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If I Don't Go Crazy
If I Don't Go Crazy
David Kirby
              There's a sheriff's car parked near Emerald Mound, 
 and the deputy is looking down at his lap and smiling, 
       which means he's probably doing what everyone else is doing 
 these days, that is, texting, though I think he's knitting a quilt 
              out of the scalps(头皮,战利品) he's taken off travelers like me: 
              a killer has been working these country roads of late 
 with a blue flashing light, pulling people over and shooting 
       them for fun, like the men who lived in caves on the Natchez 
 Trace in the day and who killed travelers for money and then 
              because they found out how much they liked killing. 
              Historian Robert Coates says these men would have been 
 like others if they'd stayed back east, though once they entered 
       the wilderness, they opened their own hearts 
 to the dark heart of the continent, breathed in its perfumed 
              appeal, beheld the terrible flowering of their madness, 
              and revealed by their violence how different they were 
 from other men, and I like this, it makes sense, 
       but I wonder if those men might not have been okay if they'd just 
 had girlfriends. It's one big black and white movie 
              when your baby's not in the picture, that's for sure: 
              promoter Dick Waterman wakes one morning to the sound 
 of blues man Robert Pete Williams playing his guitar 
       and singing softly, and when Waterman says That's 
 beautiful, you should play that at your shows, Williams 
              says Oh, no, that's not music, I'm just talking to my Hattie 
              Mae and telling her I'll be home as soon as I can. 
 What are the blues? A good man feeling bad, say some, while others say 
       it's a man losing his woman or the other way around. 
 If I don't go crazy, says Son House, I'm going to lose my mind. 
              Damned straight: you're working twelve-hour days 
              at the Dockery or Stovall Plantation and can barely get up most 
 mornings and owe more than you earn, but you can play 
       and sing a little, and there's this gal(姑娘,加仑) who looks at you from time 
 to time, and her name is Louise McGhee, and you tell her 
              you're playing at the Honeydipper this Saturday and ask 
              if she'd like to come hear you, and she smiles and says yes, 
 yes, I would, and on the night of the show, you wait for the other 
       fellows to finish and you get up there and say How's everybody 
 doing tonight and you look out into the crowd, and sure 
              enough, there's Louise, your pearl beyond price, your last 
              chance at happiness in a world where a man works like 
 an animal till the day he dies and lands in jail if he drinks 
       too much or looks at the wrong person the wrong way, 
 but she's with another fellow, and it's like she can't keep 
              her hands off him, and you grin and you sing, but inside 
              you're thinking, God damn every goddamned thing to hell, 
 and when you finish, there's some coins in your tip jar 
       and even a dollar bill or two, and a couple of fellows pull 
 their pints out, and you take a few sips, long ones, 
              but on your way home, when you know nobody's watching, 
              you grab your guitar like a baseball bat and swing it 
 against a tree. How do you write the song that gets the girl? 
       If we knew the answer to that one, we'd all have somebody. 
 Ma Rainey is a vaudeville(杂耍,轻歌舞剧) singer in 1902 when she hears 
              a young miss in a little town sing what she later describes 
              as a "strange and poignant(尖锐的,心酸的) lament" about a bad man, 
 so Ma starts doing the song herself, and suddenly America 
       hears the blues. A year later, W. C. Handy is cooling his heels 
 late one night in the Tutwiler, Mississippi train station when, 
              in his words, he dozes and wakes to the sounds of a "lean, 
              loose-jointed Negro" pressing a knife blade to his guitar 
 strings and playing "the weirdest music I had ever heard." 
       Mr. Handy doesn't know whether he's dreaming this 
 or not: "Going where the Southern cross the Dog," 
              says the singer, that is, where the Southern Line intersects 
              the Yazoo & Mississippi, the crossroad, which is where, 
 finally, you have a choice, because you thought you were 
       going one place in your life and now you see you can go 
 left or right or even back home, if you want, but no, 
              you want to go someplace new, someplace you haven't 
              been before, even if it's way the hell out in the country, 
 out there by the cemetery, the one so old they don't even 
       bury folks in it these days, and the wind's picking up, 
 and a man steps over a fallen headstone, a big man, 
              and he has something in his hands, and you don't know 
              if it's a rifle or an axe, something he could hurt or even kill 
 you with, and you can't see his face, but he holds out this thing 
       he's carrying, and it's a guitar, and he says, "Here, 
 I tuned this for you, take it," and you know if you do, you'll be lost, 
              but you'll do anything to get that woman back, 
              anything at all, so you rest that guitar on your knee 
 and you run your thumb down the strings, and a thousand birds 
       cry at once, and the smell of lavender rises from 
 the hard ground at your feet, and you think you see a line 
              of people against the sky's last light but you can't tell 
              where they're going, and you glance at the trees, and their 
 branches are thick with slave ships and Spanish galleons, 
       and you say "Who the hell are you?" and the man shakes 
 his head and points, and his mouth doesn't move, 
              and a voice you never want to hear again says, "Play."
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