Welcome to Things Worth Remembering, in which writers share a poem or a paragraph that all of us should commit to heart. This week, poet Joseph Massey—the unofficial poet laureate of Trump’s America—shares a poem that consoled him on an endless Greyhound bus from California to Austin.
New Mexico’s desert landscape materialized in the Greyhound bus window. The summer sun was beginning to set; the plateaus glowed red and orange. This alien landscape, stark in its chiseled formations and unearthly aura, startled me out of my grogginess after two days of travel.
I caught the bus from a station the size of a public bathroom in Arcata, California—a foggy town tucked along the coast of Northern California’s “Redwood Curtain”—where I lived throughout my 20s. Austin, Texas, was the destination. One of my publishers had invited me to participate in a poetry reading he organized during a writers conference. He bought the bus ticket and offered me his couch in his apartment in the city.
My life in Arcata was a slog of poverty. I lived in a cottage—that’s what the landlord called it—but it was really a woodshed haphazardly converted into a semi-livable space. The shack, as I called it, was slanted. I’m sure an earthquake, at some point, damaged the cinder block foundation and it was left unrepaired. If I dropped a pen on the floor, it would roll to the other side of the room. The shack wasn’t insulated and because of the high humidity—the ocean was visible from the hill I lived on and heavy blankets of fog rolled in every evening—I patrolled the shack with a spray bottle full of bleach to fight back the black mold. I was eager to get out of town for a few weeks and stay in a place with functional plumbing, breathable, unbleached air, and a stable foundation.
That wasn’t my first long trip on Greyhound. At the age of 19, I traveled from Delaware to San Francisco to visit a poet I had been corresponding with. He wasn’t home when I got there, so I bummed around the city for two days and took the bus all the way back to Delaware. As dreary and miserable as Greyhound buses, stations, and passengers—and some drivers—could be, I loved seeing America pass by the windows. I thought of Jack Kerouac and other literary heroes who wrote from a depth of bittersweet affection for America as they traversed its landscapes.
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Joseph Massey
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://bariweiss.substack.com feed and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.