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SUN fd MOON PRESS LOS ANGELES
rggb
Sun
&Moon
Press
A Progrm ofThe Contemporary Arts Educational Project, Inc. a
nonprofit corporation
6oz5 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 9oo35
This bookws 6rst published by Sun &Moon Press in 1996
tog876543zr rrnsr eolrroN
1996
@1995 byJohn Wieners
'HmThis
Book
Cme
@ :995 by Lewis
to Be Two Short
Historic'
Wush and Fanny Howe
Some of this work pmiously appearc d in o-bEk and the Emct Changc Yearbook tg96 Biographical material @1996 by Sun &Moon Press
HowThis Book Came to Be: Two Short Histories
All rights reserved This bookws made possiblc, in part, through a metching grant from the National Endowment for the Arts
7oZ Scott Street, thejournal of John Wieners, dates from 1958-59, the years when Wieners 'uras comp osing The Ho-
NATIONAL
tel Wentley Poems, as well as many of the great lyrical poems included inhis Selected Poems (Black Sparrow, 1986). The journal contains versions of some of these poems as well as others that have never been published anywhere. "I must forget how to rvriter" he states on the opening page. "I must unlearn what has been taught me." And then later, a bit less portentously: "I must learn how not to write. I must \^/atch with my 5 senses." \Mieners 'was twenty-four, still grasping for the ineffable "other" thatwould somehow
ENDOWMENT
FoR!rTHE
ARTS and through contributions to The Contmporary Arts Educational Prcject, Inc., a nonprofit corporation Cover: Louis Faurcr, Untitled, ct. rg48 Design: Katie Messbom
Tlpography: Guy Bennett LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING
IN PUBLICATION
DATA
Wieners,John ft9341 Tlte
ofJohn Wieners / is to be mlled / 7o7 Scott Stree t (Sun &Moon Classics: ro6) p. cm
Jotnal
-
r.
tstN:
t-5577r3-z5z-6
Tide. rr. Serie. rrr. Transletor
8rr'.54tczo Printed in the Unitcd States ofAmerica on acid-free paper.
Without limiting thc rights under copyright resered here, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retriaal rystem, or transmitted, in any fom or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otheruise), without the prior witten permission of both the copyight mer and the above publisher ofthe boolc
connect his various selves and give his life meaning, yet he was already fully formed (in many ways) as a poet. The question'was how to define the "otherr" how to get there through invocation, so(, poetry, drugs and magic. He knows he has his "whole life" ahead of him, but what does that matter? Conversations transcribed on the spot (easy to picture poet in corner of crowded room 'rvith journal open), dream narratives, a list ofpotential contributors to a new
issue of his magazine Measure, quotes from reading (Wittgenstein, Jung): eyerything's permitted, nothing's
excluded, poetry and prose passages alternate, while the emotional pitch centers around loss of love, frustration, love's inaccessibility, the transience of every encounter. There's a lot of ovedy self-conscious romanticism, always redeemed byWieners'innate ability to step back from and enter into o<perience simultaneously, as if it were possible to be totally hot and cold at the same time. The journal conveys the sweep of a whole life lived in this way.
ln
t972, William Corbett and I visited John in his apartment at 44|oy Street in Boston with the hope of getting poems from him for our new magazine (edited with Lee Harwood), Tlte Boston Eagle.I rememberJohn opening a trunk filled with ledger-sized journals with old-fashioned marble covers. "I'd love to read them someday," I said, thinking out loud, but Wieners caught the genuine interest in my tone and presented one to me. I was initially shocked that he would simply hand over one of his intimate journals to someone he didnt knowwell (casually, as ifhe were offering me a taste from a box ofbonbons), and without even looking through it, but I accepted the gesture as an act of trust, a gift, an offering. Sometimes giving and taking and accepting is frightening but this moment seemed perfecdyclear and untfueatening. My next memory is sitting at a desk on the top foor ofBill's house in downtown Boston; it's the Watergate summer, Bill and his family are in Vermont, and I m listening to the hearings on the radio and transcribing John's words on my portable Smith-Corona electric. When I was finished I had 77
5
manuscript pages,
a
book. On the inside cover of the led-
ger there was the title: 7o7 Scott Street, for Billie Holliday. I published a few pages of the journal in an issue of Tbe
World,the literary magairne of the Poetry Project ( an isto autobiographicalwritingwhich I was guest* editing); then, for almost twenty years, the transcript of thejournal disappeared. It was the interest ofthe poet Peter Gizz|who had heard that such a journal oristed, that made me go searching for it. I never presented John with a finished copy of the transcript, though I do remember visiting him again and returning the original, not that itwould have mattered (or so he led me to believe) whether I'd kept it or not. sue devoted
_LEWIS
.lMARSH
Aprilr99z
ln
ry72 Bill Corbett and Lewis Warsh visitedJohn Wieners at 44Joy Street in Boston where he still lives.John pressed
this manuscript, handwritten, on Lewis who proceeded to type it up at Bill's house at 9 Columbus Square in the South End. It was summer. The manuscript, c aLled 7o7 Scott Street, was
written between 1958 and
1959, and
includes references
to Boston ("colored paper rose, blue spots, ink spots Bostor.,tg4g, the sound of cellophane") although it was composed in San Francisco.lnrygz the typed manuscript resurfaced and attracted the attention of Peter Giz.zi,apoet now about the age that Bill and Lewis were when they
visitedJohn inry7z.
During the summer of r99z,I arranged to meetJohn outside the branch of the Boston Public Library nearest Joy Street, because I had dedicated my most recent collection of poems to him, and I hadnt actually spoken to him for several years. My oldest daughter, also a poet, was with me. John was wearing a coat though it was very hot, and despite the torn orpression of his face, he looked almost robust. Always courteous, his way of paying attention to us was to whid our remadc into spirals of poetic speech. Struck, for instance, by *y sayrng that my daughter was
on her way to London, he "remembered" a girl standing on the Salt and Pepper Bridge over the Charles Riverl she was, he said, "stuck with her back to the Hyatt Regency and couldntgo to London untilThe Highwaywas built." He also said to her that his mother had told him to get job, a but he had refused, because a job would prevent him from writing poems. And then he added two very precise
if to reassure me: "I look around-and there arostrum-in Bostonnoets in the limelighbut I dont see them anymore." And again to me, quite specifically: "For you and me it's better to be unknownto do our work" In 7o7 Scott Street he writes, "and ifl cannot speak in poetry it is because poetry is reality to me, and not the poetry we read, but find revealed in the estates of being remarks as
used tobe
around us."John's poetryhas always been the closest thing possible to a new form ofspeech, one that narrows the gap between longing and calling. These pages from the fifties live in that "estate" as much as his spoken words to others do now. Estates of being o<ist as streets, seasons, people, songr and while the placement of his poetics could be cordoned
offby a pcriod in "the limbo of contemporary Americd that has passed-a poetics that predates post-modern rhetoric and the strange fixation with an Otherness that he would not recognizrhis unembittered position as an uunknown" across
witness of the dispossessed is absolutely present
time'
_FANNY HOWE
THE JOURNAL OF JOHN WIENERS 707 SCOTT STREET
Saturday, March 8, 1958
r:3o PM
The sun shines. Miss Kids is across asleep on the couch. She wakes and says "I dreamt I just put on..." I cant hear the rest. She goes back to sleep. Dana is asleep in the bedroom beside this one where the sun fills three windows. Miss Kids' dark glasses sound/crack on the foor.
I
must forget how to write.
I
must unlearn what has
been taught me.
Last night I dreamed Alan appeared in a hallwaywhere I leaned against a lintel; there were open doors on all sides and he presented me with a doll, his doll, the country onc whose dress he ironed 3ooo miles awzy.He was smiling, a great smile and I still see his white teeth and the black beard on his face. She was dressed in black, the doll, and her long thick hair was tied back the way I had left it. He had put it on top of one of those innumerable chests he had around his house. And I take it as a sign that all is well, I am and he is, today with the doll handed between us, he wanted me to have what he named was his. It is only Miss Kids and Dana who have hangovers. I must not let them hang me up.
13
I
She awakes again and asks "Is it cloudy outside yet?" say "No" and an automobile horn busts our ears and the
There is not enough sound in the air. Miss Kids and Dana have headaches from last night.
Chinese kids overhead beat and stomp on the foor. These days shall be my poems, these words what I leave behind as mine, my record up against time. It is all very sad that we have to fight it. Possibly I may come to love time and its taking of my days.
"It well
may
be,I do not think I would."
Right now, it is very fine. The cable car track shuttles in right inside the street and they empty the mail-box. A motor-scooter or motorcycle guns its motor and what bright flesh runs on Leavenworth Street. The 8o bus stops. Miss Kids has the Mohawk blanket that we (Dana and I) bought in the Morgan Memorial up to her eyes and her hair, her yellow hair is all over the pillow and her shut eyelids. The cable car conductor rings the bell twice. It also stops. Only man and time move. And the space we are given to inhabit, so fast it is thru our fingers.
I must learn how not
to write.
I
must watch with my
5
I must stop being wise. Miss Kids wakes and "Is it latel" oAlmost uAnother
says
two."
day ruined." She stretches her long wa:( arms
(parafin) on the mohair couch. "I feel fine now, Kids."The sun puts gold on her nose. "Kids, theyte after me." I tell her "Kids, you look like a fucked Alice-in-Wonderland. And your hands are swollen," She looks at them. "Dana did
it,"
Sunday March 9
8eu I make this veryvery short otherwise it would last forever. I have walked all dawn, all night. Without control. I am forced to stop what I am doing if I want to survive.
senses.
"the 5 perfections that are the 5 hindrances" and I must nail down thosc who would, all that would hang me up.
The 8o bus going the other way, to Market Street, sounds its squashed beep, peculiar to San Francisco, where they are afraid any loud noise would start another earthquake. And yet we all go around screaming.
r4
I came home and there is a strange man-boy in the bed. Dana must have brought him home although he has never befor-and where is Dana. Whatever, I am tired and my arm aches too much to write. Detectives again tonight but why and later I shall tell what they look like. He does not snore.
15
3:r5 PM
5.9-59
Does anyone knowwho the person was who got stabbed at Big Eric's Place? Irene Taverner said in the room and others Present areJoanne Kyger, Tom Field, James Kity, Mrs. Nemi Frost-Hansen, Jack Spicer, Robert Duncan, Joe Dunn, Mrs. Carolyn Dunn, George Stanley andTommy Albright andoh yes-Ebbe Borregaard is sitting between Nemi FrostHansen and Jack Spicer. Dana is having breakfast out in the kitchen and we are all here for poetry that no one is
What do I need the street for? Ray Charles on piano. One half of one room is where I live. Love? Fills the window with light every morning. But I do not see it. Today I do. Last night I saw Greta Garbo one instant.
All I am interested in is charting the progress of my soul. And therefore all men's souls. What the soul is I dont know. But that it is contained in every blood nerve and brain cell I do. And what its name is I do not. yHvH.
reading.
"Oh for the days of Marie Laurencirl'
zt41
PM
Sunday March r7
It is poetry day again. I have just finished toast and coffee. Miss Kids arrived at noon and we went uP California Avenue picking church daisies and ivy which now stick out of a water-filled glass at my left hand. There are purple blue and fowers. And miniature bell blossoms that Miss Kids does not know the name of. I am worn down today. Ebbe Borregaard and George Stanley. "This is the last meeting." Also on the left is Michael McClure. Across from me is Joanne. And beside her is John Ryan. We all sit around chatting amiably. George Stanley's hands tremble holding the wine. At my feet is a bronze planter I transplanted marigolds and ivy into. They are thriving. Jack Spicer has arrived.
16
And when man rides with demon on horseback it is only his own soul. Or sees Greta Garbo on Fifth Avenue. All actions we thrust on others whether out of enry or disgust are only operations of our own psyche working. And we contain the souls of our ancestors. That the soul is transmitted to us at birth. And that it is this chart that we follow for life, is our life, what determines what we will be and are. And I am interested only in unraveling this, showing the snags and syndromes, so that other men may have some ease in doing theirs.
Or at least Work out thy salvation with diligence. Tonight they're dancing the dance ofdeath all over America ballerinas in their little spike shoes
17
and boys
with painted eyes Hold tltat tiger
have blackjacks for hands.
How can we pass there.
Godi Curse Man when it is night, look for the light And when it turns bright, mourn the moon's fight.
We all know how death travels these days.
On horseback
5.ro.5g
Shou, me his face.
Look in the mirror.
I want to hear his breath in my ear. Hold it to the ground. Watch his waves rush in on thc shore. You think you have seen it all. I'11 show you morc. In the faces oflittle girls. Who carries flowers not thru the fields.
How can
All I
I
see
him with
dl
these faces
Man when it is night, look for the light and when it be bright, mourn the moon's fight. The human voice
is blue.
Fast as I can write it down I will The list of the living gone'over to the
Gone PorterTuck, Shela Pl"rr, gorr.lt"d' Rita and Rubio, gone gone gone
gathered here. From my life and the pictures in my heart he gathers.
Right out of their heads their hearts stop beating.
Mark thcm down.
I
Chalk them up.
except that the living enter
say nothing new about death
it for a new
life.
am interested in is charting the progress of my own
soul. And my poetics consist of marking dourn how each
And the living sigh thru the rooms,
action unrolls. Without my will. poetic.
drug addicts, locked in single fats, find one of them,
It
moves. So that each man has his own
fixing for paradise.
Qballah.
r8
t9
I
too.
who
Mark me down.
cares
for the details, only the dance
A Marksman, making
makes
time for death.
it
this desire.
What am I in all this space, man says. I, a speck of dust in time. Who will light my night?
And time always night where we
The fault of the "poerri' here is are.
that
I
lose sight of the original emotion,
TheWoman rn me
& the original
bilk of home. Rather I go offand write a poem about an old lover. Which landscape contains no real objects nor actions but all heightened, glamourized, even, object
tbe
at the end, abstracted.
It is a simple
song:
to long, for home and Dana lounging there under the moon. Who is Dana, what is he that he should mean so much to me?
So what starts
offas potentially simple lyric with possibly
a
new
form winds up
as a
trashy romantic unreal self exploration.
Nothing is sacred, but to sacrifice a real event even if out of Is it love, or grass stains on your shirt? Is it night, or the sight of flesh lying on its side in the Pine Grove Groove of memory overgrown with weed & speedballs. Is it movie houses, or blowjobs in the kitchen Is it hate or blood or the food of seed running down yr. leg Basements, ballrooms, back alleys,
black masquerade, who can say
the past for theatrical effect, afFect, is second rate and trashy. Also the poem on previous page rhapsodizes rather than match my emotional language
line imdge the weight of death. There is no sense of a breakthrough into a new place as there is a hint ofit in this essay. So all serves well.
The Man
Cover over the rooo nights
to this place:
It is so simple. Not I mean to say wasting life
KnightTernplar of the Holy Grail, holy oil on my head.
over love.
I light
candles.
rourla
&I
I follow
phantoms down the street. They are never her. I am
Here
Who will in my bones, and crooked joint. Who will crawl under the covers and join
sack the place.
Do up the altar, black mechanics. The flashing of silver spikes in the night. The strapping ofbelts and cooking ofevil fires.
have me,
Spoons and eyedroppers, slapping of flesh, sucking of blood, hitting vcins with
head to head, secret plot, the sacred spot. So that there will be no face before yours in the mirror.
dirty needles. What a way to start the day. After this long journey. To stop here and knovr I go no more.
Who is she and what is she to me that I should hunger silendy at the moon, thin cunt in the sky apple of my eye, that god be delivered in the dawn, surrender his daughter to this crippled son.
There is no god powerful enough to end this deadend, this place of pure rapture.
Oh country of hunchbacls,I walk with my shoulders to the wall. Green lead in my pencil.
June rr
Think of the hundred hotels with nothing in them but a radio and opium pipes
23
Listen to a Chinese voice sing in the night and Read Confucius. Later write in a green pencil what you learned today.
II Miss Lollipop sits up in bed all night, playing and smoking pot. She lights candles and listens to jazz a
I
book of poems for Miss Lollipop ofToledo I want it to be the bookJohnlvrote in his prison cell in Toledo. ForToledo and yet entombed in the burning wall of his soul. Surounded by the plant and fowers of the valley, blown in the night by ocean wind, behind glass, with sweet incense drifting under the doors, and yet locked out, in of it all. Beautiful women pass before him, putting on lipstick, their swains zipper their coats. Foreign voices ride in on the radio, pluck invisible guitars and leave the, let sun fash in his eyes for an instant. a
NewYork hippy
she says what is
about the shadow on the wall, an oyster, a blue heron, tell me what it is now the late, late show the man on the radio
says It aint nece'ssarily so What do you now,litde Miss Cheracol, what do you do when the horse runs out, who do you
it
to get She combs her hair with a pink comb by the edge of this bed. Her legs $May to the Mexican whistles, she stands on one leg. Do not stop 6xing your red hair
24
go to and how far to make it yeah just one more time.
In the night with Miss Lollipop strapped up, down
to the last vein in her leg. Oh
year, walk now,
Sheri of the night. The trumpets blare your exit.
it now
step to vrhat sweet song and
happyboy. Bobby Short
25
June 14
III
Rejection of all other than the Real Substance is a deity. Therefore, do not adulterate truth with falsehood. The "where" and the "how" are open mysteries: Dispense, therefore, with them both.
Miss Lollipop is not here. She has
SUFI
gorre away, is home, is not my muse, is me sitting here swaying to Red Fred's piano. She
woke up feeling ill this morning. And remains hidden from me all day.
He who accepts among men His uttered word shall receive permission to speak among men. SUFI See to it that you do not deny that which you cannot understand of the secrets.
June
16
Occupy yourself with the divine revelations and forget
material assistance. Like water let your taste be both fresh and cool On the tortured belly of every friend.
SUFI MAXIM
But for the tears and suffering oflovers, Need for water and fire among men would have been greatl
All fire takes its spark from their sighs, The spirit is a delicate organism composed of radiant
A1l water f.ows from their tears.
substances:
It Ifyou were a heavenly chair, or a throne, or a garden Or fire or heavenly bodies running their course, And if of the Whole you were a coPy And knew this to be
a
realiry
Why then should you abide in your debasement, With those who are prisoners? Is not your turn come that you should go home? S
z6
UFI
is customary in classical Arabic poetry of love to refer to the object of a man's passion in the masculine.
Will
the fames of love ever be quenched? Where and when shall union with the beloved take place?
Contemplation: The man of gnosis was drowned and thus became unconscious of o<istence; he was annihilated through the object of contemplation away from contempla-
tion itself
27
Contemplation: As the gnostic rejoiced in the blessings of mystic knowledge, his sleevecuffs yielded perfume which spread throughout the world.
I hid myself fromTime behind
his wing
So that my eye sees Time while he sees me not. Ask the days of me, they know me not;
from the Maxims ofllluminations The reality of love is 6re which consumes the livers, an agony that swells and increases. If ever they disclose the secret, they pay for it with their lives.
Such is the punishment of those who divulge.
Of mywhereabouts they know not either. Manifestation (zuhur) comes to men by acceptance and perfection.
Sketch: The greatest love is one that settles in the heart immediately and distorts all onet feeling without giving notice.
Tiue love is an obligatory magnetic force.
Thoughts are the stars of mind's heaven.
The removal ofjudgement takes place through enlightenment and resumption of belief in predestination (tagdir)
Conjuration of the treasured talisman (fath tilsan al-Kazaz) Take the letters of the human talisman (al-tilsam al-insana)
When Providence comes, it
causes judgement to vanish
and extract from them the spiritual name (al-ism al-
immediately.
ruhami), then Nature is the house where lies the time of the echo;
what ever you say in it, it will resound to you; it is revealing what is in you.
a
mirror
affix to it your signature and carry it as an amulet while you go on your path.
For you might consider the mountains on which you look stationary whereas they travel with the speed of the
John Wieners al-ism al-ruthami
clouds. SUFI
Decipherment: The saint who is beloved of Allah is the treasury of secrets and mysteries; the Night of Power, magnificent in consequences; the Name that is heart by
Allah; the Letter of Action.
zB
29
Decipherment Ponder the letters of the alphabet.
..
And recite: Outside of your essence, I have no ambition, a picture to capture, not a glance to gleam.
Not
I found my mark ' . ' My sign. My sig nature. It is on my arm. Mainline. It is the four
Regulation: The saint is one who smiles if saluted; in conversation he is pleasant;when asked he shall give; should you trespass in his presence, he utters not a malignity; when others divulge secrets, he concealsl of princes he knows he is not proud, and the poor he does not disdain; nothing shall mar the radiance of his face; the nort world he does not sell for the present.
But compassing all points
pointed star. The sleepwalker's eye that never closes, points to the four corners of the universe. Not square
North East-West House of the planets South Pole,
Lasdy, you may say that annihilation is complete consecra-
Arctic rndZenith,up and
down the stairs, the ladders
tion to the light of manifestation. S
UFI
And my roommate carries offmy sins, I send him down the primrose path, stick him fulIof needles, knowing that every day carries him closer to oblivion, his
I do not try to help him, I let him die before mybody a,ery day I have the blues and they are lifted from me to land on the back of little boy blue across the room. Oh their shoulders
3o
Talisman: Usually conjuration does not occur without a key; the key is the great man; therefore, when the fruits of humanity are obtained, the talisman of the universe shall be conjured and shall yield the realities, the miror-treasure. Talisman: Said the Messenger of Allah, Allah bless and keep him, Allah, the Exalted, says: i4, seryant continues to draw near unto me through his supererogatoryworks till I love him, and once I have loved him I become to him a hearing, an eyesight, a hand and a support."
3t
June
18
v Miss Lollipop is full of pain this morning. Her wing bone in the back. Her legs are black and blue. She ran her hands over me showing me where the pain is. We sat up all night listening to jazz and then at dawn, rock and roll. Her history as far as I know it consists of 8 arrests, of the narcotics bureau in was chief 4 husbands. Her father Sacramento. She lives in the Broadway Hotel with an Armenian piano player. She bends her neck as one of her boys rubs his hands into her. She wears a black bra. She
does not complain.
Miss Lollipop has one of the most rare diseases known to medical history. A form of low grade bacteria that causes her shape to change every day. One day Pregnant and full of gas, the nort shapely. As she puts it, "I?e had a lot of trouble with my insides." She now laments the loss of her car, a"totaf'(wreck in the 3 car collision). Actually cries over
it.
thought how pretty) she was carrying z ampules of methedrine, the new miracle drug and one joint of marijuana which she stashed in the back seat of the police car. She cannot lay down to sleep because of the pain (Richard calls her blue all over) "She's sick,"
"She is sick."
but cannot go to hospital because ofclaustrophobia and feels she needs a rest first and to "get the rent all cool, I guess."
A poem In the Car with Freude Let this be the poem of v, written on that page in the green book. To accept all revelations of the letter next to last one ofthe alphabet, z5rt/t of a century the language of numbers,
my age. They're making a new kind of car with glass as the floor mats, she says, so when you run over somebody, you can look down and see what you done with them. When she was arrested for the hit & run (they claim someone else was driving, a young man, who ur, told them was Paul Martinelli because she could not remember the accident at all only saw the headlights coming out of the night and
32
MafiaMurder, the letter
u My
Me and you, far out prince ofthe spheres who reveals to the servant in the tunnel
33
this secret x
&y.
Read
A book of poems on a piece ofpaper that has no end. O
Of the Felicity and Sweetness of God's Love: And of the Nightingale's Song: and Prayer for Perseverance
ofTiue Ghostly song that Worldly Lovers have not.
glory. Hosanna. O radix cordis mei
My mother's name. She sits in the heavens sets them all in motion whirling thru the universe discharging at night
O my heart's rose perfeccio
-"ioy" "Lezveyr."
fash and spike of
Piles in tlte West
the golden rod, road
uray.Wxy
Dec z3'Pennsylvania Hotel Washington D.C. 1959
7.r7.59
For the boisterous and fleshly soul is not ravished into contemplation of the Godhead unless all fleshly lettings be wasted away by ghostly meditation.
RICHARD ROLLE The Fire ofLove
Delectable heat is also in the loving heart, that has devoured heavy griefin the fire ofburning love.
A poem at the Equinox Beyond grie{, beyond pain at the universet unending turning, we move, still spectres of another race, our hands to our mouths, sailing out to some beach beyond oblivion.
Move on
I wrote at Black Mountain, to that higher order where the angels are, residing in the heavybreasts of men'
No dice. Move now
34
35
through chambers where there are walls, the
Erroll Garner's underwater playing Dreamy!
doors with names, and the names no faces,
trying to pierce the magic box that sings in the middle ofeach forehead
After Midnight Ella Fitz Singing A Tisket A Tasket
Godhead
20 years ago one
playing with the atomic chains of hair
generation, away
around each wrist
beloved toys of my parents, ignored adored
linking what is lare
by
to all there is
byme 1939
6.2r.59
Hipsters' Corner. The Zenda
B
allroom. Wally
B
erman.
June z7
July + Characters
Miss Lollipop
Lord Hydrogen Lady Helium
June z8
Jimmy Dorsey Dee Parker vocal:
Im GladThere's
36
You
I thank thee Lord, Le Diable, for sending me these thy gifts: Miss Lollipop home from the hospital on a a4 hour leave. Her "sister" died for the third time. They gave her 4 seconals to calm her. A lad also is here asleep on the bed. I feel his warmth at my feet, curled up on the other half of this cot. Miss Lollipop sits on the other bed which is on the foor with Richard. On the floor is Jimmy Carter who has been here all day eating chicken and ham, smoking por, reading The Circle of Knoaiedge. Does the night ever endl It has to as I have to go with it.My shadow on the wall needed in the scheme of things. WithJimmy andJohn Davidson on the foor. Sherri
37
Monday (in the jungle
My room. Elise drunk at the end of the bed. I watch like withJim Beam in her hand. She holds it high to the male guests who ignore her. Keith has the needle in his left hand. They are shoota hawk as she staggers from bed to table
ing sleepers. Elise talks of Gertrude Lawrence singing
When my Ship Comes In and Lotte Lenya of a different ship that comes in to do the whole town in. She fexes her muscles. Aaron on the floor: I once knew a mattress wringer in Dubuque. The radio: Great Western Furniture Store. Elise says this is the last time I'm gonna clean up for anybody else. Mopping up the whiskey Aaron spilled on the floor. Keith sits under the light cleaning out the clogged spear of the needle, Harry sleeps at the foot of the bed, with a pink flower dying in his lapel. Richard is in his sickbed, with a high fever. There is only one light and the window is open. Red drapes blow in the wind. The door bell rings. We are thrown into a mild hysteria. Elise again, goes down to !eak." Aaron is snapping his knuckles to the rock and roll. It was somebody for Wally. Elise is swiggrng from the bottle. Keith is wheeling his arm in the air. Aaron ties him up. Elise rolls over on the foor. Hiding her face. Her fists are clenched above her head. Aaron says: you'Il be patient with me, wort't you, there it goes. Don't wanna do wrong, dont wanna do right. Keith has given his 6x to Aaron. You don't mind do you Keith. They are fighting. He rings a bell in the closet. Elise is looking at me, Aaron wheels his arm in the air. He stands as he does. Now kneels to drink his whiskey. What school did you attend, Elise he says as he puts the needle in his arm. My father's love and my mother's womb, Go baby go
38
I wanted to say they are attacking me now. Elise screams I dont have balls. Every time I see you. But like I dont need them. Cry I know. I wont cry and I wont shed a tear. Now they are woven in here now. Keith watches Aaron make it. Richard: that represents the art of: Aaron. Buffoonery. Elise has the whiskey botde in her hand Aaron
says.
and her head sags on her shoulder. Can I sit on the foot of your bed. He touches with a cold hand my ankle. There you go I remember the first time I missed and it spread like a great big beautiful sunburst. His arm is raised above I hear the needle squirt. He says look give me luck. Help me put it in there. It's a tribute he says to what you're working against.
Hit!
Mexico How can I write where
I
about there neverbeen. Tell the frog
to jump out of its garden or the
garden to grow
with god.Tell him to lay down his law. Without words
or
a place
behind them.
A front for
a
back.
Home in Indiana. Massachusetts is the place for me.
39
the stars creeping up the hill and thought ofsex in the dark, catching him surprised coming around some corner, cradling
From ajournal July
13
his cock in his hands. Hard it was
The long night spent in slack hours. When the hand is too heavy to lift to the machine. Almost. Rather slip over into oblivion. The eyes sink into the head and the mind pulled down into a scene of its own, when conscious
on me to lay there
thot
with only the ground under me. Bits of it stuck to my coat. Let it go I think; Rise up from this waste. There is no lover in the dark. No nightmare stallion
stops. But the action of this creation
brings me back, the charge that catapults me to take action, for its own sake, the cause unknown, of no interest, only the web of the words, like the days of a life form an image which is a construct against and of time, erected out of space, in the space of this hour, this night, this drifting with one hand over our mouths and the other to our belly. I speak in plural for that is who I am possessed by The tonight. discharge.
King
Solomonls
Magnetic Quiz
And when I went to the woods
I heard the whispering of lovers ages ago. Was
it
turning into
a tree to see you; are alone. I rose and went out by the street bush I came in.
(for nc
Blaze Starr
r)
A silver
tassel hangs from the edge ofher
tit.
Green leaves grow out of her hands, she is Daphne in a diaphanous gown. Earl Long's old lady. See her on the roof of the world. Hands of goodies for the King.
lights or my eyes playr.g tricks on me? The trees were forms, was rain dropping on the ground like feet, fog and my own game at hand.
On my back I saw 4t 40
We awake to chaos & desire. It chokes our throats. Puts tears in our eyes. Masters of the beat, withheld from the in6dels. Dope does not replace it. The Men who.
2)
A silver
tassel hangs
from the edge of her tit. Green leaves grow out of her hands, roll in the afternoon
practice
her legs and arms alabaster, her hands shape secret codes.
it our gods, our families. The mind the final test. It is an
aristocracy. Envy for the titled holders of the crown. Problems. Pushed to the
She is Daphne in a
limit each time we try it. Try it
diaphanous gown. Earl Long's old lady. Oh la la
and see.
The slim books our heritage. Wise men of the world. And Bourbon Street. A belly fi.rll of goodies for the Bayou King. And jelly
the way our
mind works the way the poem reveals
it
self.
I
rolls all afternoon.
can count on countless years before me
with no food in my stomach,
writing out history in some dark room, doing my bit towards creating July r7
rrvr
a new structure
from love. For the poet what else is there but poems. Let the jazz organ pump in the afternoon. Let the dope fiends sell their asses in the street and the'discjockeys spin their records, advertise wares, we are the creators, coiners ofthe new word, line tempo time held to a measure. We become what we create. Call down the entire universe into
It can only be that. For my other
motive we fail. And love is a sParse
thing
to nurture all these years.
one syllable.
42
43
July
Dis-
q
A Glimpse
charge. Manifesting the process of is
it life? Or the action between this and non-action? Letbargy
There is a knot in the middle of my head that will never be untied. Two monkeys sit there one on the right turned towards me, the other crouched and turned away.
They
have red hair and do not play
with their chains. But sit on a ledge above Venice? Anyway a city with canals painted by Breughel,I see them in a mirror when I look for my own face.
as.
Violence.
For to take up arms against the void is attack, and the price ofwar is high. Millions of syllables shed over the falls of our saliva, millions of teardrops
roll out of our
eyes. Giant screams echo through the halls of our houses at night. We do not wish it. It is so. By the action we are engaged in. Hundreds of days, months have to go by before the spirits descend and the right word rolls out sharp and full of fire air earth and water offthe tips of our tongue. And one ch,nnot avoid the days. They have to parade by in all their carnage. The events of them like
images on a shield, we carry thru the streets
of
the town
A poem does not have to be a major thing. Or a statement? I am allowed to ask many things because it has been given me the means to plunge into the depths and come up with answers? No. Poems, which are my salvation alone. The reader can do with them what he likes. I feel right now even the reading of poems to an unknown
later on our way to the poetry reading. Drunk or
doped before that wild horde who presses in to get a pick at the bloody hero. And is hei You bet.
July zo
large? public is a shallow arl, unless the reading be given for the
fact of clarity. The different tecbne a man uses to make his salvation.
even tho
it
does deal
with langue is no more ltoly act
than, say shitting.
A poemfor a marriage
That is why poetry
I
sit facing out to sea waiting for the woman to cook supper and her daughter beside her chewing on a chicken bone.
44 45
bits ofcolored glass recovered from the
Flamenco musrc on the machine, the
rv drifts out
sea.
from the bedroom Green, blue,
where the boy sits in the sun, watching. Which star on its fullcircle set on a hill. A bird drops by overhead out the open door
stones,
red paint droppings and rust.
Hollow indentations where the stones dropped out. r foot by z feet,
the sky is very blue.
The wind blows thru slats on the porch, fishing rods
z) She sits now in this room, her legs on a table gold sandals around her ankles. A Weigh it. Why not. This day is no different from any other. A neighbor comes calling.
Down Catfish Row, and the
a
says,
under me. I see it green with white light from the sky carried on its surface to the shore. Swish against the pilings of this house.
We are built out
I
am a worm in the house. They are in this room. All four of them. The avalanche of humanity stimulates me. Their lives inbound with mine. The last light leaves a gold glow behind the spires of far trees. They bring me my drugs. I am patronized and supported by the'uromen of the world. They keep life between them
girl
hang over the sea, it washes
over the sea.
4)
And the sky shall be beneficent to us. Despite its rumble
bright river. The
sea
A train? know. Some response to my word. Unsaid in
so that the women run out and say what is it?
I dont
runs a deeper blue.
I
the cries of flamenco dancers, heralding the dark. Full moon rising in some unseen place. But we know it. The woman and holding out, onto
3)
I watch night come down. Or we turn into it. A piece of driftwood holding down this Page,
the wings ofwhat bird roaring to the east. Phoenix.
plaster ofparis on its face
46
47
July zr
erra
guarded by the fesh of her legs. OhJoanne you let me know your secrets and I love you for it.
Subjects to write about that interest me: I. Stars, Les Etoiles. 2. The Spectrum. The Exact and
4. The Tarot Deck. I pick one every day and it is the
in-
o<act, what Olson told the mathematician tae catbe. When the door blows open in the middle of the night, I want to write it down.
I know what stirs the heart of man. I know how to win him to my side. By letting my beart spring forth. As the wind. A poet only writes poems. That is all he should have to do. Unless he encompasses more and we do. Universes. 3. A sleeping woman. My fear of them. Not their cunts but their souls. We do not have to speak at high pitch. We only have to use the instant, in whatever form it appears. High tide or low, below this house
it washes. The
sea. Senses, how they are dulled.
Feel. Her rosa vulva,
Do drugs
because they stimulate when they wear
off
leave one down, needing the drug to rise to what next
day.
Sets the tone. Unleashes a chain of events
that I love on, off. Capricorn. The land and sea. The narcotic and natural. Man and all the generalities. I was going to say Woman The Womb. That secret Place. She has the [cobalt bomb in her womb. Francesa. Madam La Farge. The Flower Girl with giant nasturtiums spread out over her giant breasts and thighs. Cunt that I could smell in the car. Sitting on her lap. Singing to me: You must have been a beautiful baby. Joanne with her two beside her sleeps and laughs in the big bed. Oh house what enchantment have I wandered into. The poem progresses of my own life, and pulls
[*" along with
it.When man cannot write in a
IPlace he leaves that place.
presents itself Yet it has been over two years since I began a steady use of them. And I feel my writing my being fows out and in from the universe with more give
I do now write myself out but renew myself daily. I am in accord with the word of my time. What my space is I do not
and take, that there is a parabola in us, hollow places where we foat into the abyss, knowing the shape of all things around us.
fknow. These two continuums are unknown to me. Not like my flesh. I am learning that. It is my key into all wisdom, is wisdom as the
Contour.
48
49
man who wrote'AgainstWisdom as Such," says My master. Who reveals so much to me, and
who acknowledges me, was the first to recognize and save me from the self condemnation I [practiced
Let me know the chambers of my soul. Even tho he would never acknowledge my using those words. Medieval, he said of the heart.
One can practice the pure poem in Life:wz. monks and nuns, saints John Kelly and virgins, whores, all who are led by forces that are not their own. Giving themselves over to the white, contemplation, making art a religion and the pursuit of the soul their guide. Dante thru Hell, hungering after Beatrice. But in the Poem, there has to be the black, the whole process gone thru, trans
mutation.
We have to be post-modern. Or
Mutate or die Duncan said
more.
over the table eating radioactive lettuce.
The Stars. Etoila. It's enough writing. the night makes me stop.
I
do not and dol practice compulsions.
July
zr
3 rivr
On the back deck behind the room which she said is % witch's casde." Only a choice ofwords. It is a casde, we know that. lnywbere h eoeryrutbere.The universe orpanding as we do daily. But why this talk of cosmos. Where will it take usl To the mountains against our will. We always have to go against that. To stand erect. Do what we dont want to do, but know that is where the richness is. In the skies. Enough of this poetry Remove yourself from them. For it is here at a distance that we gain sight/insight. That is not the practice of claritas, nor perspective as they usbd to say. But peace. Within yourself Moving with the spheres which whirl in such abundance and
5o
I imagine velocity. Setting right the
rites.
The blonde girl comes out on the porch. I say Hi Sweetie. She smiles down on me like the angel from heaven she is. She's followed by her brother who says: Hi Mr. Giant. What joy to see Kelly pull in a polka dot dress the Kangaroo truck and say: This is our baby. Larry says: It's a lit up trolley car. He says: Jack, do you want to play with this, you can be ghost." I say "I'm playrng already."There is no pain in this so I know it is not a poem. A poem comes from a pitch beyond man's reach.
That is why impossible for r r u to ever turn all men into robots. There being at times ro or 50 poets in every rZ5, ooo, ooo men. Practicing a process which produces pure gold; The poem which contains enough joy and pain to illuminate men at times over a time of thousands ofyears. Pushing on to eternity. Who knows where our words go. But it is an immortal art of man. Practiced by him alone in absolute silence in the middle of noisy bars and restaurants, on the back porches of houses from Gloucester to San Francisco.
5r
"Make it Neu
a
vegetable organic renewing as well as psychic."
I tell her my dream, how they
July zz She has brought her treasures out into the sun and
I spring
to write them down. 4 stills of Charlie Chaplin, "2by z" walking on the road then rNo, spread out in a circle on top of the table,l/z an orange rind, the top of a crystal water jar, a sugar tin, drifnvood, green stones thrushes, my head is still heavy with sleep, the brain cells not open from the dream. Of night and the junkies stealing my bicycle and books. I love them because they are the boys of my childhood who would chase me home from school and leave this same terror.
rnr
So that even here by the sea,
the objects of my life return, from another life that never dies.
Fish bones, a pin She brings me in
another tin charcoal burnt newspaper.
Istole the bike and I think some clothes because they gave us cigarette papers to redeem them. Red Sharpe's car and when I got my clothes back they had someone elset name sewn on the label. An old name I will not reveal,
asldo the contents of table. The black circle drawn around the hole in the center, the clinking of pewter as she moves the objects around, the wash of the waves under us.
luly
zz
Late afternoon with the sun at about 7 o'clock in the July sky. The moon is on the wane. Tide pulled into shore. How to survive in the city. A desperate act. To make it there on one's own terms. And seek sustenance from the street. How a man does that is interesting moreso than from the country. We know his means. Give and take the peculiarities of each place. But the city is a fabled labyrinth, and sustenance there is subterranean. Life on the surface regiment, ordered mechanized the people move as robots, displaying neither love nor fear: Sophistication and of course the infinite variety of individual acts made to break the stereotype. How can it be done?
At nightwhen there is only one eye and the police prowl as roaches thru every layer. Searching like poets every face, gait, manner
52
53
of dress. Under the street lights only the eccentric stands out garbed in the costume of his game. Streetwalkers, showgirls, perverts, late business men, clerks, schoolboys, tourists, from the healthy country (these really belong here in this panorama) poets with pale faces, girls dressed in black beside them. All parade by on silent errands. There is seldom laughter except in the neighborhood and negro districts. Here all is flash and glamour. The Best in tbe West the signs sing. Cars circle here too, constant for some piece of prey. Cats with no homes but pads. Closets, garages, lofts. These persons hold on and try to erect poles to place the syndrome. How long? Two years at it and I am worn out. My teeth half gone at 25. A racking cough all night. Litde fqod and sour stomach in the morning unless drugs, not to deaden one, but open doors for the fantasy world. Sur-real is the only way to endure the real we find heaped up in our cities. And across most of the country. Are we to survive at all? Attempt is being made by a few to withstand the heaps. To crawl out on all fours, hands & knees, for retreat. If only a week. To restore the devastation of absolute poverty which America, not our laziness which is inherent in all and everyman, has to fight against, forces us to practice. For every scrap of bread is worked for. Each crumb from the master table of 1959. A prosperity peak. When the man who wants to create on his own level has to resort to crime to do it. Petty or not, it is theft and we are held responsible for it. In the eyes of the law which are waiting to pounce on us. Not many survive to report on it in even this form. The jails are filled with saints and heads who believe in Jesus Christ, his acts as a man. And at the beginning what support can one a(pect o(cept from the
54
gods. Do not doubt it. Myvery existence to this day depends on their beneficence. Chance. Which treats me kindly. Knock on wood. Why the drop in the line because I feel the forces gathering that makes a poem. By mention of them rush in of what powers, old ghosts my mother and sister whispering their prayers in padded cells.
Echoing thru the blood of my body, the power of the sun. Maximum at this instant like the clapping of hands and distant hurahs heard on the beaches ofthis land.
There is no consistency in me.
I
change as the sky, blue, aqua
marine, orange gold and deep purple. Radio spires what I erect in this spectrum to detect the changes. A bird's tweet, a piano by the sea where green and royal blue meet, not mid way but constant-
lymix mudpies in the slry.
Of my eye.
55
Rose
white pale red, black bogs ofcloud bunched to begin the new night.
I would rather live my dreams at night than dream them out to 611 the morning with pain.
Over
I think but the melody lingers. I am too taken away
7/zz/59
It has to do,,wth jaz,z. This dark symphony brought to birth by brothers, to Hell, to junk. There is a reason for the vocabulary we use. The demon means we use to extend our life on whatever terms we can make. An infinite extension. Hold on, fond wanderer, when you come to this to whatever you are involved in, with every atom ofyour body, for this is eternity. And cannot be turned away from, at peril of your death. The voice comes out from the microphone megaphone
anywhere.
But
so
it is and here I go again taking a chance
On love. Its gende barges drift me up a hundred new channels. Clanging out a jungle dance man makes under the moon
in whatever clearing he can. Sun burnt on my back. Bearing
zoth century r.
I'll remember April and the way it turns in the night the town to snow. See the streets banked high and the men midgets between them. Howwe walked, under the trees and lights laid down in the ice and made love. No more. This is a city of the sun. Nocturnal dreams are out of place, the acts we no longer live return to haunt us in our dreams. 56
by sense/impulses fying me off
her crescent on his breast. Walking over the land like hands beating out a rhythm
I
do not understand'
Listen. It is Morse code from the goddess, And jingle bells in the
ju"gl.. Mambah.
s7
Jaly zz
And so now I sit alone in the house with the lights on and
Picks up speed the tide does with the rising of the waning/ moon.
Lex Ba,xter beating his drums on the phonograph. and the z children asleep on the porch The woman covered in blankets.
Night I thinkwith wild cries and a cymbal clashes somewhere in the jupgle.
An uptown beat. Tempo. Try to maintain control of the tempo, dont fy like the evening star Venus from the sea.
off
How red she is tonight Love descends on the land. The record ends.
With
no other words but hers
in the night. Two tin cans take over this poem. A skin stretched over bamboo blows out Cuban blues in the night like Chicago. East in the city I dont wanna go no more. I wanta be free as the breeze that blows the waves onto the shore.
58
July
z3
He thought: What next to do? He wanted to stay in the house beside her, her spirit moving thru the rooms; the door was open to the porch and the waves were there. The boy was crying, rather whining in the next room. He would stop. He was bored. He was not stirred by the rising of the waves. They would roar for aeons on this beach after him. Who would be here to hear them. The boy had been sent outside. He came back in sobbing to the bathroom, and the gid was sucking a honey dew melon. Motor boat roared in the bay. It was July and the dog days. He thought what's a poet doing writing prose? Where are the phantoms he had called down with night. Gone with the night. Writing he knew was an agony. From what source it sprang he did not know. That the gods were not with him now he knew. But he felt that the recording of that fact was important. The cqnng on the doorstep had begun again. And the girl came in calling: Mommy do you uant to see a sailboat? | am a silent man, he thought. How can I ever amuse a woman? Fill her life with a structure that would support her and prop her for the life they had left together. The wind is a woman, he thought, but he knew that was not true. And that this compulsive writing not a productive act for the house. But the house is a woman, he thought and so he went outside.
59
He sat in the big green chair overlooking the sea. He had changed pens from a ball point one to a fountain. He had taken offhis shirt and there were grapes in his l6ft hand.
A machine whirred on the porch next to theirs and the waves lapped at the pilings behind him. He ate a grape and spit the seed into the sea, crushing it first by accident between his teeth. It is terrible, he thought, to be a reporter of the instant. One has to be there all the time. He ate another. There was a hill behind the house, like a gargantuan guardian of the house. Its summit reaching a peak exactly in front of their front door, which opened onto a boardwalk which led to a piece of land not wider than 5 feet which ran between the hill and sea, along that little bay of houses which she called Cat Fisb Roru. Across the bay was another hill which she pointed out to him last night looked like an Egyptian mummy. He said Gulliver. She said what. He said Rip Van Winkle. And later, reminds me of a drawing by Blake, you know the old man with the long white beard. She went inside to 6x the rest of supper and he had smoked. Later she came and got him in the doorway. Sending waves of her being thru him as he stood in the doorway there, holding onto his wrist and causing his belly to bounce in that queer way, like he too was at high
tide.
Now it was
a new day and he sat in the with only dungarees on and they too had a hole in the seat. He finished the grapes and threw the vine down. Then the last seed between his teeth, his
green chair above the sea
6o
fingers, he shot it out and it bounced back offthe wooden slats which fenced in the porch. Except where he sat which opened directly to the liquid quicksand ofwhat was called Pacific Ocean. The motor picked up speed next door. "Mommy''came drifting out from the house, soft and liquid as the sea. Women real7y are that, he thought. Even the young, and he would hate, he thought, to anger any one of them. That was why he was such a sibilant around them. Not really bothering them, but always on the lookout for what pleased them. Rather than himself which he reduced to a kind of helpmate around them. Help me God, he thought, to be a man and keep this woman and her brood. Of course it was her house and she brought the food. And he just sat in the sun and let the sweat roll down his thighs. But they were good together at night, she let him know that. And she was his first woman. And despite other lovers, she gladly came back to him, courted him and made him feel at home. Her and her friend Margo up the row. That was good for him, he thought, rubbing orange stains offhis belly and spitting his sinus mucous inro the sea, pulling part of his skin offhis back as he moved too quickly, stuck as he was somehow to the green chair! The sun made his eyes squint and the nasal cavities behind them to discharge their flow down the back of his throat. He liked the taste. That was one thing he got being by the sea, sinus. And a gull bounced on the waves before him. Another thing. Brown with black tail and black beak, turning to face him as he wrote that down. How a poet controls the universe, he thought. Had not his master taught him: He who controls rhythm, controls. There was a rumble behind him and he half turned but saw nothing so
6t
came back again to his book. And the wind cooled him, as the jaz.zboys would say. And the land loved each new arrival that the wave dumped upon it. And the speedboat across his ears further out than the cruiser, was a caress.
Why not? Be a sensualist. Take the pleasures, richness another master had said.
Damn the references to my lords, I must set myself absolute, and as he bent to write it, a black shadow of some winged thing passed over the white paper and the memory of it made him sit there for a long time rubbing his running nose.
up
They are tears in my eyes,
Mists that lie along the land to the west, gray blue specters that have no names, but play an enchanted game with our minds. Childhood stories, we never heard
till
as
now.
July z4
A Stately Pleasure Dome luly
z3
And
so he crept away injected with heroin by the to hear a concert
A poem for the storyteller
sea
There are many here where
fall
l;il ""* the ran*s of fabled dead, shadows
of the night. Dogs barking, song of islands
across this paper. Names. Cleopatra
of shore
lists her beloveds gone underground: Anthony: who is to me or I to him that I should name him courtier to that heavenly
tto*t'or rrrn
out of sight incense drifting in other rooms.
What to do now he thought with paradise on my hands, who can I bring it to.
life come to me out of your graves, it is the day the dead shall rise and populate
I will paint
a map of Africa and lay naked colors royal blue
the skies. 6z
63
running for the rivers and
Dreams reveal how much in danger we are, but across the room in the new blue light a little girl sits up, her eyes wide open staring at me, and
orange Beachandland, orange Tangiers. Leave Ethiopia black but Egypt red.
I know it
easy
It\
The waves wash in on the shore and I find my solace there. Comfort against the coming of the storm,
living when you're in love building up the scale like a roof
easy
a
disease gets caught
in my throat.
living
out ofleaves and grass, taking on your reed the end just right.
is your sign.
No matter what
Vomit on the floor then swing to Popsy, a cool bass behind the waves What boat do I wait for,
The trial breath
arranged by our betrayers.
OnH
And nowhere in sight, he says
running the most beautiful blue water in the sink
expecting to come down any second.
Myboot
vomiting strawberry and green.
from the sky July
July
I O God of the dawn birds protect me from the dangers of this world as I sit in the dark with the crab as my ashtray.
64
z5
z5
despair of love ever throwing up
on the shores, enough ofa raft for me to ride out upon.
65
Great Britain
t
kaly 78g
Russia
4
23
56
America
ro tr
is
t2
Dreams, just dreams of long ago beams a face that we must know Summer's gone and life grows cold
still in dreams youte mine of old.
INA July z6
JOB
is German forJew
On the road again. America does not change. Nor do we, Olson says. We only reveal more of ourselves. Riding in the car with all the windows open. How can I rise to the events of our lives. I am a shrew and nagging bitch as my mother
Crauman
it could just
as
well be
BERMAN
theyr
57zr of the Jewish era begins at sunset on September zznd Gregorian Calendar
CalvertCafe
Hobart
-
z-9882
De-pression July
And
so he sits at sunset listening to
Nora Bayes sing and now it is Caruso, shadows are falling, memories when you were my own.
66
I
am filled with doubt and too passive. I go where I am told. Anywhere. Take pleasure in doing what I am told. There is no comfort in Nature or God o(cept for the weak. It is my fellow men that deliver me my life. Otherwise I wrap up in myself like an evening primrose in the sun. Nature is good for analogy. We think we learn lessons from her but she deserts us at the moment of action. That is why we remain savages. Underneath. And our civilization remains a jungle. Live it at night and see. was.
z5
But traveling on the road to Sausalito, San Francisco then Big Sur, I see how much the earth still surrounds us. Willow Road juts out in my memory. Mission San Rafael Archangel. Redwood Highway. Where man is going now, who knows. The earth no longer need be his home. M"yb. this means the end of the old world. And man, on the minutest of planets may and can range thru all of space. To the very frontiers, limits, barriers of outer wodds. Luclcy Drive. End construction project. With what frightening
67
speed we move ahead.
This must be necessary: Paradise
Drive. The children are quieting down now. The witch drives her old Chevrolet, her long black hair blowing out the window.
Locked out of the world, above a blanket of mist pierced here and there by notes from a bird, we are above the sea so high the sun blinds our eyes and the birds rise to us,
J,aly z7
wheat whirls in the wind.
Wrapped up in an Indian blanket with the mist falling on this paper
I could see miles out on the
Read
Vachel Lindsay: Tbe Golden Wbales of California
Willa Cathet A?ril Tuilights
Pacific Ocean
but fog blocks up the view.
What can I write about Willa Cather's book rat eaten rain ruined beside me, found in Stone House on a mountain in California. Book of the prairies, book of love poems to SpanishJohnny (what rush when I wrote his name on a silver cup bought in Venice life is sweet together, birds in the branches,
to set my heart afire as the wood cut and burning in the stone place on my left. Here are no demons, only friends. Does the poem proceed out of pain does the heart have to beat at a super
and unnatural speed for the word to be produced,like the gold
of alchemy, transmuted.
broken lines
writing them under
There are no dreams
a roof that opens
I
have not lived except for
to the sky, Woman of the prairies writing on stone.
Waiting.
Out the windowWest and the set sun.
In the window
a kerosene lamp
whose light I write by.
68
6g
To
*y
There is the woman that sleeps now and rises in the dawn
left the fire in the stone place
and 4 people before it, the woman, her daughter and z men, sit on the stone floor, talking of sun worship and fire worship, the cricket in the roofwhere the bats live, Still shows a lighter blue than the black
the note
that dances in the air on ten toes.
Then silence. And shadows on the wall that look like snakes.
corners of this room, stone house with wooden
doors on the side of a ridge that rises behind the house to a hill
No scheme. Only acts fragments of the act that is my life and that of the fellows around me.
Out theWestWindow
My book is before me why dont my fingers move over it
Out the windowWest and the set sun.
In the window an oil lamp July July z7
There is the fute that sings
in the dead of the night. The word that writes itself only in the dark
7o
A cricket
z8
sings in the morning
What to do with the definite article. And prepositions. How to connect
without them. I want language to be taut as
the rope
7t
that hold a teapot over the fire for hot water. We pour it. Into the strainer
thru sweet
leaves
"The living spirit grows and even outgrows its earlier forms of expression; it freely chooses the men in whom it lives and who proclaim it. This living spirit is eternally renewed and pursues its goal in manifold and inconceivable ways
It is an hour's climb from the road, so all supplies have to be brought in on one's back. There is a large stone fireplace to the right of the doorway which opens West. To the East the kitchen and backdoor. All doors are wood. A11 else is stone. Finely built and of careful craftsmanship. Except of course cabinets and table and stools, which are handmade from the woods which slope offfrom this ridge on three sides. nights'sleep.
I
have trouble
with Mass Media
throughout the history of mankind. Measured against it, the names and forms which men have given it mean little enough; they are only the changing leaves and blossoms on the stem of the eternal tree."Jung, Modern Man in Search of a Soul, p. 244
This is a stone house built on a ridge in the Big Sur mountains of Southern California. If it were not for the mist which has suirounded us since we arrived, blocking out the sun but not its glare, we could see miles out on the Pacific Ocean. There is a garden built on ridges behind the house. The animals have eaten all the plants. I found two sunflowers at the edge of an abyss, one ofwhich I propped up with pink scarf and stick. They face southwest, giant servants to the sun. We stay in doors all. day, the mist being a bright gray glare that is like a wall around and below us. The house was built in r9r9 by a man named Lapler.It is
in good condition except for the roof which has been used over the years for firewood. We live primitive on a stone
foor, mattresses over wood 72
slabs which give an excellent
July
The
sea rolls in the at rwilight do I have to write
slcy.
zB
Why
all the world dropping offthe West
July z9 Even my piss runs golden
in this time of plenty all spring long one lovely flowering of my life, and now in summer I come to this mountain, this morning while below the mist rages. I range here clear in the secrets of my own being.
73
Let the peaks be blocked from view the woman walks thru the room and
to score. And the bats return home to the roof of Stone House to sleep. And I was born then. And poets go to sleep then. Into a new birth. And we are lucky when we dream. Practicing containment. To adhere to the structures of my being. Itrhethr thqtfall away into the sea or not.
brother and sister sit together on the step
ofthis stone house. Lizard under the stone,
Is I comin or is I goin is it somethin or is it nothin is I livin or is I dyin
bees buzz around us
in the morning the two trees fulI of canaries atd in the burnt grass
is
yellow poppies.
all I want to know is is
the air is alive with sound
July 3o xr.r565 the license number on the car aside us as we go the
shoreroad back from Gorda thru the Big Sur mountains to San Francisco. The Great Beast and his Book of the Law Liber al vel Legis. 56 revelations therein made to him, April 4?, r9o9. A thirty year time lag: E Pound r9z9 editing Exile brings MEASURE out 1959 with golden marigolds hanging offits ears and a white bone in my pocket from the fields telling me the way is of the jungle magic is tbe science of tbe jungle,lung says and the mountain cat becomes the spade cat prowling thru Killmore Street. Between midnight and dawn. Dont discount the dawn for at 6 au the junkies meet at the Hot Dog Palace
74
"...the demonic horses harnessed to the chariot ofour life, the conscious ego being only the driver. So that there is nothing for it but to resign onesel{, like Gathe's Egmont,'to hold fast the reins and to steer the wheels clear, now to the left, now to the right, here from a stone, there from a precipice."'
Zimmer The King &the Corpse p.
And so be done, be gone with it into some gentler night where winds ofennui are not so fierce and fires from the void so drear.
One must remember that "The speech of birds" is the language of angelic communication.
-AKc
7s
zr
Aug rst decide today to strip my walls bare. For despite the labor I feel it necessary for my neur-creating psyche to see the fresh field rather than the souvenirs and fetishes ofsuch a recent past. Even tho that past may be lost because no poems made note of the events contained therein. And I am a needy and lonely wanderer clad in red with no memories (what a difficult law to live by) so it is I strip the walls of my room that I may have the fresh, the neq not the evocative image of friends of faces my soul knows from the past, but the old wide plain where man is alone, only the red guilt on his hands, of his own life, what he has and must use. I was going to say guilt for having stolen fire, or blood running down his hands, but these images we recognize. I mean the red that is his alone containing fire and blood, but more the gift, the
I
all over the page without will but a plan a design of the
wind. Wbat does any of tbis do
but that is the voice of my demon, the corpse that hangs upon the tree and wails! srnaNGE FRUrr Tltis song raas writtenfor ne
Billie Holiday
As the writing is, when it is the man will show, this structure of change,
shifting but always revolving upon itself. So that the way will widen as the land it moves over, does dip and valley volley home like a cannonball, not
I aint trying
to be brilliant.
PLAN FOR MEASURE
Old-New r Book of the Earth City z Chades Olson's Descartes Newform : Tom Field's Notes on Form &Beauty New space 4 Ebbe Borregard'sJournal place 5 John Haines A Nice View Reminiscence 5 Sheri Martineli's stream Z Wm Fleming Night Piece decadence 8 David Meltzer Mechankions degenerate 9 John Wieners dope ro Michael McClure Notes hip rr Philip Lamantia City ofWeir struggle
76
says under the
baby spot light.
tongue of flames
tx:'.'"Yselrin'
mind
not constructed out of agony but moving with the tides, I was going to say
Magnum Opus
77
act LSD surrealism revelation Flesh
t2
Duncan What do I know of the old lore
13
John Reed's Capsule from Another World Allen Ginsberg's r,so Mad machine vision
Collin's Tiicky Lad Allister Crowleyt Liber al vel Legis (the woman) AnotherJournal or Photo ofJan Jess
Love
Poems
Ron Loewinsohn Ed Marshall John Wieners
typewriters hang in The Pawnshop Window; words go on. And their instruments with them. Today I am one of them and I dress in a red robe. Sometimes it is only given to us a few words to speak and a litde time to say them in, in an old form: prose. And what is this new form that breaks thru? Is it pure? What shape does it have? Its contour on the page.
And if man is not engaged in Mary Fiore
creating new form, what does he engage himself in? He does not die with each day. He says there is no death. For him there is no life either. It is the limbo of contemporary America. Yet even that too moves at its own gracefrrl and deadly speed-need, ease.
Persky's Cocteau Prose for Russell
Michael Rumaker's Letters Two Indians fishing on the Bay of San Francisco
And who am I but a lonely setter upper
Aug
5
We are playrng at little games and I am one of the children. Not insanity but how far are we from the time of ten years ago.
And daily we re-enact their rites. Let us not take
ourselves too seriously. We return to the grave soon enough.
And the waves wash over us. What paltry beings we become if we complain that 28 years upon the planet is too much. It appears that we are not needed as a rule any longer after that. Or we would remain. Like the tree does. Or the sun has these billion years. And so if the day dies and we too have to decline with it, we know that we come back tomorrow. Even tho all the pencils break and all the
78
ofoutworn creeds and beliefs, brought into being by the needs of my ever-avaricious ever bright-full mind. Where do I dwell but in Hell stealing your secrets, o precious reader o not desert me,
without you I roam alone. Shouting my words into the abyss where the Fool walks. We go bitten by what
79
beautiful bug, butterfly o scorpion, you spur me on.
And if I cannot speak in poetry it is because poetry is reality to me, and not the poetry we read, but find revealed in the estates ofbeing around us.
It is necessary for the poet to be ignorant of the true mystery and yet to contain it wrapped around him. Not aware that his slightest fash of eyelid is enough to set those offaround him into an ecstasy of awareness. To be dumb himself A mammoth vegetable, A. Richer says.
But today is Friday and I know what's happening on the street. I would think it's a full moon for the high tides in my soul. The Perseids shower themselves thru the sky above me. Buddha sits in the dust. The poet works to undo the confusion around him. He should not add to it. Well the cycle moves and I with it. Wbat a dffirence a day made the girl sings on
the radio. Oh those high mornings those nights when the boat rocked with velvbt tides.
Aul7
Must I pay forever for those sweet rides thru the tunnel oflove.
Nothing today but the yen. For heroin. Snap my fingers. It does not appear. at the door. I am alone. As always. As all men.
With
a magnificent obsession.
Le Chiteau Merveil
I
have hunted,
I
have yearned
for you and now you
where
I undergo the trials
withhold yr. hands from me. of desire
I
have to look for something to do.
Now is not enough. There is no thinking about it. Put it away as one would do a lover.
8o
use
What strange voices, what hideous forms appear before me in the faces of my countrymen, my friends.
8r
They stalk me down.
I
To guard against Pax John of the Wood. Sword in his hand, rocks
To try my soul? for pay every inch oflife (oy)
I
move thru, swept over by
it
forgetting it is not eternal.
That is the nature ofjoy that one thin&s it will go on forever. Pain is harder to bear. One forgets there too that this will end. No it sis not harder to bear.
The non life the vacuum that is the thing
I
flee from.
The most. And where the solace is. In this the writing.
In the center of the chamber King Arthur sat upon a seat of green rushes over which was spread a covering of f.ame-colored satin. And a cushion of red
in his head, beware maiden if you want to live chaste and mild. He will drive you wild. And your bed of crimson joy, destroY.
Always looking for life or the passing of events to be enough. And they are not. We must see them as temporal. As passing manifestations thru the cosmos. Even this, these words shall fade and'fall to shreds as the rest. But I erect them for they are my salvation. The eternal letters that spring from the mouths of men. Written to hold up the trembling structure.
Dame Ragnell:
satin was under his elbow.
Rot What Ougltt Not Every day decay
Sir, now shalt thou know what women desire most of high and low There is one thing in all our fantasy, and that now shall ye know: We desire of men above all manner of thing, to have the sovereignty.
goes on. The rose grows a
8z
green hardihood.
And there they made joy out of mind. 83
Aug
My mind
Aug rr
A poem for Susan
keeps running over at its edges
like rays from the sun or the arms of a
Just the joy of her
spiral nebula.
Oh we
8
are galaxies unto ourselves.
And the Tarot Deck
is not enough to tell our fortune.
The earth shaped like
a pear
is the Adam's apple
of the universe Bobs up and down every 2oo million years. Around the central which is bell button
there is no need to recount actions description not enough, is like adjectives
but
point
turning point where action is transmuted. Am I wrong here? Does it matter that I shake in the wind like a cross atop the palm tree out my window. That I do it. Am the mover and the moved. Red drapes in the open window King Solomon and his magic wand
to hear her move in the room,
she breathes
like a verb, folding clothes against her belly, brushing the arms of her coat.
Not a cat but woman.
Hidden secret from me before I watch them unravel their world, bending before the beloved objects in them.
The poem demands
a degree of attention that drugs,
because they slacken one, deter one from the poem.
I feel not at my maximum
At
least
po'wers. Although a breadth, a
dimension is given one that is almost, or not, but irresistible. Each action, object takes on a special meaning it did not have before.
8+ 85
But at the very
A woman's face. same moment there is
Both sides of my nature come to the fore with such strength. The birds, first ones outside my window. The girl fishing in her purse, opening suitcases, and all this at dawn. A magic one I was born at this hour. And we share again the glow and first excitement of that movement, again here. Behind dope. The warmth of mother's womb, with all the hideous knowledge of the world thrown in our face, get wailing behind it. Because
it is the rush
of
an identical
motion going on downward. Inward contemplation. Use of the unconscious. Dreams. Which are made up of the actions that went on before above. Come back to hunt us, so that in time they form a
right reason that comes from heaven, a partaking ofgrace left by our ancestors, but "the legacy" given to us at the moment of our birth. Each instant's gift. The result of the action we are engaging ourselves in, so that if we write, we have the powers of all who have written before, love the lovers of old. The murderous thrust, what meaning do these sudden acts
of
savagery have? Duncan asks in Lose.That they are what we are right now. Saints ifwe are saintly but for one second. A
life?
legacy we pass on, transmit to others after us and around
Aug rz
us. Order in oneself. One's own kingdom consists in setting each instant king. Knowing that that instant, this, is
twofold. Partaking of the pen, and the mind which From the moment of our birth, we are placed midpoint of a sphere shaped like the figure eight. And the objects of the outside from then on draw us outward, further and further into space, wider and wider everyday in every way, this is the upward/motion...?
has
made conscious use of the "pen" since the eye opening etc. ofbirth. From then to now. But back again from now to infinity where the first mind shone. We work our way back to that, on the bones ofour fathers, grave diggers that we are.
Action.
All
these things are an intrusion and at times called evil
in thru the senses. The Forward. Progressive? Progress. Man marches on. because they are of this wodd, what comes
87
85
Aug
r3
The wind is a guitar in the house tonight the dog barks just once at the non-existent moon.
The maiden strums alone in golden light lovers say goodbye and close their eyes on the rising sun.
and the spirit's rage, than I could see any living thing thus separated. For all lives. In that it partakes ofexistence. Whatever that is. I thought then: chance and change. But you see, akeady I am imposing a conscious order there which Gertrude had the genius not to do. She did not have to do it. As I do. You will allow me that reader, yourselves that. That you better do what you have to do or you shall partake ofdeath. Sbe shalt crush thy bead and thou shalt lie in
raaitfor And if one were to begin writing at the command ofwhat mysterious agent, what concentration could I distill from the crashing moment, the confusion of thots that rush in on me, so that my mind can not practice automatic writing. He, it does not revolve on any one object that long. Lifting Bellyis a fiction. Is such a conscious construction of high genius intellect that it does not partake of that mysterious (again that word force which we call automatic, i.e. without will, on its own. Impelled by whatever order the mind imposes, on us now. Which is a creation of that we were before.
Now does that make sense? I could clarify and rationalize. Make it clear. Shit. But something forbids it, in fact by dwelling on it I know I lose some powers of the present, allowing myself to doubt the authoriry. And if I were to try again.And stay away from subject matters. And be abstract. Deal with words as if they were hunks of letters without meaning. I can no more use them as dead things divorced from the blood ofour desire 88
ber heel.
Oh heroine /// The words reveal themselves and place our actions, reveal our actions by our words.
I will use the distractions of this world, and erect a structure from them that will be of the poem. No matter how know I go, how ruined, bombed by shit, they will rise, the word, in whatever form, but written what? On toilet paper heart. On sick arms, with no forms but new ones.
2. A.w.Experiment#r And if the words come out
with no order or force, love is a shuck, she does not want to get
off
at the end of the line. Do not anticipate your nerft move. But
89
move
with the passing of past events
through the window; of Cassandra's, your mind.
of
Bringing them back again and again, remembering how poems under drugs sound so Poor on re-reading but so great when writing them.
creation. Semina.
Wally Berman. Thrown on the wind of Spring, he says, looking at his own picture. Narcissus, we are all, us. That boy
looking in the mirror.
Of his lake, ofhis eyes, let me sing.
I
have no obtigation or debt to reality that I need record it. The guitar can go on. I don't have to try to
DUPLICATB its melody, by *y lines, or song, full strains, save that for the birds.
The new order, the new poem, the new form, keeping pace
with
space
not leaping ahead, but
This is the work of the intellect Dante the intelligence manifesting itself thru nature, Lgaz.ziz.
Am I right on my facts? A ridiculous self doubt that has no place in creation. This is how words are abstract here in the poem. Become image. Mean onlywhat they are used for in the poem. I use that word to mean any high peak point of
looking behind too.
Wouldnt you. I reveal nothing here but
the wind is a guitar awave that washes against the shore
ofthis house,7o7 Scott Street. Stoned.
9r
9o
Aug
19
head. There are other things to do I think than write this. Images fash again. Language gives way or is funneled to
the tongue there to dart out as a viper when the right fly lands before its eye.
ASP There is so much to watch. Around here. The matador
Colored paper rose, blue spots, ink spots Boston in ry49, the sound of cellophane. The sky is brought down. A black boat scudding in a purple fog. My life with all sails
at sunset the cross across the crown the town on top. Rheims Dauphin on horse races to
nrr,l
a-fud, the small town left behind,
a new soul on the horizon.
(the moon!
4rd APOGEE
Leave at once get out at 3 pM. means "Greenwich is the initial
meridian"
Mark it, make
it
your own. Catch up with the colors, be extravagant. Spend all that you find Shimmy the horizon.
Augz4 Sunday September Across the eye come images from another world. They slide on and offthe screen. Bits of tree, four fingers, a silver scissors. They twist and coil with a shape, a life of their
own. Seaweed.
5
Saturday
Labor DayWeekend
I
am a spy from another scene, sent here to steal your secrets. Do not speak them before me.
I
see
two leaves
Soon they are three. Who is the woodsman
that cuts down my treei
The show's over now. The drug has entered our heads and there will be peace. Or the black magician rules over my 92
And what do I care what they say about me when itt you I hunger and pant for over the whole face of the world. You and the night and the music is the song they send to me on the Divasadero.
93
And of course I turn to my words when the rest of the world
3)
runs out.
Wipe clean the
They flee from me that some time did me seek. Careis what I work for. That no matter what
Fresh water. New smoke over the washed face of the white square Fill itwith a shaking line.
I
do
glass.
Idoit with some measure of love and time. Take it
easy
qUOTE
Temfo Duncan said over the heads of the audience.
The black tree on the wall spreads its ominous form thru my brain. I am in no rush, not looking for the universe through binoculars,
see
the blonde girl bend over trvo Japanese dolls. Their black hair as straight and short as here. Their eyes roll and their arms and legs bend.
that....
Le style est l'homtne.
Section z) Be a thousand weeds be ink thrown under the hull, be a black sea. You are the
rain of forms into white space that was nothing, is now abstract design, the blue boat black boat gone.
Now
a
His dedication to Guinevere, the long life with and without her, had so filled his being with the magnetisms of love that he was like a demon presence that set the mind astray. But he himself was likewise astray, under the spell of the singular passion that possessed him. One might say
blue circle
the eye, that pops in and bounces among the weeds.
For fundamentally, in spite of the chivalric gear Sir Lancelot, this harrower of the kingdom of death, is a mythical savior. Instead of the "Two Worlds" of Life and Death we have, in his romance, feudal kingdoms and their quarrels, in the place ofthe dead we have abducted hostages; and as the supreme representative of the soul we have the queen.
That supreme and cosmic adventure is precisely the typical one of the Divine Lovers ofAntiquity.The goddess Ishtar of the Babylonian mythology descended into the netherworld, passing through the seven successive gates, to rescue Tammuz (Adonis), her deceased lover, from the bondage of the hell-queen Ereshkigal. And now it is 95
94
Lancelot, the disguised rider in the cart, not Gawain, the unsullied horseman, who is to accomplish the terrible journey again" Like Christ, the divine adventurer who descended into Hell and released from eternal death Adam and Eve and all the patriarchs and prophets, Sir Lancelot is to harrow and redeem the abyss.
...in the culminating image of the series, "The Dancing Horn-Aphrodite."The Soulwas the bride of the Lord; in the figure of the Hermaphrodite the two were one. The figure is immediately suggestive of the Dancing Shiva; Shiva unites in himself the female and the male. Such a bisexual symbol represents the embodiment in a single form ofall the pairs ofopposites, a transcendence ofthe contraries of phenomenability; and this incarnate Form of forms is then conceived of as the One whose dance is the created world. The candidate is to reahze and impersonate this attitude as the effective symbol of his supreme metaphysical reahzatton.
Something similar would seem to be indicated by the divine bed of Sir Lancelot and the queen: the two lovers are one, and each is both. In their rea.lization of this identity they embody and make manifest the singular Form of forms which is beyond all space and time; their love play is the dance of that Cosmic Hermaphrodite; and their reunion in the Castle of Death is symbolic of the renewing moment that restores the life of the wodds.
Merlin dwells in the "enchanted forest" the "Valley of No Returrt''which is the hand of Death, the dark aspect of the world.
96
QUOTE
The magic forest is always fulI of adventures. No one can enter it without losing his way. But the chosen one, the elect, who survives its deadly perils, is reborn and leaves it a changed man. The forest has always been a place of initiationl for there .
the demonic presences, the ancestral spirits, and the forces of nature reveal themselves. There man meets his greater sel{ his totem animal. And thither the medicine man conducts the youths of the tribe in order that they may be born again through gruesome initiation rites, as warriors and men. The forest is the antithesis of ltouse and beartb village and field boundary where the household gods hold sway and where human laws and customs prevail. It holds the dark forbidden
things-secrets, terrors, which threaten the protected life of the ordered world of common day. In its terrifying abyss, fuIl of strange forms and whispering voices, it contains the secret of the soul's adventure. Somewhere in this monstrous (mountainous) region, this seat of darkness, the casde of Merlin stands. Its coundess windows look out upon the secrets that lurk around it, the doors are open to travelers from every quarter ofthe globe, and paths lead from the casde into the farthest reaches of the world. The casde is the heart of darkness; its countless eyes see and know all, and it offers to each of the elect a different approach to the mystery.
The hero in those days was the maker of his own 'weapons, literally the "forger of his own fortune," and so his power and prestige were in large measure bound up with his ability to forget a weapon that would not break in his hand.
97
The dream of the Age of Stone to possess a magic missile which should return to the hand that threw it, like the hammer ofThor, or the thunderbolts of Zeus and Indra.
ride back to the Middle Ages, pre-Renaissance manEzra. Pound.
I
come before the casde.
Monday Labor Day "seat
peilous" which was to remain free
awaiting secret future happenings
Now is the only time to write, when No more to voice despair. And yet to voice it. To stop the flow. To be real. To fy to float. To reign in the throne of Egypt.To regain the right of my ecstasy is upon me.
The Round Table companion must array himself for the lonely quest of the supernatural.
mind. Which benzedrine may have destroyed. Lost. Just another line link in the unending chain of uaNrt ros. September 6
And
into the room on Sunday afternoon about two and started talking about screws. He so Crystal and the man burst
opened the bureau drawer and answered her questions. For the real dope 6end there is nothing to do absolutely but the ritual of transmuting his dope into his blood and thereby his brain and then noting whatever lies around him, what comes into his ken, Darien, on a peak over the Pacific. He does not look for anything to do, contrary to most people, whatever he does is enough and right. The habit justifies anything. For the habit is a means into the heavenly kingdom. I have not tasted damnation yet. Nor will I. For once there it is eternal. And I dwell forever in higher pastures. Beware poet before you go poking about in the ashes of my life, making ruins out of casdes. Casdes of marijuana, facades of junk, heroin stairwells, benzedrine fushes, beware before putting a label on any of my garments, my kingdom for a horse. My horse for a cart and I
98
Simple. To return to self:ignorance. Be a dandy in a silk shirt but not know it. Wear black corduroy pants through the rooms of Hell. Other poets dwell here my God make room for me. Who wade thru these waters with his hip boots wet.
Wednesday Sept 9 "Woman, what have
I
do
with thee"
To those who cannot divest themselves again of mental consciousness and definite ideas, mentality and ideas are death, nails through their hands and feet. To tell the truth, ideas are the most dangerous germs mankind has ever been injected with.
99
The Ideal is always
haste, without worldly ambitions, without vexation of spirit.
An inspiration is no more than a seed that must be planted evil, no matter what ideal it be. No idea should ever be raised to a governing throne : that an idea isjust the final concrete or registered result of living dynamic interchange and reactions: that no idea is ever perfectly expressed until its dynamic cause is finished and that to continue to put into dynamic efiect an already perfected idea means the nullification of all living activity, the substitution of mechanism, and all the resultant horrors of ennui, ecstasy, neurasthenia, and a collaps-
and nourished.
The canvas I began ro years ago I shall perhaps complete today or tomorrow: It has been ripening under the sunlight of the years that come and go.... It is a wise artist who knows when to cry halt in his composition, but it should be pondered over in his heart and worked out with prayer and fasting."
The least of a man's original emanation is better than the best of a borowed thought.
ing psyche.
D.H. Lawrence, Fantasies of the
Unconscious
Friday Sept ro
A. Pinkham Ryder He must
No thing but the song
paint-
After great pain,
a formal feeling comes.
He must live to paint, not paint to live. Diana on gilded leather The poet on Pegasus Entering the Realm of the Muses
E. Dickinson
we fall back in shadows.
I proceed in perverseness, Winged Horse "The artist
mustb:ucl<7e
himselfwith infinite patience.
His ears mustbe deaf to the clamor of insistent friends who would quicken his pace. His eyes muSt see naught but the vision beyond. He must await the season of fruitage without roo
cause there is
nothing
be
else to do
but die. And we are not allowed that. Let others fall down be fore us. Or bring down the temple of my soul.
Igoa-
Old leaves have got to fall, old forms must die. And if men must at certain periods fall into death in millions, why, so must leaves fall every single autumn. And dead leaves make good mould. And so dead men. Even dead men's souls.
lone serving the gods within. Is not art a sacrifice and are not we bound
to rt. "gods" on solitary thrones. I move with pain. I wake and wash tears down my face. Who can say I should not walk in glory
Sitting
D.H.L.
as
when
I
When you go to sleep at night, you have to say: "Here dies the man I am and know myself to be." And when you rise (Here in the morning you have to say: rises an unknown quantity'which is still myself."
do.
I contain my own kingdom. "The deific principle in nature and the heroic principle in man" Move beyond that to what
Without the night consummation we trees without roots.
place but here
But LovE is really blind.
where the poet folds his green paper in the sunset and pads by in bare feet over the bare boards of this floor.
We really have no will and no choice in the first place. It is our soul which acts within us, dayby day unfolding us according to our own nature. Because we insist that even the sun depends for its heartbeat, its respiration, its pivotal motion, on the beating hearts of men and beast, on the dynamic of the soul-impulse
See: Marsde n HartTey: Albert Pinkbam Ryder
The Seven Arts v. z May ryr7
in individual creatures. 3o8 W. r5th The artist should not sacrifice his ideals to a landlord and a costly studio. A rain-tight roof, frugal living, a box of colors
D.H. Law. Fantasia
and God's sunlight through clear windows keep the soul attuned and the body vigorous for one's daily work. A.P.R.
r03
are
Something Eke
And he'll come up and into this room expect me to love him and I suppose I will, Why not with yellow flowers in
And in the night lovers come where there was no light before. They bring their animal groans. They creak the bed and cause the dog to bark. At the moon. I will endure this solitude.
I will rise to a new
the holy water fount. Wait for his foot on the stair.
day.
There is a princess in the tower. And steps like inside the Statue of Liberty lead up to her. Wooden, with grass and sunlight upon them I could climb the stairs or stay
Cars crash on the boulevard outside this room. It is a holy place where I create forms to dance across the ridges ofyour mind.
here in the poem
And it does not come. The long night stretches before you. O my soul, what will you do?
Monday The
With no lover. The
ervr
Stttf for Chaucer
fates
await you.
Saturday Night
IfI
cannot have stars eyes all the time, at least let there be love. And night sky between us.
in my
And it is time to begin school again just before Wally stops in to see us good morgen father you rise in the east green and all doors open by you, you are the news cast, and the silver funnel on the Dunce's head, Daddy's here, have no fear. I I
+ H ORSE
r04
r05
For Ezra Pound
This page is not
The accent of
a coming foot the opening ofa door docr
not a rose shirra hair shirt
uPPer
plate
and forever the burning
with 5oo peyote buttons on
it.
WIT cH.
Put Doatn of Contemporary Poctry
Goodmorning the roses sing
In the green garden on the
ranall
sometimes yes.
This page is for lovely a-
this is a tape-
stry. Dcstry rides ahead.
lrie
JohnJohn theJoker's
Washington crossing the
son
Delaware. Kitchen pots and pans.
stole a pill and away did run so
f Tbis ryage isfor
Billy
Dont turn away. I want you in my magic mirror forevcr. Desire burns, becomes a rosc shirt for you to wear. Hcrc
I knit it by myown hands.
ro5
a
t a
w a
v
ro7
Rimbaud's
that no one
Pound Guest, B.
could catch him
Journals FromAbyssima
Kultur collect her mss.
eve r.
Sept zo
kant huite kwip be lsviet
all
of
You Yoa You
TheWizard of O. Alice is one fabulous radio station that plays all night long. Loud and clear. She thinks: can he
read me on the beach at Wakiki like an open book a loafofbread and thou beside me singing butternut wine
in the wilderness.
A poemfor trapped things.
Oh God what have you given me that a black butter& lives in this room. This morning with a blue fame burning this thing wings its way in.
Wind shakes the
edges of my yellow being. Gasping for breath. Living for the next instant. Climbing up the black border of the window. Why do you urant out. I sit in pain A red robe amid debris. You bend and climb, oxtending antennae.
I know the butterfy is my soul gro\ rn weak from batde. A giant fan on the back of a beede.
A caterpillar, chrysalis that Ma Khiam.I'm home
ro8
a new home apart
seeks
from this room.
ro9
And will disappear from sight at the pulling of invisible strings.
Full Moon
Yet so tenuous, so fine this thing is, I am sitting on the hard bed, we could vanish from sight like the puff off an invisible cigarette. Fured chest, ragged silk under wings beating against the glass
And new boys come into the room. They sit at the foot of his bed. They fold up into the lotus position listening to rain. The night with one far auto call over the unseen hill. Only the flesh of the beloved is before his eyes. And that too out of sight. Only strange bones sit before him, reading comic books and the latest pages of poetry from the renaissance. High buttoned shoes, high collared shirts, hoods and white cloaks hang in the closet. The street a swarm with the rusde of their silk through its gutters.The stretching of limbs under an Indian Army blanket. The rubber tires always in our ears. The reunion of the beloved boys there, hearing them unzip their fies in the night.
no one will open.
The blue diamonds on your back are too beautiful to do
awaywith. I watch you all morning
October long.
With my hand over my mouth. Tbe Waning of tlte Haroest Moon
September
17
No fowers now to wear at Sunset. Autumn and rain. Dress in
I
await the phantom lover-the one who haunts all vromen, the one I dream of, who stands behind every man, with a finger and head shfing-"Not him, he is not the one." forbidding me each time ,o lTrr"i,
blue. For the descent. Dogs bark at the gate. Go down daughter, my soul heavywith the memoryof heaven.
Nir,
Dogs bark in my ears. My man lost. My soul ajangle of lost connections. Who will play in the light at autumn,
when all men are alone.
Urania discovered the pole and the dance of the stars
Down. And further yet to go. Words gone from my mouth. Speechless in the tide.
dromena-the things that
of
heaven
Thalia the lots and good moral teaching of comedy are done
For Helen
Thus the essential elements in the legend of Orpheus are sacred song, the other world and the ennobling of man by song and transcendence, by the mysteries and the divine suffering of their founder.
Phanes
Protogonia
Orpheus Ericapaeus Eros
Dionysius
Her hair is woven of
a
p
million
strings, her blouse blows the shade ofdead grass, you better be there or what I am pulled back to is the one dead string tied to the middle of her skull. Who plugged in that center. Who weaves the waves? Sea weeds. Priapus of the harbor from the reeds bound wound a basket about her bones. Savage moulder from the underground.
Metis
He Will Neoer Come 5o4 Anonymous
Calliope discovered the art of heroic versel Clio the sweet music of the lyre which accompanies the dance Euterpe the sonorous voice of the tragic chorus Melpomene found for mortals the honeytoned barbitos Terpsichore gave us the artful flute Erato invented cheering hymns to the gods Polymnia the joys of the dance
I sit and pine for him To ride by in his bronze car. Before the Muses, Eros he becomes. Day and night at the threshold ofthis door astride steel armor.
I
alone watch him work
up the sidewalk in this sun.
I13
Thomas E. Balas New London CountyJail
A poem for my goest
Bo:< 388
To
the young flush oflove spread on the faces of those I love is worth all the pain in my world.
Uncasville, Connecticut Take photograph ofhouse at Ellis &Prince on Ellis
see
4 porticos
The door opens.
My
At night. Lit.
eyes do.
They are there and real
Sweet music soft and tender
light brings in the night'
Sooth-
ing stars
ing and slow.
shine.
Grid foorbackn.z6 Annie the Cop born
Flesh turned eternal 18
M;ay fi75
translucence.
Like Christ CalTjader's Black Orcbid
come again toJerusalem room. Sunday afternoon
Fires of hell aglow in his bones.
9.26
A shroud
9.59
has fallen
over my tlpewriter. The pencil in my hand becomes lead
mywrist
September and the harvest moon aches.
falls. The dead of the year. She is gone underground. u5
tt4
So soon.
My mother goes.
I mourn
already.
October
15
Grey hairs across the pillow.
Waitingfor tbe Prince "a milestone in the history of logic"
No more.
Principia Mathematica
Blue smoke
Russell &Whitehead
up the chimney.
It
is towers we build
in the dawn.
Verily I say unto you, except a corn ofwheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit.
And the pain
of not loving you
With mywhole
John,n: z4
body and soul! I go down the drain
means
"My whole task consists in the explanation of the nature
with autumn.
of
the proposition."
LJJ. Wittgenstein
Linger awhile Before the guns go off. Paradise
Wittgenstein told me how the idea of language as picture of reality occurred to him. The way in which the parts of the proposition are combined-the structure of the proposition-depicts a possible combination of elements in reality, a possible state ofaffairs. a
th"t ?ro?osit;oz serves as a licture
Written during First World War in
rr6
puts such dry leaves in the throat and your neck beloved queen ofthe heavens.
It
light I wear in the is your
sunset. tbe trenches
n7
Letters to the Citizens
of
What newgoddess out of the tents of Babylon.
What countrywhere the green light blows Out through the realm of night Squares crossing circles and avenues
Down labpinthine glooms. It's I dont want it to be hung up
a
She
steps into her shoes.
of
ForWallace.
beautiful cross November
z7
In the present tense. A crack PAN
On the back of bamboo blinds. I want to be free Love in the dawn. And wo giant Steps up the front ofthis housc. United kingdom under The Fall. First Adam and Eve
A*y
Lily
Joli"
Ivy
Lowell Lang!ry Adams
Anders
Mil&ed Pearl Bailey
Tawn
Black Green Red
Qreen
ReSide in splendor. Here
Yalli-Waddig There is no p.left.
There e box returned Received from
what old ladywith golden cyes. November 29,1959 November r Johanna berg South Africa
rr8
II9
r45oqr95o Jargon Books
HEAD
40 NYT 50M 35 Ac 200
Y
5oo
M
inverted arrow
N
o T 1959
825
zoo 73 3 oo
B
food
The Mystery
drink
(forJake
Erlich tr4
98
r. our great ship ofstate JWAH JOSIAH JOELLS
of shadows, rock coast offMaine beyond beaches, a star offthe eastern window, banks beyond
their court ofhigh yellow sunset.
Let peyote go
JOY
The vigil ends. Here KISSIAH MC ARTHUR
gods disappear. Sinla The Bona Venta sails
BLVD
wHo D
G
t20
for me on the grass like Fifth Avenue. Demolished. Naked on the ground.
Plant
Jarophagus graves mat burials
Mercury and chestnuts to throw down upon the chest.
cby stone copper (fishhooks
shcll 3.
Stomp the graves of my fallen queen.
spearheads.
Silver finger rings copper bands
fi.29
The Qreen draws an oasis for the dcsert.
Charlcs
Cagr"Rule of Kings"
shrine ofthe local god
Study Origins of Blacfr. Mountain vlA SUMER
Date of Founding John Rich
to thc
ttoarn
for dawn
puesi hegemony
Fara--------
r23
the offal ofancestors
in the hands of
a scribe.
Pressure yr. tribe.
And the too strong grasping of it, when it is pressed together and condensed, loses
it
This very thing you The night of December
z5
are
rysg
Received z5 dollars
How awe, night-rest and neighborhood can rot on loan fromTiumbull Higgins Family z5oo N. Street
Washington
I
DC
pose you your question:
shall you uncover honey / where ma$gots are?
And what is the message? The message is a discrete or continuous sequence of measurable events distributed in time is the birth of air, is the birth of water, is a state between the origin and the end, between birth and the beginning another fetid nest is change, presents no more than itself
I hunt among
stones
The mechanics of the consecutive order of events in any repeatable sequence
For 7rr
of
I may be anybody to you but youte still Miss King to me. On the top, planes fly dogs, bark at men. Cry in the night, the girl downstairs sends her mother up to get me.
t24
125
Cuz somethin's on the fire. And
it
JOHN WIENERS
may be me. So
blow out the blue smoke. Where all sound dies in the night. And boys
hitch their trousers at the moon. Move through the under brushes.
important impact on the Boston and Cambridge literary scenes. After a two-year stay in San Francisco, during which
bird heard out loud.
In the green shadow of the lamplight absolute reality is all I am interested in, the light shining on the silver edge of these keys, the magic formation of the letters in rows upon the green field of thc paper,looking like the shadowed corner ofa garden, elaborating on none ofthis, entering into communion with it, picking up speed as I go further in, looking out that nothing disturbs me from it, this place, which cd. be called,
m"Br., but which is not, is only
hercr7o7 Scott Street, San Francisco
n6
Wieners was born in Milton, Massachusetts in 1934, and, after receiving his ne from Boston College, studied at the now famed Black Mountain College under Charles Olson and Robert Duncan. From 1956 to 1958 Wieners lived in Boston, where he edited the literary magazine Measure, and had an
time he wrote 7o7 Scott Streel, he returned to Boston, and has divided his time between Boston and NewYork since.