Skip to main content

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Bobby, I love Ginsberg. he was one of the first "modern" poets I read back when I I was a callow youth. Bukowski too, brutally honest, I love it when he disses the "poetry establishment" and I don't know if he's sexist or mysognist or whatever the feminists claim he is...al though I do think he's had a few bad relationships with women, and haven't we all!
Burroughs--all I have to say is the The Wild Boys is so close to gay porn it's unbelievable. Brilliant guy, although I would never shoot my wife. Never heard of Manly P. Hall, I'm afraid. You're right in saying that probably no one else knows about him, but guess who gonna try like hell to find books by him !
I like John Giorno too and Sapphire is great. Haven't heard of the others.
The reason I found out about Manly P. Hall is because I once stayed for a month in a house in Hell-Lay, which contained both a disused but enormous wine cellar and fur vault, down the block from where his Philosophical Research Society was based. It was said by the neighbors that the institute's library contained many rare books about psychic and spiritual phenomena, including some copies of books locked in the Vatican"s vaults... you know, the forbidden ones. But I never realized he was a poet. I would be very interested to find out more, Bobby.
Last edited by hatches
Yeah this forum is like so brown, like chocolate...or feces...both considered bad for you and yet both are eaten! HE HE!

Fave dead poets:
Whitman, Ginsberg, Rimbaud, Bukowski, Baudelaire, T.S Eliot, Ezra Pound, Blake, Burroughs, Anne Sexton, Sylvia Plath, Brecht (shocker, right?), Jackie Curtis, David Wojnarowicz, can't think of any more

Fave living poets:
Bobby Miller, Maggie Estep, John Giorno, David Bowie, Bob Dylan, Penny Arcade, Sapphire, Nicole Blackman, can't think of any more
You can find some of my favorite poetry of Manley P Hall in " Collected Writings of Manley P .Hall, Volume 3 Essays and Poems."

A sample:

" Masks "
Some come to laugh; others come to cry.
Some aspire. The most, like cattle,
follow herdsman and their barking curs.

Some come to love; others to be loved.
Some come to walk the weary way alone;
while many mingle with an endless throng.

Some come to pray; others to labor.
Some, more fortunate, walk life's way in ease.
While others struggle broken to the grave.

Some come to shatter hearts and souls; others
To have them shattered by the thoughtless ones.
Some come with broken hearts, and others heartless.

A strange pagentry, this thing called life,
with death the master of the show, and souls
As thoughtless jesters dancing round about.

Masks, masks , masks - false faces everywhere;
Laughter to hide the tears, smiles the grief,
And flower-strewn drapes the waxen face of death.

False faces! See them round about us here.
Doth no reality remain on Earth?
Is there no vision through the mask of day?

Clay, moulded to a thousand forms, remains
But clay, as worthless as before , nor doth
Belief or unbelief its substance change.

It may be treasured for its beauty or
Rejected because of ungainly shape;
But loved or hated, it remains but clay.

Our hearts and souls give life to lifelessness,
Tinting the colorless with myriad hues,
Only to find the clay unchanged and dead.

Los Angeles, California 1962
One of my favorite poets has to be E.E. Cummings. My Favorite poem by Cummings is.....

I WILL WADE OUT

I will wade out
til my thighs are steeped in burning flowers
I will take the sun into my mouth and leap into the ripe air
ALIVE
with closed eyes
to dash against darkness
in the sleeping curves of my body
shall enter fingers of smooth mastery
with chasteness of sea-girls
will I complete the mystery
of my flesh
I will rise
after a thousand years
lipping
flowers
and set my teeth into the silver of the moon


from "Tulips and Chimneys"- 1923
At the risk of creating a mutual admiration society, I am always sent off by the living lushus

Bobby Miller (not the least because he brought me to Mother and Ka-boom the rest is endless pleasure). I feel a lot of his work is really groundbreaking and naughtily wise.

Chi Chi has a kind of classic grace with an inspired nowness -very rare quality.

Sapphire has forever given me total rushes since the first time I worked with a women's theater group to produce evenings of performances at the Nuyoricans starting back in 1989. Everyone should listen to her speak 'Wild Thing' the work she faux-reluctantly gave to the Nuyorican Symphony recording which was made in 1992 -Big Bush tried to have the poem banned when it was printed in a volume of Heresies, I think it was. And not the least of her recommendations is that her first novel, Push, is the second most stolen book from Barnes and Noble!

Lois Griffith is another living fave. Hard to find her poetry in print, easier to find her novel, and mybe easier to catch her occasionally speak a poem at the Nuyoricans. I learned a lot from her and Miguel, who somehow is in a kind of category by himslef in my mind.

Lorie Carlos is also a massively inspiring speaker of poetry.

Emily XYZ. Don't need to explain that.

Edwin Torrez for the sheer crazy soundplayfulness.

Dead. Aliester Crowley. I have the official biography, The Beast 666, (you can almost smell the guy in his writing) written by the executor of his literary estate and vended to me by said executor's son.

Hart Crane. Hard to find someone who does it so dense.

Anna Akmatova. Its pure, simple, bracing.

I used to like Charles Brautigan.

Octavio Paz. That tropic thing.

Paul Celan. Really gets to the core.

Audre Lourde. Chi Chi, in a way, reminds me of Lourde. Same kind of spirit.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I think of a lot of writters who do prose who are really poets hiding out in more regular language; Gerold Vizenor, Jeannette Winterson, Ernst Bloch, Sebold, and even comics people like Don Martin.

I'll stop. Topics like this are just a license for me to get totally self-indulgent.
Last edited by seven
Tonight I watched "Born Into It," the documentary about Bukowski which is so gorgeous. He died in 1994... just goes to show you death doesn't matter for some people.

There's a bit in there with his DAUGHTER my Goddess was a strange beautiful woman. She looks like him! Without the acne vulgaris.

The film ends with Bukowski reciting his poem "the bluebird" which I had never heard...

the bluebird

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too tough for him,
I say, stay in there, I'm not going
to let anybody see
you.
there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I pour whiskey on him and inhale
cigarette smoke
and the whores and the bartenders
and the grocery clerks
never know that
he's
in there.

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too tough for him,
I say,
stay down, do you want to mess
me up?
you want to screw up the
works?
you want to blow my book sales in
Europe?
there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too clever, I only let him out
at night sometimes
when everybody's asleep.
I say, I know that you're there,
so don't be
sad.
then I put him back,
but he's singing a little
in there, I haven't quite let him
die
and we sleep together like
that
with our
secret pact
and it's nice enough to
make a man
weep, but I don't
weep, do
you?
Rene is our Bukowski. The ups and downs, the wild violence, the sensitive glimmers in the swill. My last reading at Chez Asada was, strangely enough, a revival of Renee's own bluebird story... the bluebird rotting...

I recollect when Johnny and Chichi didn't even want him to come to Jackie. He loved to scream abuse at the performers on the stage. Not to mention probably drinking up the bar. And that man NEVER pays for a drink. Thank you.

I once went to see "I Puritani" with him at the Metropolitan and he heckled the diva for not being as good as Callas. I'm shocked we were not thrown out. You can heckle like that in Italy... but anyhow, Rene screaming "POVERA" and other insults in Italian amidst the mummified rich audience was a bracing experience

The Bukowski documentary "Born Into This" tells you alot about the old man. (A must-get on Netflix, not to mention one to buy...)
"Hank" was wildly prolific. He went to his boring Post Office job (at night), came home, slept, woke up, started drinking and wrote. Then back to the job. That's all he did.

His publisher, John Martin, basically started the Black Sparrow press to publish the man. He agreed to give the poet $100. a month to live on -- that's all he needed -- if he would quit his PO job and write full time.

He started paying Bukowski on January 2, 1970. In the documentary, he details how he casually mentions to Hank that novels sell better than books of poems. On January 25th, the poet called him and said he had a novel for him: it was "Post Office."

John Martin asked - "How in hell did you write a novel in 22 days?" Bukowski's answer:

"Fear."
Last edited by S'tan
Seven, rent "Born Into This" for the full-blooded experience of the life of Bukowski.

It is a compilation of many films... Right in the beginning he calmly tells one shooter he is going to throw his beer-bottle in his face. the guy asks why. And the poet says, "I'm too strong for you. You came too late. The cameras came too late."

But there is really no rancour. Just saying when he really wanted fame, it wasn't there. Now it comes and he is just his sublime self with few needs.

Some artists become their subject matter, and it can be a curse.

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×