OF DOGS AND DECISIONS ..Continued from Wage .1I and ran away; and I don't think Clyde ever knew it. The horse ran right up to the cars and stopped. Clyde flew over the horse's head, and clear over the first car, and hit his head on the next one. When we got there some men were kicking the dogs away that were sniffing around; but the crowd was gathering so fast it didn't do any good. The dogs ran over him, and escaped beneath the cars. Clyde's dog hung around close and moaned like only a dog can when such a thing happens. Some doctor leaned over Clyde, feeling beneath his shirt. He stood up and toId a couple of the men to take the body into the clubhouse, and call for an ambulance. There were six men carrying the body, and three or four running for the phone. Clyde's wife came hurrying and the doctor told her there was nothing anybody could do now. There wasn't any more drinking done. Everyone stood around in little groups talking quietly, not sure exactly what to do or say. I never saw them all so strange in the four years I'd been going out to the club. Mrs. Madner stood off to herself. People occasionally walked over to her .. . with words of consola' tion, I guess. Her eyes were big. Tears slid out now and again. And she looked around at the people -as if she wonder- ed were they looking at her. When the ambulance came she cried pretty hard. I walked over to her as they were bringing the body out; and she looked up at me with her mouth a little trembling as if she wanted to say something, only she couldn't. All I could think of was what we'd said over back of the cars: he hadn't any business drinking if he was going to ride after the dogs. I said: "Too bad it happe2d: this way." And then I knew I better not say anything more. They put Clyde into the ambulance, and pulled away, with the tires crackling on the gravel. Mrs. Madner watched. "How, how, how am I going to tell the children," she said. I said: "If you want, I'll drive you home, or some place." She nodded, and looked questioningly. "Sure," I said. "Wait till I find the dog." I didn't'feel very good about saying that, later on.