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While you were considering the two hundred families with all the power and yakking about enemies of France, I suddenly turned to the window now covered with frost and began to make a sketch of the new possibilities.
The sketch inadvertently reveals the boy in baseball, he who drinks at a somewhat cheap though somehow charming tavern near the stadium. He says that he has been married for thirteen years, what he calls "thirteen long ones."
In this painfully telling yet commonplace scene I hear you going on and on about the humiliation of the individual caught in the "boss yes" and "boss no" of the industrial centers, caught in what you are now calling a "managerial revolution."
I return to the frost for a moment and it seems clear that the past does not occur behind the present, but is actually quite far out to the front of it, and that whatever I think of this, however nonsensical, is of little harm, and to be enjoyed as such.
You say that some "rough beast" is slouching towards somewhere and that the truth is that no one is free enough to follow whatever meaning all this might have. You note that someone recently smacked a minister in his eye, someone who was tired of his turmoil, and that it took three weeks for the cornea to heal.
At this point my eyes have become so clear and blank that no sculptor would try for them, and I'm thinking that I'll soon find my pockets, the ones in which I shall place my hands for the eventual off-walking I am soon to do, the solitude and shame of somehow leaving you.
You nervously implore me to fetch your pills and you mention your long-chronicled involvement with what you accurately term "the absinthe harbor of neglect," and as I view the details of your prescription upon returning, I note that you might somehow have pledged yourself to a more elegant calligraphy.
I learned from the lost drawings that the truest line finds itself by going ahead and getting out there, fully into the emptiness, and that emptiness has its own way of going. As we leave, you nervously break down, in the old-fashioned manner of the 1950's.
I had meant to tell you that the boy in baseball had mentioned your name, had recalled "a few brief moments" wherein your clothes had come off like some awkward history that you were just slipping out of, and that he remembered you this way, indeed foretold you, impossible.
All this reminds me that people are finally silly and not enough like birds. For the moment, let's make it home. It's true, the grains scream at the end of summer - they're far from the beach and about to be cut - they know it, we know it - we know, like the scorpion, that there is a deadening corner and of course, the sting is staying even.
In the car you are still grumbling about the boy in baseball - his hairy chest, his perfect shadow. You say that he was just another "bullshit artist" who never learned to work with his hands, that his eloquence is simply another quiz show, sponsored by noise.
You won't let the thing go about the boy in baseball. I won't turn the wipers on, to rid the windshield of its frost.
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