Here you will find the Long Poem Two Quits And A Drum, And Elegy For Drinkers of poet Alan Dugan
1. ON ASPHALT: NO GREENS Quarry out the stone of land, cobble the beach, wall surf, name it ?street,? allow no ground or green cover for animal sins, but let opacity of sand be glass to keep the heat outside, the senses in. Then, when time?s Drunk, reeling to death, provokes god?s favor as a fool, oh let a lamp post grow out of its absence, bend, heavy with care, and bloom light. Let a curb extrude a comfortable fault. Let ?street? become a living room. Comfortably seated, lit by the solicitude of ?lamp,? the Drunk and street are one. They say, ?Let?s have no dirt: bulldoze the hills into their valleys: make it plain. Then take the mountains down and let their decks of slate be dealt out flat grey. Let their mating seams be tarred against the weeds by asphalt, by the night?s elixir of volcanoes hotly poured.? Then the soulless port at night is made a human, and the Drunk god: no one else is here to be so but who cares? 2. PORTRAIT AGAINST WOMEN Bones, in his falling, must have hit the skin between themselves and stone, but distances of wine were his upholstery against the painful crime of lying in the street, since ?God protects them.? He rolled onto his back, his right hand in his fly, and gargled open-mouthed, showing the white of an eye: it did not see the sign raised on the proper air that read: ?Here lies a god-damned fool. Beware.? No: his hand, his woman, on the dry root of his sex, debates it: deformed by wine and fantasy, the wreck of infant memory is there, of how the garden gate slammed at the words, ?Get out you god-damned bum,? and so he was, since she, goddess, mother, and wife, spoke and it was the fact. Her living hair came out gray in his hand, her teeth went false at his kiss, and her solid flesh went slack like mother?s. ?Now, lady, I am sick and out of socks, so save me: I am pure although my hand is on my cock.? Then he could rise up young out of his vagrancy in whole unwilled reform and shuck the fallen one, his furlough in this street redeemed by her grace. There would be the grass to lay her on, the quench of milk behind the taste of wine, and laughter in a dreamed jungle of love behind a billboard that could read: ?This is YOUR Garden: Please keep it clean.? 3. COURAGE. EXCEED. A beggar with no legs below the middle of his knees walked down Third Avenue on padded sockets, on his telescoped or anti-stilted legs repeating, ?Oh beautiful faspacious skies!? upon a one-man band: a bass drum on roller-skates, a mouth-high bugle clamped to it, and cymbals interlocked inside a fate of noise. He flew the American flag for children on a stick stuck in a veteran?s hat, and offered pencils. He was made of drunks? red eyes. He cried, ?Courage! Exceed!? He was collapsed in whole display. Drunkards, for this and with his pencil I put down his words drunk: ?Stand! Improvise!? 4. ELEGY FOR DRINKERS What happened to the drunks I used to know, the prodigals who tried their parents? help too far? Some misers of health have aged out dry; the rest are sick and out of socks, their skin-tight anklebones blue as the mussel shells that rolled in Naxos? surf when Bacchus danced ashore and kicked them all to hell. Oh gutter urinal, be Dirce?s holy stream, so lightning out of Zeus can rage on Semele, invited! Permit her son, issuant of His thigh, to rule her family as Bromios, god of wine! Oh Dionisos, good god of memory and sleep, you grace the paper bag, stuck in the fork of a crutch, that holds the secret sons and furniture of bums, since wine is the cure of wine. It?s thanks to you that I, in my condition, am still possible and praising: I am drunk today, but what about tomorrow? I burnt my liver to you for a drink, so pay me for my praises: for thirty-seven cents, for the price of a pint of lees, I would praise wine, your name, and how your trouble came out of the east to Thebes: you taught the women wine and tricked King Pentheus to mask as one of them: because his father died to all appeals for help, the rending penalty, death at his mother?s hands!, still fills The Bowery with prodigals of hope: they pray for lightning and a dance to their god damn, since wine is the cure of wine and wine the cure wine cured and wine the cure of wine.