Sunday, December 15, 2013






Peter O'Toole

1932-2013


Lawrence of Arabia
directed by David Lean
Columbia Pictures
1962



http://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/dec/15/peter-o-toole-dies-lawrence-arabia






GATHERED ~





photo © bob arnold




Saturday, December 14, 2013

RAINMAKER ~





(1969)





One Time Thing by Michael Chapman on Grooveshark




 "I had an art college education and on a rainy night in 1966 I went into a pub in Cornwall, but I couldn't afford to pay to go in. So I said, I'll tell you what, I don't want to stay outside in the rain, I'll play guitar for half an hour for you. They offered me a job for the rest of the summer and I've been at it ever since."

(from MC website)


http://www.michaelchapman.co.uk/




Friday, December 13, 2013

ROBERT HAYDEN ~










Frederick Douglass



When it is finally ours, this freedom, this liberty, this beautiful

and terrible thing, needful to man as air,   

usable as earth; when it belongs at last to all,   

when it is truly instinct, brain matter, diastole, systole,   

reflex action; when it is finally won; when it is more   

than the gaudy mumbo jumbo of politicians:   

this man, this Douglass, this former slave, this Negro   

beaten to his knees, exiled, visioning a world   

where none is lonely, none hunted, alien,   

this man, superb in love and logic, this man   

shall be remembered. Oh, not with statues’ rhetoric,   

not with legends and poems and wreaths of bronze alone,

but with the lives grown out of his life, the lives   

fleshing his dream of the beautiful, needful thing.


__________________

ROBERT HAYDEN
Collected Poems
edited by Frederick Glaysher

Thursday, December 12, 2013

PAULA MODERSOHN-BECKER ~













Paula Modersohn-Becker
The First Modern Woman Artist
by Diane Radycki
(Yale 2013)









Wednesday, December 11, 2013

I AM HERE ~









One More Contradiction



Did I fulfill what I had to, here, on earth?

I was a guest in a house under white clouds

Where rivers flow and grasses renew themselves.

So what if I were called, if I was hardly aware.

The next time early I would search for wisdom.

I would not pretend I could be just like others:

Only evil and suffering come from that.

Renouncing, I would choose the fate of obedience.

I would suppress my wolf's eye and greedy throat.

A resident of some cloister floating in the air

With a view on the cities glowing below,

Or onto a stream, a bridge and old cedars,

I would give myself to one task only

Which then, however, could not be accomplished.




________________________

Czeslaw Milosz


New and Collected Poems
(1931-2001)
Ecco





Terrence Des Pres, writing in the Nation, stated that "political catastrophe has defined the nature of our . . . [age], and the result—the collision of personal and public realms—has produced a new kind of writer. Czeslaw Milosz is the perfect example. In exile from a world which no longer exists, a witness to the Nazi devastation of Poland and the Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe, Milosz deals in his poetry with the central issues of our time: the impact of history upon moral being, the search for ways to survive spiritual ruin in a ruined world."

 Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1980, Czeslaw Milosz was born in 1911 in Lithuania where his parents had moved to escape the political upheaval in their native Poland — the poet later left Poland himself due to the Communist regime that swept to power following WW2. He eventually settled in the United States in 1960 and became an American citizen in 1970. For decades he taught at the University of California Berkeley. His books of poetry, prose and historical importance took awhile to be known in the US, but now they are more than secure.



photo : AKG Images / East News



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

EMILY ~










                   Captivity is Consciousness.


                   So's Liberty.



                                                                  E M I L Y    D I C K I N S O N
(  poem 384 )









Monday, December 9, 2013

ONCE IN VERMONT ~






Helen & Scott Nearing




In one more beautiful move recently by the hands of Gaia — as I finished typing out all the pages for this text from their classic Living the Good Life — and I'm not sure if it was Scott Nearing, or Helen, or both? but in the wink of the eye as soon as I finished my typing I looked up at the screen and every bit of my electronic keyboard work was gone. Gone. Vanished. Like a puff of smoke up the chimney with the maple logs that were keeping me warm. I had no one to say anything to, except a sleepy Kokomo across the rug on the light of the couch. So I just whispered aloud a chant-like, "my my my."


The next morning I rose early and scanned the pages. Now you hold the real McCoy.
It's all about living in a community.

Please click onto the book image to enlarge ~









Living the Good Life
Helen & Scott Nearing

being A PLAIN PRACTICAL
ACCOUNT OF A Twenty Year Project IN
A Self-Subsistent Homestead in Vermont
TOGETHER WITH REMARKS ON How to Live
Sanely & Simply IN A Troubled World

Social Science Institute
Harborside, Maine
1954
















Sunday, December 8, 2013

ARCHIVE ~






The destruction of Los Angeles streetcars, in favor of buses, automobiles and freeways. 1956




YOU AIN'T GOING NOWHERE ~









Here is Charles McGrath today in the New York Times where he is a contributing writer, speaking to his craft as one of the judges of The National Book Award for fiction:


"So you do the best you can. You don’t skim exactly, but you race, driving your eyes across the page, in the process forgoing much of the ordinary pleasure of reading. I sometimes thought of it as chain-sawing through books, tearing into them, grinding them up, leaving a wake of fluttering pages and bits of binding. Maybe that’s why my retina ripped.

Do you need to read the entire book to know whether it’s prize-worthy? No, to be honest. But you do need to read enough to be sure you haven’t missed something, and even then you feel guilty, worried that just a few pages farther on there’s a passage that might have changed your mind."




Imagine a writer reading this and responding: "Do you have to write the entire book to know it is finished? No, to be honest."

 

I'm afraid we are already there.

 

I'm going out now before it snows to hang up some holiday lights around the Back Road Chalkboard. If I'm Charles McGrath I'll string the over 100 feet of extension cord from the house out to the rural roadside and of course I will skim, race, and forego much of the ordinary pleasure of stringing out colorful lights. I might even use my chain saw. Anything to get through the job and into some other form of racing.

 

I might even be too busy to connect the extension cords for the whole thing to work.

 

I dunno.

POSTCARD 19 ~







"Flagpole Wedding" Coshocton, Ohio, 1946
photograph by Allan Grant


Saturday, December 7, 2013

HURRICANE SANDY, ONE YEAR LATER ~







Officials, including Vice President Joe Bidin, 
officiating at Hurricane Sandy landfall





In workman's terms:

"Hurricane Sandy was a storm like no other in the history of New York. It left more than 100 people dead and caused enormous structural damage that will take years to repair.

FEMA has received claims for nearly 16 million square feet of drywall, 56,000 furnaces and water heaters and enough paint to cover 43 million square feet."

There's more:

"Many residents of the region were also surprised to have claims denied for damage to the foundations of their houses because the damage was deemed to have resulted from “earth movement,” not storm flooding. "



http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/07/nyregion/displaced-by-hurricane-sandy-and-living-in-limbo-instead-of-at-home.html?hp





TAKE MIKE ~









TAKE MIKE


1.

i mean he doesn't live in this town
he lives in levittown which is nowhere
as far as anybody is concerned these days
he lives in a house built after the war
in a time when everybody got married and lived
as happy as the guy in the next peapod
meaning they lived in a house like everybody else's
and didn't mind it and they all watched the same
show on the same channel on the same motel tv
and the test signal came on at the same time of night
in every household in america

but take mike for goodness sakes i mean he makes
a little money and he does something with it
that was just a little monopoly house after all
but right away he's pushing it out here and
he's adding a little skylight there
and before you know it he's got a kitchen nook
where everyone else on the street has got a wall

and he refuses to catch the 6:28
and be one of the guys
on a train full of guys
rumbling car by identical car to the city,
he won't even take an office job for chrissakes
no, he's got to be a roofer or something, and buy
a truck of his own and paint his own name on the side

and nobody but nobody is going to tell him what to do

all right maybe sometimes it means he loses a contract
in the middle of a job because he refuses to compromise
with some lady in one or another of those over-priced
houses on the north shore —but i mean take mike
he's his own man with his own set of tools and his own set
of manly possessions take mike he owns one of those dogs
that sits in the passenger seat of his truck and hangs
his head out the window for chrissakes you can take
that dog to the beach and it will actually jump

in the water if you throw a stick, i don't care
whether it's summer or the middle of january
by god they actually go out and they go for it
i've seen the pictures.


2.

it's not that i'm jealous i want to get that straight

i've lived long enough to realize that individualism
is no longer an issue i've outgrown that particular fantasy
i mean it's impossible to be an individual in a nation
of 250 million people who are all being fed
the same line of crap every day
every everlasting working day every day
about freedom and individuality

the same line of crap, advertised absolutely
everywhere and everybody is offered
the same line of products and services
which they would have to buy to be individual, wear
to be individual, the same clever line of commentary
which they would have to think to be individual,
and where the only semblance of individuality

is to figure out how to keep up with the new
fashion alternatives in individuality
without going broke or losing focus on
your work, is to figure out how to strap on
the latest feedbag and remain content
when you're not in your office or in a bed
which no longer yields up its dreams,

where choosing from among
the new lines of crap they've come up with
becomes the measure of a man, not real
life choices, no! i accept all that
after all these years.

but take mike i mean he's a man with a real leather tool belt
and a big clanging box for his tools, and when he comes
home at night, he's spackled from ear to ear
with tar and hard work, and he smiles and takes
to his easy chair, and everything about him
tells me this is a man who actually comes home
and finds real relief from a day's work,
real rest, not just another dark spot
to park his ass while he waits to die.

and there. i've said it. it's not that i'm afraid of dying
but take mike death wouldn't be so bad for a man like that
he's experienced life and life has given him its rewards
for living it, take mike he hasn't cheated himself of living
life hasn't meant missed opportunities for a man
like mike the way it has for me — because I don't know
but sometimes i feel as if i have cheated myself
and missed my chances
i don't want to die until i have really lived, even if
it's too late for me to do so
but not mike, why should he be afraid to die?


3.

that's why i say
if death has to come
and knock on someone's door
let it be mike. let mike
be the one lying
on the living room floor
clutching his chest
with his wife ironing
happily in the kitchen
and the kids out
god knows where
pummeling baseballs
and doing their hair

with the bills piling
quietly higher
with the snow still falling
on the perfectly plowed
driveway

it is the strong ones that should die,
the ones who have worked hard and slept well,
the ones who have wrestled with life, and won and lost
while the rest of us have just waited, hoping that
somehow someday someone would hand us the magic key.

death, when you come
take mike



 ____________

GEORGE WALLACE 
Greatest Hits 1988-2002
Pudding House Publications
www.puddinghouse.com 

           photo : nytimes





Friday, December 6, 2013

SOUTHWEST ~






Cliff Palace
( Mesa Verde )




[ Random travel notes, not in sequence: northern New Mexico, southern Colorado, west Texas ]





Cliff dwellings facing west.

Mutton grass in wind. The

curling two lane.

Junipers abound. Blue

berries. Guide says they're used

to flavor gin.

And seasoning once, for

the Anasazi.

Rice grass, too, popped

or fried, food for

mule deer. Bitterbrush.

Uses. Bark for kiva roofs,

menstrual pads, diapers.

Pine pitch waterproofing

baskets, smoothed along

arrow shafts, wood handles.

Scarlet gilia, fendler, yucca.

Rope, cord, snares, & belts.

Plant flesh, man flesh, earth.

Sandals, roots, syrups. The

small white moth in the

yucca flower.




.





Intellectual, explorer, thief,

Gustaf Nordenskiold published

The Cliff Dwellers on the Mesa Verde

in 1893.





.





STATUS



P      Permanent resident

S      Summer resident

W    Winter resident

T      Transient (this also includes a summer visitor, post-nesting

         wanderer, and an elevational wanderer)

X      Breeding unknown

?       Breeding postulated

N      Not seen in the park in the last 10 years



Wood stork, Snow Goose, Ring-billed Gull, Franklin Gull, Marbled Godwit,

Ptarmigan, Pheasant, Chukar, Gambel's Quail, White-breasted Woodpecker,

Three-toed Woodpecker, Dusky-capped Flycatcher, Gray Jay, Golden-crowned

Kinglet, Red Crossbill, Bobolink, Water Pipit, Swainson's Thrush, Sage Thrasher,

Phainopepla, Nashville Warbler, Lucy's Warbler, Grace's Warbler, Common

Yellowthroat, American Redstart, Painted Bunting, Lincoln's Sparrow, Harris'

Spoarrow, Fox Sparrow, Black-chinned Sparrow, and Song Sparrow.



HABITAT  TYPES


Mesa Top

North Rim

Side Canyons

Deep Canyons

Riparian





.





The Animas flows

past Durango


here we picnic





.





And by what's left of the Pecos


___________________


Kim Dorman
from Gleanings / fragments / addendum december 2013
(Houston)


Thursday, December 5, 2013

CID CORMAN'S BOND ~








Here is a wonderful and long conversation Philip Rowalnd had with the poet Cid Corman. Between the two, the early years of Cid's travels in Europe are covered, as well as Cid's journey to Italy and the writing of his book of poems SunRockMan (New Directions). Background lighting is shed onto Cid's legendary small press journal Origin and the many poets involved with the journal come in & out of the conversation. We also get a feel for Cid's life in Kyoto with his wife Shizumi, Cid as translator, and the backdrop on the publication of his opus Of — which at this date  (Cid: 1924-2004) has reached three volumes, masterfully printed and bound in Japan. There are more volumes in the wings waiting to be published. This is classic poetry and publishing, at its best, living/dying/surviving.



http://www.flashpointmag.com/corman1.htm


drawing of cid corman by © bob arnold




Wednesday, December 4, 2013

THE CREEPY ~












The Creepy Crawl
 


There's a stink in the old farmhouse
 

Maybe a dead squirrel or rat or could it be a cat?

 


We've a hot water kettle on the woodstove
 

With apples and cinnamon scent

 


Nutmeg
 

Be patient with it

 


It takes a long time for a life to disappear





___________________

Bob Arnold



Tuesday, December 3, 2013

MUSEUM WORLD ~










USC International Museum Institute director Selma Holo, David Wilson and artist Fred Wilson



"Education is at the heart of a museum's mission. Museums want to tell you things -- through object labels, audio tours, videos, brochures, websites and public programs. But is this really education? Not according to David Wilson, director of the Museum of Jurassic Technology (MJT). In a rousing discussion moderated by USC International Museum Institute director Selma Holo, David Wilson and artist Fred Wilson, who unearths and juxtaposes objects from museums' deep storage to uncover hidden stories, debated the place of audience, community and education in museums."



Monday, December 2, 2013

SWITCHBOARD GIRL ~ Lorine Niedecker






Lorine and Henry Niedecker






SWITCHBOARD GIRL



I divined this comedy, Dante, before I went in. But I had to have a job. "Like one who has imperfect vision, we the things which are remote from us." O brother, we saw tho the eyes were shot. We had light if not love. We had business.

Nystagmus ("The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling"), the searching movement, combined with 80% vision. You'll have to use a magnifying glass, we can't give you glasses to reach print. Good-bye to proof reading. Good-bye to a living. No! That low, rangy, glass-walled office and plant in the Frank Lloyd Wright setting, clean-mowed acres, tulips, petunias, evergreens—I would apply there. Not literature but light fixtures and pressure cookers. Out of daylight into Wade Light.

I was the September dandelion—forty, female—seeking a place among the young fluorescent petunias. I keep cropping up in the world's backyards while here in America, on all sides they shear civilization back to the seventeen-year-old girl, not yet young shall we say.

I entered the window-walled office of personnel. Or was it a corner of a little theatre? What would the director be like? A properly placed man may expand his influence over the whole of your sight. We met ideally, as strangers do, without prejudice, without violence . . . courteous before the guessed-at depth. All art between us. Will he help me? He is not usual. He moves as in a dance to be considerate. As if to speak, against the room's outdoor backdrop, of Renoir? Of Einstein? Is he the master economist with a sense of the relative value of things? The artist with a sense of needing fewer things? The political observer with a knowledge of electronics? What does he know really, sweetly, by touch?

He said, "You read."

Beethoven: "It is impossible to say to people, "I am deaf." But I said it: I have an eye handicap.

"I wonder if you should . . . we have a switchboard opening. You might try it."

I went in. Lights, polished glass, blond satin finished desks, glossy haired and bald-headed efficiency. Shine. Lamps to be produced. Lamps to be sold. The antique sweatshop base with a new shine. You'll never have to polish this brass, a lacquering process, won't tarnish. This is the lust that will never rust.

The shade by the door, the grey parchment face, cracked in a half smile. Shall I appear alive or let myself be carried along? I suppose man is, the most sensitive physical part of him, an electrical apparatus, switches, wires, etc. . . .How much do I give to Wade lamps? It takes 1028 human bodies to build a star. Purely business.

The girl at the switchboard shouted, "Come in—if you can—it's my birthday, you know. Once a year and at Christmas this happens—nylons, table lamps, candy, help yourself. The bosses, the old honeypots, must like me a little bit, anyhow. Sit down. Let me tell you what goes. They're all good enough guys, family men, church, golf, they're after the business, they'll lay on you, of course."

You see in a place of this kind, she said, the switchboard girl is one of their outlets. They do a great deal of their sweating thru you. You'll make the contact and in haste, also they relax thru you. You're a part of it when their bags are full and you jazz 'em when they're down.

"Get me the Howard Hotel, a single."

"Good, I like to sleep close."

That was Mendau, the burnt-out fuse in the beautiful suit who still thinks he's got something to sell.

"Give me Philadelphia." Give me Europe. I'm waiting, operator, for the Paris pick-up. I'm on wartime Montparnasse, gas mask, phosphorescent heels, illuminated brooch. "What's that?" What does it look like? There they call it what it is.

The Japs: We had neither hens nor eggs. We went requisitioning. A miserable village. On the way back we began to look for Chinese girls.

They don't make 'em as sensitive as geiger counters.

"Goddamit what the hell happened to that call to Lethal Steel? Sleeping at the switchboard?"

"I reported to you, sir, that Dan Blaine will talk."

"Christ if you can't get anybody but Dead-End Daniel—"

"What was the name they wanted?" Somebody by the name of Christ.

Please pass the blood. Human materiel is obsolescing.

As for the work itself, she plays an intricate chess. You gamble with the red and the white and the green, without benefit of spa.

I lost. "No natural aptitude."

Dante? Yes, go ahead.


        END





__________________

from ND 13
New Directions in Prose & Poetry
edited by James Laughlin
1951


Lorine Niedecker