A poem after Charles Bukowski's “Nirvana” with Bob Dylan lyrics throughout. |
No direction home, there's a young man on a motorcycle revisiting Highway 61 on his way to somewhere. Old power lines on the low side of the road hum forgotten lyrics. The snow of last season retreats to the ditches destined to lose this trench warfare. And he stops the bike at a little diner on the shores of Lake Superior. He notes something different about the waitress as she sits him down a genuine smile that lights up azure eyes and he knows she loves what she does but if he leaves, she'll never be there when he comes back or she won't be the way he remembers her. She trots off on long shiny white legs to hear the cook's latest joke and to bring him the young man's order. And it starts to gently rain and the young man watches it tap against the windows like a long-lost lover begging to be taken back. And he wants to stay in that diner forever. He has the peculiar feeling that, under this roof that holds back the clinging of winter's chill, no matter who you are or where you came from, you will always be beautiful in that place. But then he remembers that outside world of rain and responsibility and he thinks, No, let me just stay a little longer A little longer A little longer... The waitress brings him one more cup of coffee and then he rises and strides out into the hard rain that's a-fallin' starts the bike and takes off around a curve, bending and twisting around the lake. There's nothing else for it— just to keep driving listening to the roar of the engine and trying not to dwell on the fact that these moments will be forgotten like tears in the rain. |