For the poet, language is a structure of the external world. The poet considers words as a trap to catch a fleeing reality. All language is, for him, the mirror of the world. My own poetry mirrors, grows out of, many things. Fleeting, fleeing, reality I try to catch in many forms by means of words. One thing, one reality, I deal with is reconstructed memories of actual persons, places and things. It will take the rest of my life to continue the reconstruction. -Ron Price with thanks to Thomas Francis Lombardi, Wallace Stevens and the Pennsylvania Keystone, Susquehanna UP, London, 1996, pp.12-13.
Like some getaway car, shooting fast, slick along the highway, back, back, to some place forever young and fresh; it could be the future, except I know it so well, some colours of the mind, like the movies, only I’m director and everything, caught for a moment right now, sharp editing, drifting out over the surf onto the open sea, shining in the sun all the way to the blue sky: where can I begin and go where the camera can not go, where no man has ever gone before, and boldly? Perhaps, those Eskimo kids in the fall of ’67, when I was young and on fire with the torch which Thou didst kindle, with burning snow and cold day after day, until my brain did burn with some electrical buzz, knockout blow, and I slowly recuperated listening to the top forty on a.m., counting screws in a workshop and eating cabbage frequently: my first prayer book gone.1
1 I gave my first prayer book, a blue 1954 American edition of Baha’i Prayers, to the first Eskimo in the District of Franklin to become a Baha’i on 29 May 1968: Josephee Temotee.