Here's a poem for you guys, one that Tramp wrote about his travels by rail, this one when he was making his way west in 1982, at the age of 25. One of my most favorite pieces of writing. Hope you won't mind reading it again. I put it back up here because there's been some new developments.
___________
ONE DAY
Can a Nuts . . 30
Beer . . . . . . . 25
Schoop . . . . . 35
Shot . . . . . . . 65Let me speak of the past:
Let me walk into a freight yard
Into the afternoon summer sun,
Across the sandy heat, the stench of tar,
Of creosote, a tired diesel shunting,
The thistle and the gravel;
Middle of the country—1980
Awaiting a 10 PM call westbound.
Let me walk through the open door,
Under the neon of the Dewey Hotel and Bar
(Last true track-side workingman's bar),
Let me hoist a schoop of cold Point,
Let the barman pour out a can of peanuts
Scooped from the wooden barrel,
Let me scatter the shells on the floor,
Let me feel the breeze through the door,
Let someone buy me a shot of whiskey
Because my smile is as clean as a shout;
Let me just sit there and drink,
The stacked cases of beer at the back
Almost reaching the ceiling.
Let me wait for the first outbound freight
Of a western run. And then
I will stumble out to the yard
And board a wood-floored empty boxcar
And sit against my pack in the door as a
Thunderstorm arrives across the darkness.
And as the freight rumbles toward the west
I will lean against the side of the doorway
That cool rainy wind against my face
And I will see the red and green neon
Of the Dewey Hotel and Bar sign
Dancing in the wet night street.
___________
Beautiful!
Here's the developments, thanks to Tramp's incredible prescience in carrying a camera on his travels, as he did when he followed the hood of a beat-up Nova down south.

.
Well, maybe two years ago, knowing how much I loved this poem, Tramp sent me a scan of a polaroid he took of the Dewey in the afternoon sun.

That picture got me sufficiently wound-up to write to folks in Wisconsin in an effort to procure more pictures. I guess a barroom isn't on many people's lists of memorable photos, and I had little luck, though I did get a response from one gentleman who went to the trouble to take two pictures of the building, the Dewey having sadly passed into railroad history.


And the best for last. Tramp recently found, in an old journal, two more pictures, this of the Dewey at night, hand-inscribed with the exact time in history, neon agleam and the doorway lamp beckoning...

...and Tramp's pack sitting in the old steel boxcar doorway, the doorway from which he would later see the Dewey's neon receding in the night.

Too cool!

Enjoy!
