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Neglected Poets G-L: David George Samuel Greenberg Hazel Hall Robert Hayden H.D. Nazim Hikmet Vicente Huidobro Robinson Jeffers Stephen Jonas Weldon Kees Kate Light Duane Locke Amy Lowell Mina Loy |
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David George (1930-2003)
Born David George Vogenitz. Poet, artist, freelance photographer. David George's work appeared in over one hundred literary magazines and anthologies in North America and Europe, including The Anthology of Magazine Verse and The Yearbook of American Poetry. Did seminal work on the Andalusian Gypsy as an anthropologist and wrote THE FLAMENCO GUITAR in 1969. That book traced the making of the guitar from tree to instrument with anecdotes of asuntos gitanos in the substantial endnotes. Photo gallery: http://www.stevekahn.com/flamenco/fp_collection_1.html American Gothic Beauty Burly Cobb's Barn Dignitaries Georgia O'Keeffe.... In One Of Goya's Paintings Landscape With.... On Fields Of Grey Regret Rippled Surface The Balcony The Girlie Show The Lassitude Of Ulysses
an oil on beaverboard by Grant Wood, 1930
The tines are attentive to silence and slow time
The sticking point of action deferred, the glum
Expressions on their faces, as they stand
Side by side, emphasizing the tines
That symbolize what a farmer is about.
They scoop up hay, or cattle-feed, or the dirt
Accumulating in the steaming stalls,
The dark corrals of flesh and bone and blood.
In one fell swoop, the tines will play their part
Scooping up and stacking. They bite through bales
With the horrendous appetite for work
The farmer has, the Gothic worker, that
Never stops working, never stops to smile
Until the tall and sacred silo is full.
2
The lightning-ball on the roof is not a cross.
This is not a church, in spite of the sharp
Window peaking, the arching, triangular
Window in the second-story loft. Each face
Repeats the archness, the arching brows, the eyes
Not even glasses can temper or disguise.
This man is a priest in the Gothic sense.
He sees the world intently, through his own
Interpretation of what is right and wrong.
Righteous he stands. Righteous he falls. Each man
Assumes the duties and status of a priest.
The woman, however (the perfect cameo)
Tends to her flowers on the porch. She fills
The kitchen with the honest smell of bread.
3
But its the tines, the trident in the hand,
The poignant, dangerous trinity of tines
The painter chose to emphasize, when he put
A pitchfork in the fist of a man like this
A hand like thisa work-hardened, capable,
Clamping-down kind of handa farmers fist.
Hes all of this beneath the priestly stance:
The black jacket, the holy pose, the collar
Buttoned and starched. He is a man to fear,
A heavy-handed man who has his way.
Perhaps there is another way, but he
Has never heard of it. Perhaps he did,
But only laterlong after he was dead
And then it didnt matter what he said.
Beauty
an oil on canvas by Edward Hopper, 1931
Its too remote to record without a deed
Bringing it up to date. How many barns
Gave up their boards for fireplace mantels?
How many hardwood floors became the walls
Of tiny, rustic estates? Theyre scattered about
Hither and yon, like a Christian martyrs bones
Bits and pieces, that multiply in the shops
Of ikon-makers and antique-dealers, the men
Who covet them. But what a relic needs
Is restoration and peace, not sacrifice
Not unlike the old man who prepares
By buying a casket big enough to breathe in
At least until the tearing-apart is over,
The screech of nails, the sobbing of relatives.
Attuned to the hush of Gods revolving door
(The well-oiled hinges, the whisper of the wings
That glide behind, come out ahead of you)
The Men-That-Matter are aware of things
That lesser men never knew existed.
Thats why theyre lesser men. It all begins
Out in the street. The doormen smartly salute
Disembarking dignitaries, their cars
More elegant than others, more discreet
Than those that cart the other men to work.
They have, in fact, that black and well-worn look
Reserved for state occasions. After all,
The classical is never old. It gleams
Behind the tinted glass of myth and dream.
2
The ministers-of-state (for they are that)
Seem to float from door to elevator.
Italian-leather slippers (supple shoes)
Encase the toes you know are manicured.
They lightly navigate the marble halls,
And take their ease in gold-embroidered chairs.
Only the finest wool, the finest sheep
Contribute to the tailored suits they wear.
Men of the cloth, what gods elected them?
Are they ecclesiastical in fact?
Are they an ancient, biblical elite?
And if there is a heaven, will they greet
One another by name, and take their seats
To play the same hereditary game?
Georgia O'Keeffe And The Buffalo Skull
a photograph taken in 1948 outside of her house at Abiquiui,
Seated on rough planking, wearing a hat,
The round black sombrero of the vaquero, its loop
Dangling down and loosely-knotted, she sits
Holding the ancient skull of a bull in her lap.
How many times has she painted that skull, her hand
Cupping the upper jaw, her fingers laid
Along the row of massive teeth worn down
By years of grazing on buffalo-grass and sage?
Its horns are still matted, the mossy bark of an oak
That clings to the branch long after the rest of it
Has blown away across the desert terrain.
Taking her place with dignity among
The petroglyphs of buffalo-hoof on stone,
She too is old and weathered at sixty-one.
2
But what is sixty-one to such a woman
Still working, at ninety-six, in the sun
That blanches whatever it touches? Did she take
The force of the sun in her fingers, leather now,
And let its yellow tongue slide down her skin?
For thirty-five years, she was never far from the skull
Photographed here with the artist, her cupped hand
Clutching the skull of her friend, her constant companion,
Its head alone as large as her torso, its eye
Dead and empty, old and wise as the soul
Hidden, perhaps, in its bone-marrow. She sits
Solemn and old and wise, as if she knows
The thoughts behind the bone, behind the eye
Empty and hollow but still alive in her hand.
3
Georgia thinks like a Zuni. The Zuni believe
The sun is a hole in the sky. The artist knows
The Zuni have lived forever in the sun
She has endured but slightly, began to crave
When living away too long from its healing rays.
The sun has baked her toothe clay in her veins,
The ox blood and urine of her adobe home,
The idle thoughts of the skull she holds in her hand,
Its eye still gaping, staring back at the sun.
Her needs are simple: the sky above her, the sod
Tiling her roof, the cantilevered logs
Keeping the rain out of her cave, the sun
That gives her heat and light, the refried beans
Simmering rich and brown in a black pot.
based on a Goya painting of a dog (1820) and
In one of Goyas paintings, a little dog
Rises out of the mudbanks of Madrid.
Its melancholy mouth, its mournful eyes
Express in paint the howling sentiment
Turners dog is trying to express
All by itself on an empty strand, the sea
Lapping at the shores of its loneliness.
Nobody seems to know what Goyas dog
Symbolizesas if it mattered to him,
Padding about nearly deaf with his black paintings
Constantly on his mind. Did Turners dog
Bay at the moon until the moon was lost
Behind a cloud? Or did it bay and bay
All night, all day, for what was missing at sea?
How strange it was: only a dog, and yet
Nothing is more appropriate than a dog
To keep the faith, to bay at the moon, until
The painter pays attention to its plight.
In one bold stroke, the painter eliminates
Empty gesturethe figures on the shore
That didnt believe in what they couldnt see.
Only the dog stayed awake for days, and searched
For distant lights, for the sight of a battered boat
Drifting out of the black and into the blue
Of early dawn. Only the dog remained
When everyone else had given up the search
The sea turning green, then blue, then green and then
Only the wind was howling, only the sea.
an oil on canvas by Pieter Brueghel, 1558
Whether or not it was Brueghel who painted the flight
The Fall from Grace, the harsh, ambivalent cry
Of one forsaken at the height of his life,
The fact remains that Icarus, all alone,
Learned what it was to be a falling stone.
A watcher said he plummetedone who was there
Looking for nothing, apparently, when he saw
Something new, a naked man, a god
Folding its wings like a waterbird, to dive
Into a watery grave. What marks the spot?
What monument to science or to art
Commemorates the passage of a man
From earth to sky, from sky to earth again
Who sacrificed, who paid the ultimate price?
2
Nobody ever accused him of moderation.
The sun, that day, was gilding the sky with gold
A setting sun, reflected upon the wings
Suddenly limpas if his stiff resolve
Melted down at the instant of ignition.
This is the way, his father said, the sky
Keeps its distance, is never overrun
By premonitions, by fleets of alien things.
Dont fly too high, his mother said, before
He spread his wings and leaped into the wind
Without a backward glance. He must have guessed
That there was more, much more to it than the leap
He blithely made into what appeared to be
Nothing but air in a vast arena of stars.
based on an anonymous Civil War photo
On fields of grey regret, the bodies fall
Good men all, and younger than the grass
That paints them green and black. How high must bone
Pile upon bone before the taste of brass
Legislates an end to the blood-letting?
The stones are red, the sky is red, the dawn.
A dead sun glints on rusty bayonets,
On bones the color of marble and broken slate.
On fields of grey regret, the bodies fall
In stony rows for no good reason at all
And they are falling yet. How deep? How tall?
How long must the wind rustle a dead mans hair?
My fingers itch to scratch an ancient sore.
How smooth the faces of those who go to war!
Two raindrops, falling into a pond,
Become the pond that they are falling on
Become the moon, the tree, the tangled limbs
Intertwined with broken rings, and the rain
That left two drops behind. How soon will they
Assimilate with what they have become
Give up their rings, the ripples that the wind
Will smooth with its white hand? Already, they
Are slowing down their microscopic sense
Of oceanic pride. Their ripples are
Running out of steam, the inner surge,
The energetic sense of what they were
Before they fell upon a tranquil pond
That once was still, will soon be still again.
a memoir of yellow roses in Seville,
The tall and ornate door on the second floor
Opened out on courtyards of light and sun.
Huge yellow roses climbed the balcony
From brick planters, ascending wrought-iron bars
Up to the washlines threading the flat roof.
The Gypsy maid, who could out-sing finches, complained
Yellow roses were inundating the space
Up to now she felt safe in. Couldnt he
(Her enemy, the gardener) get a grip
On all those messy petals, perilous thorns?
She didnt sing for a week until he did,
Her sighs and groans floating darkly through the door
Always ajar, because of the slender breeze
That stirred the curtains, alleviated the heat.
2
An early Matisse was hanging motionless
At one end of the spacious room, with light
Pushing its way through the hordes of yellow roses
That seemed to pause, drop a few petals, and pass
Upwards and onwards on their way to the roof.
The light from the balcony dappled the Matisse
Already scarredaccording to la condesa
By careless brushstrokes by the maestro himself.
Take it, she said. The face is all wrong.
Im doing abstracts now, by which she meant
She was collecting Braque and Picasso.
The early Matisse, like his Woman with the Hat,
Was still considered scandalous, when she
Divested herself of all her early mistakes.
3
The roses filled the studio, the door
Always ajar, the roses spilling in
Until the floor was yellow with roses, that slid
Gently across the tile. All night they rustled,
Their petals drifting across the polished floor.
The Gypsy maid was horrified when she saw
The balcony clogged with roses, even the floor
Littered with petals that had a life of their own.
The early Matisse was motionless. His face
Didnt react to the roses. Perhaps he knew
It wasnt easy to choose between life and art
The open door, the roses blocking out light,
The hordes of yellow roses posing as art
Bold intruders that had a life of their own.
an oil on canvas by Edward Hopper, 1941
More like an ikon of Byzantine intent,
The stiff, hieratic attitude reflects
Nefrititi in the nude, her hair
Reddened with henna, her cheeks with actor's rouge.
Is that lipstick on her nipples? Her breasts
Forge ahead like the prows of battleships
Not exactly dancing over the waves,
Probing the night air like ballistic missiles.
A prehistoric bird of prey, she strides
Across a naked stage in a pool of light
That follows every jerky movement she makes.
The drummer in the pit beneath her feet
Has turned away, as if he knows by rote
Each step she takes, each bump and grind, each turn.
2. The latest hits
He doesn't have to look at her, to keep
The driving beat, the tattoo of a stick
Upon obliging skin. He sets the pace,
The rate at which she moves, as if his hands
Were on the quick, invisible strings attached
To head and toe, to each mechanical limb
Even the message centers in her brain.
The drummer is the man that makes her move
Across the stage, no matter what her mood.
The drummer is the man she learns to love
Above all others, the only man she obeys.
How effortlessthe way the drummer plays
The latest hits with slender, stuttering sticks
And she responds with twitches, grunts and groans.
3. A star upon a stage
Didn't another, a famous dancer, respond
To flute and drum upon a distant stage?
What was it about her, that set her apart from this
Burlesque dancer, whose strident movements seem
Contra naturum: the harsh, discordant drum
Inviting her to step into a light
That leaves her nothing to herself, that steals
The last small shred of what she was about
Before a drummer turned her out, before
She became a star upon a stage?
Now she starts and stops upon command
A puppet on a string that tugs at her
Incessantly, as if she were nothing but
A ticket-taker, a temple prostitute.
4. Strutting her stuff
Why did this careful painter endow her with
Such a set of boobs? He must have seen
The bulbous shape of rubber bicycle horns
That squawk when squeezed. Did his enormous hands
Yearn to make a barnyard sound? And why
Did Johis wife of many yearsremark
How closely did the dancer's legs resemble
Her very own (although she was the model);
As if a part of Hopper's wife were up there
Strutting her stuff, letting it all hang out.
She must have noticed that her husband centered
The dancer's navel at a point half-way
North and south, and nearly coinciding
East and west in the center of the stage.
5. Once Rubenesque
She doesn't slink. She whips her body out
In sullen arcs that dart about as she moves.
Her stance, however, does not disguise the wings
Lurking under her skin, that flow behind
Like some repellant, reptilian thing.
But far beyond the dancer and the drummer,
The hoots and jeers, the ripples of applause,
Another soundthe flute and druminvade
These nightly invocations to the gods
Of here and now, the fleshy gods of burlesque
That turn their backs on her, as the drummer did
When she becameeven for himtoo profane;
When her flesh, once Rubenesque, became
The flayed carcass of Rembrandt's famous ox.
How dull it is to pause, to make an end,
To rust unburnished, not to shine in use!
Tennyson, Ulysses
The lassitude of Ulyssesfair hand at making
The sea caress him, the crew come to his call,
Lashed out at his wifes suitors: he slew them all.
And what did Homer have him do then? Not a thing.
It ends in a wine-cup: the flesh of a stuffed-ox and song
Barbaric howling, the walls of a great hall hung
Red and dripping, the heads of a kingdom impaled,
The wine-god jesting with his harsh underling:
Cup by cup contesting, keeping his courage up
Against the day the sea drained out of his sails.
Penelope knew. She tucked in the threads of her grief,
Spindled in homespun a sheath for the terrible knife
Slicing, slicing, the man and the wife in half
Until he fit the garment she had woven.
Samuel Greenberg (1893-1917) Dead of tuberculosis at 23, this forgotten New York poet & sonneteer, who lived his life in poverty, is vaguely recalled for his influence on Hart Crane. Very hit & miss, his structural strengths outweigh his thoughts; but this immature poet had Owenian potential. Conduct Literature Ruins Science
By a peninsula, the painter sat and
LiteratureAnd now! What hath the Orients page?
Shock of Ruined Towers describe as follows
Science! The smithy of the sea! Hazel Hall (1886-1924) Brief fame in the 1920s would not last for this invalid poet. Note the density of music & rime, & how she undermines many of the lines which would fall to cliché in a lesser poet. She combines the best of Emily Dickinson & Edna St. Vincent Millay, yet with little of their downsides. Company Finished To-Night Flight Light Sleep Stairways Sunlight Through A Window Things That Grow A footstep sounded from the street... Mingling with the winds at will, You passed, but in your step's refrain I have you still. I have unleashed my hands, like hounds, And I must not call them back; They are off with virile bounds On the hidden quarry's track. Though there come rain or sun- A bird may curve across the sky-- A bird may tangle east and west, Maddened with going, crushing space With the arrow of its breast. Though never wind nor motion bring Women who sing themselves to sleep Why do I think of stairways Stairways worn and old, Where rooms are prison places And corridors are cold, You intrigue with fancy, You challenge with a lore Elusive as a moon's light Shadowing a floor. You speak to me not only Beauty streamed into my hand Reflection of a burning gold, And it has been more beautiful Than hands should hold. To that delicate tracery Beauty is the core of fire Trees whose feet, nimble and brown, Wander around in the house of their birth Until they learn, by growing down, To build with branches in the air; Ivy-vines that have known the loam And over trellis and rustic stair, Or old grey houses, love to roam; And flowers pushing vehement heads, Like flames from a fire's hidden glow, Through the seething soil in garden-beds. Yet I, who am forbidden to know The feel of earth, once thought to make Singing out of a heart's old cry! Untaught by earth how could I wake The shining interest of the sky? Robert Hayden (1913-1980) Another underappreciated black poetic giant. His obscurity stems from his slim poetic output. Those Winter Sundays is right there with Frost's Stopping By Woods On a Snowy Evening as one of the supreme American- and world- lyrics. Fredrick Douglass "Monet's Waterlilies" Those Winter Sundays Frederick Douglass "Monet's Waterlilies" Those Winter Sundays A video of this sonnet can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81-GCoslURo&list=UUN5kTfj5u8XcTBg51Z65EKw H.D. (1886-1961) The purest of the Imagists, and much neglected in these days of Confessionalism. Sublime! Heat Oread Sea Poppies Nazim Hikmet (1902-1963) Years in a Turkish prison could not deter this giant. Unfortunately most of his greatest verse is too long to fit here- but check it out- especially the titanically great book-length poem Human Landscapes. On Living The Blue-Eyed Giant.... Today Is Sunday I Living is no laughing matter: II Let's say you're seriously ill, need surgery - III This earth will grow cold, The Blue-Eyed Giant, The Miniature Woman And The Honeysuckle Today is Sunday. Today, for the first time, they took me out into the sun and for the first time in my life I looked at the sky amazed that it was so far and so blue and so wide. I stood without moving and then respectfully sat on the black earth, pressed my back against the wall. Now, not even a thought of dying, not a thought of freedom, of my wife. The earth, the sun and me ... I am happy. (translated by Randy Blasing & Mutlu Konuk) Vicente Huidobro (1893-1948) Long overshadowed in his native Chile by the politically minded Pablo Neruda, Huidobro crafted one of the great long poems of the 20th century- ALTAZOR- as well commanding lyrics of sonority & imagery far more surreal than alot of so-called SURREALISTS. Arctic seas Ars poetica Nature Vive Storm Arctic seas Let poetry be a key Invent new worlds and watch your word; We are in the age of nerves. O Poets, why sing of roses?! For us alone The poet is a tiny God. To the accordion he leaves the end of the worldPays with rain for the last song There where voices join a huge cedar tree is born More soothing than sky A swallow says Papa An anemone says Mama Blue there and in Wolf's mouth Blue Mr. Sky who moves away What's that you say Where will he head The lovely blue blue arm Give it to Mrs. Cloud If you are afraid of Wolf The wolf with the blue mouth With the long tooth To eat up Grandmother Nature Mr. Sky scratch out your swallows Mrs. Cloud extinguish your anemones Voices join above the bird Greater than the tree of Creation Lovelier than a current of air between two suns Stormy night Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962) Shamefully ignored by the Academy- Jeffers is one of the greatest poets to have written in English. An apostate during the Chicken Little 1920s- note how "fresh" his nature lyrics still sound today in comparison to the dross of Pound, Eliot, & the High Moderns. Love The Wild Swan Science The Deer Lay Down Their Bones The House Dog's Grave Their Beauty Has More Meaning The Purse-Seine Love the Wild Swan The Deer Lay Down Their Bones Ive changed my ways a little; I cannot now
So leave awhile the paw-marks on the front door
I cannot lie by your fire as I used to do
But your kind thought has laid me less than six feet
You, man and woman, live so long, it is hard
Under the ground like me your lives will appear
And never have known the passionate undivided
You were never masters, but friends. I was your friend.
A video of this poem can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaS4I_t_sso&list=UUN5kTfj5u8XcTBg51Z65EKw The Purse-Seine These things are Progress; Stephen Jonas (1920-1970) Along with Langston Hughes & early Quincy Troupe, one of the few 'Jazz' poets who actually had an ear for music. Although not a deep poet, the music is the 'thing'. from EXERCISES FOR EAR in trips sweet may carpets spreading down to banks of waters & the sky a musick a yak-yak j who intended a grand passion then there was small c who also he ended a Weldon Kees (1914-1955?) His 7/18/55 disappearance near the Golden Gate Bridge has obscured this devastatingly mordant & witty lyricist's excellent verse. Small, taut, & darting images & ideas are the Keesian hallmark that resurfaces again & again. For My Daughter 1926 Return Of The Ghost Robinson Looking into my daughter's eyes I read A video of this sonnet can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyy3X82owck&list=UUN5kTfj5u8XcTBg51Z65EKw The porchlight coming on again, No sudden leavetaking, by your grace, The dog stops barking after Robinson has gone. Kate Light (1960-2016) Light wrote witty poems on sometimes light matters- yet with occasional alacrity & felicity. She was a violinist for the NYC Opera, & far better than the many neo-Formalists with greater name value. Advertisement And Then There.... Maybe Hidden If safety can be had from hollow men
And Then There Is That Incredible Moment,
when you realize what you're reading,
is my favorite space. Maybe finding
Duane Locke (1921-2019)
As of 2/06, Locke has published 5634 poems. He is also a painter and photographer, whose varied career can be traced with a Google search. Note especially two key aspects of his verse: 1) how clichés are cleverly undermined, and 2) the sly music of his poems that transcends the binary notion of meter with alliteration, assonance, and varied rhyme schema.
Al Fresco Café Poems #: 76 77 78 79 80
The stem of the moon was softening,
Petals fallen to become a temporary impasto
So I arise out of the aubade on fallen moon petals
But I recognize what was never more
So I will answer the fog and its silence,
If she would not talk about the willow,
Talk about The tree As if It were a tree of wax, or plastic, or steel, If she would not regularize the irregular Into proper places, make the tree recognizable, The tree Could maintain in our perception its true nature. The tree Could be A magician, Its leaves the ornamentation of a magus wearing appearal, The tree could surpass Hermes Trismegistus In his chanting of Gregorian chants. If she would not classify, analyze, formalize the willow, Its birds would stay as they are magic words.
If she would not talk,
According to tradition, Not talk in correspondence With the language of lies that the people speak About the willow, The willow Would marry us.
A confession:
I have had only
A modicum Of mass and pop culture experience;
This modicum
Was an unwanted intrusion. You cannot escape The prevalence of mass and pop culture triviality.
So to exorcise this pollution,
I write poems. I usually, over and over, preface the poem With this quote from Adorno:
Truth is the antithesis of existing society.
But in this poem, this exorcism, I will not preface the poem
With any quote from Adorno, but one from Andrew Marvell:
Lady, if we had world enough and time,
This coyness were no crime.
I am not sure I got the Andrew Marvell quote correct,
But very few will care to check, But here is my poem, my exorcism:
When a series of sharp-
Pointed, Skinny, anorexic Mountians appeared, canvas-colored,
On
The shopping mall parking lot in Spring,
It was due To a collapsed circus tent That collapsed on a number of tall people beneath.
So, when oppidan opossums, with urban
Shortened tails and their next of kin Viewed from under the urban garbage bin The scene,
The oppidan opossums saw
The latest quota of quotations marks
That were brought from an article That would Be a mimesis of a mimosa Speaking in known tongues, thus No understanding.
It was when the flower girl with flowering dogwood
Passed the bin With her next of kin, knitting needles. There were three knocks on the door of the wind, But the wind was in the kitchen, Malavitch was in the kitchen, A white on white kitchen. My chin was in the kitchen, The rest of my face was dislocated in Chinatown.
Gazelles went around and around
The Gazebo.
The sky is sliced by linear clouds that want to underline,
The clouds want to underline But there on the blue here are no sentences. No sentences Beyond the blue, not even Or in the six beneath.
So another heuristic attempt takes off its clothes to be
Baptized, The new born bathrobe waits on a chair back By the bathtub.
The start. What start. A start to what. What?
What is the beginning? A game of solitaire, Slant rhyming the void, or visualizing the or/ Or oR O. R. o r r o
Oo rr oo rr
OR is it an oration?
Pebble spit from the mouth to speak. To speak what.
To speak to whom. Is the speaker doomed. Is The speaker outside always in a room?
(the question mark an useless sign, for there are no answers,
Henceforth, No Questions.)
I just heard a shot down Tampas North Jefferson street. What
Reader did you hear. The Decline of the West? The sound track From a Godfather movie? Tim McCoy with his hand off the trigger, Slapping with the palm of his hand the hammer? The celebration At the opening of the Panama canal? Another person killed in Iraqi?
No, not, a game of solitaire, for no self to play, a game is rules
And regulation, therefore an illusion, no rules, no regulations, All games are mirages, hallucinations, arranged fictions, opium For the people.
Another shot on Tampas North Jefferson Street, an argument
Over cocaine for the people.
A game is tame, has a pen.
A game has Frost on its fence, its tormented and sliced trees.
Not an oration, for orations have workshop rules
And workshop regulations, voices, to supply opium, cocaine, And poems For the people.
Is this moment of joy, a toy, an intangible touch, no metal
Surface To rub and redden a fingertip, a ghost toy.
I play with a ghost toy and have a theme, a ghost theme,
A theme sans contours, sans flesh.
I(?) spatially located under what is designated in ordinary
Parlance as a willow
Want, desire, dream about hearing in a silence, this non-existent,
Actually in a metaphoric or symbolic silence,
Hearing in this silence
What has been spoken hitherto by no one.
(The familiar has tricked us, fooled us, drugged us too long,
Most of our lives have been squandered by his our belief, Our faith In the familiar.)
I listen to this silence, record
What is dictated by this silence.
The sea is gone, the sea has been taken away by oil companies, but
There is a few spaces of wet wrinkled sand, a pitchfork is stuck in The wet, wrinkled sand, seaweed, the hair of the unborn Venus, the fetus Aborted by Priests and Playboy, Venus hair is wrapped around each pong. The hair
Has never heard of telephones, the only current connection
between people in late capitalism, ears no longer touch, the only touch of the ear is the ear Against a telephone receiver, the telephone receiver has replaced Lips, That tiny cell phone has replaced hips, the hair of Venus has never Heard of the telephone that murdered her, Venus.
Each strand of Venuss hair wrapped around the pong
Of the pitchfork stuck in wet, wrinkled sand
Now distraught and wishing to die like the Sybil in a cage
Gives wrong answers To all the questions asked about love. The voice of the hair of Venus twisted Around pitchfork prongs Supplies the wrong answers That passes as wisdom In the newspaper column giving advice on love, In horoscopes, In the leather-sofa-ed offices Of psychological counselors.
The waves of the vanished sea are washing
Tossed-away wedding rings onto the shore, The wedding rings are leaping Onto the wedding ring fingers Of those with paralyzed lands, those Who has been lobotomized By belief in the language of lies That is spoken by the people.
The gulls laugh. The gulls laugh. The gulls laugh.
Amy Lowell (1874-1925) Derided as an "Amygist" by the eternally paranoid Ezra Pound, Lowell was, after H.D., probably the most image-conscious of the Imagist poets & her poems- while not always deep, often leave vivid memories & phrases. A London.... Astigmatism Patterns Petals The Taxi They have watered the street, Opposite my window, I stand in the window and watch the moon. Astigmatism The Poet took his walking-stick Peace be with you, Brother. The Poet came to a meadow. Peace be with you, Brother. Go your ways. The Poet came to a stream. Peace be with you, Brother. It is your affair. The Poet came to a garden. Peace be with you, Brother. The Poet came home at evening, Peace be with you, Brother. You have chosen your part. I walk down the garden paths, My dress is richly figured, And the plashing of waterdrops I would be the pink and silver as I ran along the paths, Underneath the fallen blossom In a month he would have been my husband. In Summer and in Winter I shall walk Life is a stream Freighted with hope, When I go away from you Mina Loy (1882-1966) Loy's intellect & plunging rhythms enliven poems that dive & move through topics bordering on the surreal & those as material as sexuality. Often totally missing from Modern anthologies she has seen her name recognition increase with recent books of her poems & prose writings. (nominated 6/11/01 by Jessica Schneider) Apology Of Genius Lunar Baedecker Moreover, The Moon--- Apology Of Genius Lunar Baedeker Moreover, The Moon--- Return to Poetry |
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