In the American Grain"

"Ninth grade, and bicycling the Jersey highways:
I am a writer. I was half-wasp already,
I changed my shirt and trousers twice a day.
My poems came back...often rejected, though never
forgotten in New York, this Jewish state
with insomniac minorities.
I am sick of the enlightenment:
what Wall Street prints, the mafia distributes;
when talent starves in a garret, they buy the garret.
Bill Williams made less than Band-Aids on his writing,
he could never write the King's English of The New Yorker.
I am not William Carlos Williams. He
knew the germ on every flower, and saw
the snake is a petty, rather pathetic creature.

Auteur: Robert Lowell

In the American Grain"<br /><br />"Ninth grade, and bicycling the Jersey highways:<br />I am a writer. I was half-wasp already,<br />I changed my shirt and trousers twice a day.<br />My poems came back...often rejected, though never<br />forgotten in New York, this Jewish state<br />with insomniac minorities.<br />I am sick of the enlightenment:<br />what Wall Street prints, the mafia distributes;<br />when talent starves in a garret, they buy the garret.<br />Bill Williams made less than Band-Aids on his writing,<br />he could never write the King's English of The New Yorker.<br />I am not William Carlos Williams. He<br />knew the germ on every flower, and saw<br />the snake is a petty, rather pathetic creature. - Robert Lowell




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