A name only once
 crammed into the child's fitful memory
 in malnourished villages,
 vast deliriums like the galloping foothills of the Colorado:
 of Mohawks and the Chippewa,
 horsey penny-movies
 brought cheap at the tail of the war
 to Africa. Where indeed is the Mississippi panorama
 and the girl that played the piano and
 kept her hand on her heart
 as Flanagan drank a quart of moonshine
 before the eyes of the town's gentlemen?
 What happened to your locomotive in winter, Walt,
 and my ride across the prairies in the trail
 of the stage-coach, the gold-rush and the Swanee river?
 Where did they bury Geronimo,
 heroic chieftain, lonely horseman of this apocalypse
 who led his tribesmen across deserts of cholla
 and emerald hills
 in pursuit of despoilers,
 half-starved immigrants
 from a despoiled Europe?
 What happened to Archibald's
 soul's harvest on this raw earth
 of raw hates?
 To those that have none
 a festival is preparing at graves' ends
 where the mockingbird's hymn
 closes evening of prayers
 and supplication as
 new winds blow from graves
 flowered in multi-colored cemeteries even
 where they say the races are intact.

















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