1In the little houses the tenant people sifted their belongings and the belongings of their fathers and of their grandfathers. Picked over their possessions for the journey to the west. The men were ruthless because the past had been spoiled, but the women knew how the past would cry to them in the coming days. The men went into the barns and the sheds.

2That plow, that harrow, remember in the war we planted mustard? Remember a fella wanted us to put in that rubber bush they call guayule? Get rich, he said. Bring out those toolsget a few dollars for them. Eighteen dollars for that plow, plus freightSears Roebuck.

3Harness, carts, seeders, little bundles of hoes. Bringem out. Pileem up. Loadem in the wagon. Takeem to town. Sellem for what you can get. Sell the team and the wagon, too. No more use for anything.

4Fifty cents isn’t enough to get for a good plow. That seeder cost thirty-eight dollars. Two dollars isn’t enough. Cant haul it all backWell, take it, and a bitterness with it. Take the well pump and the harness. Take halters, collars, hames, and tugs. Take the little glass brow-band jewels, roses red under glass. Got those for the bay gelding. Member how he lifted his feet when he trotted?

5Junk piled up in a yard.

6Cant sell a hand plow any more. Fifty cents for the weight of the metal. Disks and tractors, thats the stuff now.

7Well, take itall junkand give me five dollars. Youre not buying only junk, youre buying junked lives. And moreyoull seeyoure buying bitterness. Buying a plow to plow your own children under, buying the arms and spirits that might have saved you. Five dollars, not four. I cant haulem backWell, takeem for four. But I warn you, youre buying what will plow your own children under. And you wont see. You cant see. Takeem for four. Now, whatll you give for the team and wagon? Those fine bays, matched they are, matched in color, matched the way they walk, stride to stride. In the stiff pullstraining hams and buttocks, split-second timed together. And in the morning, the light on them, bay light. They look over the fence sniffing for us, and the stiff ears swivel to hear us, and the black forelocks! Ive got a girl. She likes to braid the manes and forelocks, puts little red bows on them. Likes to do it. Not any more. I could tell you a funny story about that girl and that off bay. Would make you laugh. Off horse is eight, near is ten, but might of been twin colts the way they work together. See? The teeth. Sound all over. Deep lungs. Feet fair and clean. How much? Ten dollars? For both? And the wagonOh, Jesus Christ! Id shootem for dog feed first. Oh, takeem! Takeem quick, mister. Youre buying a little girl plaiting the forelocks, taking off her hair ribbon to make bows, standing back, head cocked, rubbing the soft noses with her cheek. Youre buying years of work, toil in the sun; youre buying a sorrow that cant talk. But watch it, mister. Theres a premium goes with this pile of junk and the bay horsesso beautifula packet of bitterness to grow in your house and to flower, some day. We could have saved you, but you cut us down, and soon you will be cut down and therell be none of us to save you.

8And the tenant men came walking back, hands in their pockets, hats pulled down. Some bought a pint and drank it fast to make the impact hard and stunning. But they didn’t laugh and they didn’t dance. They didn’t sing or pick the guitars. They walked back to the farms, hands in pockets and heads down, shoes kicking the red dust up.

9Maybe we can start again, in the new rich landin California, where the fruit grows. Well start over.

10But you cant start. Only a baby can start. You and mewhy, were all thats been. The anger of a moment, the thousand pictures, thats us. This land, this red land, is us; and the flood years and the dust years and the drought years are us. We cant start again. The bitterness we sold to the junk manhe got it all right, but we have it still. And when the owner men told us to go, thats us; and when the tractor hit the house, thats us until were dead. To California or any placeevery one a drum major leading a parade of hurts, marching with our bitterness. And some daythe armies of bitterness will all be going the same way. And theyll all walk together, and therell be a dead terror from it.

11The tenant men scuffed home to the farms through the red dust.

12When everything that could be sold was sold, stoves and bedsteads, chairs and tables, little corner cupboards, tubs and tanks, still there were piles of possessions; and the women sat among them, turning them over and looking off beyond and back, pictures, square glasses, and heres a vase.

13Now you know well what we can take and what we cant take. Well be camping outa few pots to cook and wash in, and mattresses and comforts, lantern and buckets, and a piece of canvas. Use that for a tent. This kerosene can. Know what that is? Thats the stove. And clothestake all the clothes. Andthe rifle? Wouldn’t go out naked of a rifle. When shoes and clothes and food, when even hope is gone, well have the rifle. When grampa camedid I tell you? he had pepper and salt and a rifle. Nothing else. That goes. And a bottle for water. That just about fills us. Right up the sides of the trailer, and the kids can set in the trailer, and granma on a mattress. Tools, a shovel and saw and wrench and pliers. An ax, too. We had that ax forty years. Look how shes wore down. And ropes, of course. The rest? Leave itor burn it up.

14And the children came.

15If Mary takes that doll, that dirty rag doll, I got to take my Injun bow. I got to. Anthis roun’ stickbig as me. I might need this stick. I had this stick so longa month, or maybe a year. I got to take it. And whats it like in California?

16The women sat among the doomed things, turning them over and looking past them and back. This book. My father had it. He liked a book. Pilgrims Progress. Used to read it. Got his name in it. And his pipestill smells rank. And this picturean angel. I looked at that before the fust three come—didn’t seem to do much good. Think we could get this china dog in? Aunt Sadie brought it from the St. Louis Fair. See? Wrote right on it. No, I guess not. Heres a letter my brother wrote the day before he died. Heres an old-time hat. These feathersnever got to use them. No, there isn’t room.

17How can we live without our lives? How will we know its us without our past? No. Leave it. Burn it.

18They sat and looked at it and burned it into their memories. Howll it be not to know what lands outside the door? How if you wake up in the night and knowand know the willow trees not there? Can you live without the willow tree? Well, no, you cant. The willow tree is you. The pain on that mattress therethat dreadful painthats you.

19And the childrenif Sam takes his Injun bow anhis long roun’ stick, I get to take two things. I choose the fluffy pilla. Thats mine.

20Suddenly they were nervous. Got to get out quick now. Cant wait. We cant wait. And they piled up the goods in the yards and set fire to them. They stood and watched them burning, and then frantically they loaded up the cars and drove away, drove in the dust. The dust hung in the air for a long time after the loaded cars had passed.