paroles de chanson Sunflower Sutra - Allen Ginsberg
I
walked
on
the
banks
of
the
tincan
banana
dock
and
Sat
down
under
the
huge
shade
of
a
Southern
Pacific
locomotive
to
look
at
the
sunset
over
the
Box
house
hills
and
cry.
Jack
Kerouac
sat
beside
me
on
a
busted
rusty
iron
Pole,
companion,
we
thought
the
same
thoughts
Of
the
soul,
bleak
and
blue
and
sad-eyed,
Surrounded
by
the
gnarled
steel
roots
of
trees
of
Machinery.
The
oily
water
on
the
river
mirrored
the
red
sky,
sun
Sank
on
top
of
final
Frisco
peaks,
no
fish
in
that
Stream,
no
hermit
in
those
mounts,
just
ourselves
Rheumy-eyed
and
hungover
like
old
bums
On
the
riverbank,
tired
and
wily.
Look
at
the
Sunflower,
he
said,
there
was
a
dead
gray
Shadow
against
the
sky,
big
as
a
man,
sitting
Dry
on
top
of
a
pile
of
ancient
sawdust—
—I
rushed
up
enchanted—it
was
my
first
sunflower,
Memories
of
Blake—my
visions—Harlem
And
Hells
of
the
Eastern
rivers,
s
clanking
Joes
Greasy
Sandwiches,
dead
baby
carriages,
black
Treadless
tires
forgotten
and
unretreaded,
the
Poem
of
the
riverbank,
condoms
& pots,
steel
Knives,
nothing
stainless,
only
the
dank
muck
And
the
razor-sharp
artifacts
passing
into
the
Past—
And
the
gray
Sunflower
poised
against
the
sunset,
Crackly
bleak
and
dusty
with
the
smut
and
smog
And
smoke
of
olden
locomotives
in
its
eye—
Lla
of
bleary
spikes
pushed
down
and
broken
like
A
battered
crown,
seeds
fallen
out
of
its
face,
Soon-to-be-toothless
mouth
of
sunny
air,
sunrays
Obliterated
on
its
hairy
head
like
a
dried
Wire
spiderweb,
Leaves
stuck
out
like
arms
out
of
the
stem,
gestures
From
the
sawdust
root,
broke
pieces
of
plaster
Fallen
out
of
the
black
twigs,
a
dead
fly
in
its
ear,
Unholy
battered
old
thing
you
were,
my
sunflower
O
My
soul,
I
loved
you
then!
The
grime
was
no
man's
grime
but
death
and
human
Locomotives,
All
that
dress
of
dust,
that
veil
of
darkened
railroad
Skin,
that
smog
of
cheek,
that
eyelid
of
black
Mis'ry,
that
sooty
hand
or
phallus
or
protuberance
Of
artificial
worse-than-dirt—industrial—
Modern—all
that
civilization
spotting
your
Crazy
golden
crown—
And
those
blear
thoughts
of
death
and
dusty
loveless
Eyes
and
ends
and
withered
roots
below,
in
the
Home-pile
of
sand
and
sawdust,
rubber
dollar
Bills,
skin
of
machinery,
the
guts
and
innards
Of
the
weeping
coughing
car,
the
empty
lonely
Tincans
with
their
rusty
tongues
alack,
what
More
could
I
name,
the
smoked
ashes
of
some
Cock
cigar,
the
cunts
of
wheelbarrows
and
the
Milky
breasts
of
cars,
wornout
asses
out
of
chairs
& Sphincters
of
dynamos—all
these
Entangled
in
your
mummied
roots—and
you
there
Standing
before
me
in
the
sunset,
all
your
glory
In
your
form!
A
perfect
beauty
of
a
sunflower!
a
perfect
excellent
Lovely
sunflower
existence!
a
sweet
natural
eye
To
the
new
hip
moon,
woke
up
alive
and
excited
Grasping
in
the
sunset
shadow
sunrise
golden
Monthly
breeze!
How
many
flies
buzzed
round
you
innocent
of
your
Grime,
while
you
cursed
the
heavens
of
the
Railroad
and
your
flower
soul?
Poor
dead
flower?
when
did
you
forget
you
were
a
Flower?
when
did
you
look
at
your
skin
and
Decide
you
were
an
impotent
dirty
old
locomotive?
The
ghost
of
a
locomotive?
the
specter
and
Shade
of
a
once
powerful
mad
American
locomotive?
You
were
never
no
locomotive,
Sunflower,
you
were
a
Sunflower!
And
you
Locomotive,
you
are
a
locomotive,
forget
me
Not!
So
I
grabbed
up
the
skeleton
thick
sunflower
and
stuck
It
at
my
side
like
a
scepter,
And
deliver
my
sermon
to
my
soul,
and
Jack's
soul
Too,
and
anyone
who'll
listen,
—We're
not
our
skin
of
grime,
we're
not
our
dread
Bleak
dusty
imageless
locomotive,
we're
all
Beautiful
golden
sunflowers
inside,
we're
blessed
By
our
own
seed
& golden
hairy
naked
Accomplishment-bodies
growing
into
mad
black
Formal
sunflowers
in
the
sunset,
spied
on
by
our
Eyes
under
the
shadow
of
the
mad
locomotive
Riverbank
sunset
Frisco
hilly
tincan
evening
Sitdown
vision.
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