To Elsie
The pure products of America
 go crazy—
 mountain folk from Kentucky
 or the ribbed north end of
 Jersey
 with its isolate lakes and
 valleys, its deaf-mutes, thieves
 old names
 and promiscuity between
 devil-may-care men who have taken
 to railroading
 out of sheer lust of adventure—
 and young slatterns, bathed
 in filth
 from Monday to Saturday
 to be tricked out that night
 with gauds
 from imaginations which have no
 peasant traditions to give them
 character
 but flutter and flaunt
 sheer rags—succumbing without
 emotion
 save numbed terror
 under some hedge of choke-cherry
 or viburnum—
 which they cannot express—
 Unless it be that marriage
 perhaps
 with a dash of Indian blood
 will throw up a girl so desolate
 so hemmed round
 with disease or murder
 that she'll be rescued by an
 agent—
 reared by the state and
 sent out at fifteen to work in
 some hard-pressed
 house in the suburbs—
 some doctor's family, some Elsie—
 voluptuous water
 expressing with broken
 brain the truth about us—
 her great
 ungainly hips and flopping breasts
 addressed to cheap
 jewelry
 and rich young men with fine eyes
 as if the earth under our feet
 were
 an excrement of some sky
 and we degraded prisoners
 destined
 to hunger until we eat filth
 while the imagination strains
 after deer
 going by fields of goldenrod in
 the stifling heat of September
 Somehow
 it seems to destroy us
 It is only in isolate flecks that
 something
 is given off
 No one
 to witness
 and adjust, no one to drive the car
                
                    
                        William Carlos Williams, “To Elsie” from The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams, Volume I, 1909-1939, edited by Christopher MacGowan. Copyright 1938, 1944, 1945 by William Carlos Williams. Reprinted with the permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Collected Poems: Volume I 1909-1939
                                                                                                                                                                    (New Directions Publishing Corporation, 1945)