Saturday, March 9, 2019

JACK KEROUAC TAKES US TO POOH BEAR ~






Steve Allen 
1959

KING UBU ~


"With
this
system,
I'll
soon
make
a
fortune:
then
I'll
kill
everyone
in
the
world,
and
go
away"
(KING UBU)
Alfred Jarry's
Ubu Roi



Sound like anyone you know?
















Friday, March 8, 2019

HUNTED ~











BEI DAO ~









At the Sky's Edge



love among the mountains



eternity, that patience of the earth

simplifies our human sounds

one arctic-thin cry

from deep antiquity until now



rest, weary traveler

a wounded ear's

already laid your dignity bare



one arctic-thin cry




___________________

Bei Dao
At the Sky's Edge
translated by David Hinton
Poems 1991-1996
New Directions











Thursday, March 7, 2019

PABLO NERUDA ~














Ecco
2018




MARK STRAND ~







When I Turned A Hundred



I wanted to go on an immense journey, to travel night and day

into the unknown until, forgetting my old self, I came into

possession of a new self, one that I might have missed on my

previous travels. But the first step was beyond me. I lay in bed, 

unable to move, pondering, at one does at my age, the ways of

melancholy — how it seeps into the spirit, how it disincarnate

the will, how it banishes the senses to the chill of twilight, how

even the best and worst intentions wither in its keep. I kept

staring at the ceiling, then suddenly felt a blast of cold air, and

I was gone.






Once Upon A Cold November Morning


I left the sunlit fields of my daily life and went down into the

hollow mountain, and there I discovered, in all its chilly glory,

the glass castle of my other life. I could see right through it,

and beyond, but what could I do with it? It was perfect, ire-

ducible, and worthless except for the fact that it existed.






Anywhere Could Be Somewhere


I might have come from the high country, or maybe the low

country, I don't recall which. I might have come from the city,

but what city in what countries beyond me. I might have

come from the outskirts of a city from which others have

come or maybe a city from which only I have come. Who's to

know? Who's to decide if it rained or the sun was out? Who's

to remember? They say things are happening at the border, but

nobody knows which border. They talk of a hotel there, where

it doesn't matter if you forget your suitcase, another will be

waiting, big enough, and just for you.




——————————

Mark Strand
Almost Invisible
Knopf 2012










Tuesday, March 5, 2019

SHADOW ON MY DOOR ~









SNOW WALKERS ~





Here we are the other day in Bob’s old home region of the Berkshire hills. 
After almost 50 years in Vermont, where we have regularly snowshoed each winter,
making more trails than we can keep up with.







photo ~
Bob & Susan Arnold
February 2019





Monday, March 4, 2019

HEAVEN LAKE (23) ~








Snow Country







It’s the snow that runs the show

After a blizzard we look out from the house



See nothing but snow for miles

Tall trees come down with the weight of the snow



Horses cradle together beneath the softwoods

The bluejay flies as a darting color



And there are people out there somewhere

Hidden away until Spring






She Knows





She’s the one who sets the traps

Catching the mice under the kitchen cupboard

Friendly traps that often nabs a mouse by the tail



So she let’s the mouse go

Then sets peanut butter

Further into the trap



When the mouse returns

It gets it at the neck —

We are all hunters



With that in mind

Every mouse kill

She takes out into the woods



Onto a fine flat stone

For a fox she knows

That tracks through






To Me






as she leaves

she becomes

gorgeous







The Secret






Have secrets

Share them







Getting There





half

way



doesn’t

cross



a

bridge





_____________________


Bob Arnold
Heaven Lake

Longhouse 2018







Sunday, March 3, 2019

DUBUFFET DRAWINGS ~












The Morgan Library & Museum
Thames & Hudson
2016




FRANK KUENSTLER ~






Choruses


The poem was beautiful.

Was the poem beautiful, or was the rain beautiful?

The rain was beautiful.

Was the rain beautiful, or was the room beautiful?

The room was beautiful.

The girl was beautiful. The music was beautiful.



The poem was beautiful. Was the poem beautiful, or was the rain

beautiful? The rain was beautiful. Was the rain beautiful, or was

the room beautiful? The room was beautiful.

The girl was beautiful. The music was beautiful. Music,

rain, room & poem. Beautiful.



The poem was beautiful. Beautiful.

The rain was beautiful. Beautiful.

The girl was beautiful. Beautiful.

The music was beautiful. Beautiful.

Music, rain, room, poem & girl.

Beautiful.



Was the poem beautiful, or was the rain beautiful?

The rain was beautiful. The poem was beautiful.

Was the rain beautiful, or was the room beautiful?

The room was beautiful.

Was the room beautiful, or was the girl beautiful?

The girl was beautiful. The rain was beautiful.

The room was beautiful.



The poem was beautiful.

Music, rain, room, girl & poem. Beautiful.







The Poem on the Wall

In 810 A.D. Yuan Chen wrote his friend the poet Po Chu-i
that on his way to exile he found one of his poems inscribed
on the walls of the Lo-k'ou Inn.



_____________________________________


     The clumsy poem I wrote on the wall

no one much cared to see.

    Birdshit & moss' growth obscured it,

     Letters & all. An exile came, a page

to the throne, travelling. He didn't

     mind using his fancy sleeve to wipe

     the dirt away so he could read.





______________________________

Frank Kuenstler
The Enormous Chorus
Pressed Wafer 2011




photo by Ira Cohen


R E A D      M O R E



Saturday, March 2, 2019

LEOPARDI ~








L'Infinito / Infinitive


I've always loved this lonesome hill

And this hedge that hides

The entire horizon, almost, from sight.

But sitting here in a daydream, I picture

The boundless spaces away out there, silences

Deeper than human silence, an unfathomable high

In which my heart is hardly a beat

From fear. And hearing the wind

Rush rustling through these bushes,

I pit its speech against infinite silence —

And a notion of eternity floats to mind,

And the dead seasons, and the season

Beating here and now, and the sound of it. So

In this immensity my thoughts all drown,

And it's easeful to be wrecked in seas like these.

translated by Eamon Grennan


————————————
Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837)
Selected Poems
Princeton University 1997









Friday, March 1, 2019

JEFF BECK ~











IRON CURTAIN JOURNALS ~






You may think you've had enough Ginsberg — not quite.
This is AG at his height and only rising.
He's spunky, daring and traveling solo
meeting poets and flavors along the way.
He will be crowned by students ceremoniously
the "King of May" in the Czech Republic and
then unceremoniously be booted out of the
country by the government who already
warned him to keep a low profile.
Impossible.

[ BA ]


University of Minnesota Press 2018
edited by Michael Schumacher




Thursday, February 28, 2019

BO DIDDLEY ~









CROSSING AMERICA ~







Crossing America


I.


We hitchhiked America. I

still think of her.



I walk the old streets thinking I

see her, but never.



New buildings have gone up.

The bartenders who poured roses

into our glasses are gone.

We are erased.




II.


Minook, Illinois,

one street out of nowhere through cornstalks.

Winter clutched the cornfields into Chicago.

Cold, we couldn't get in out of the cold.



But a lonely filling station owner risked

letting his death in out of the night.

I lay on his gas station floor and let her

use me for a bed.



I will never forget the cold into

my kidneys or lying awake bearing the

pain while she slept like a two month

old child on the hill of its mother's tit.



It was on the stone floor

that I knew I loved her.




___________________________

just a portion of this excellent long poem by
Leo Connellan
Crossing America
Penmen Press, 1976












Wednesday, February 27, 2019

JESSE FULLER ~











LOUISE BOURGEOISE ~










The Museum of Modern Art
2017

____________________________________
A labor of love portrait by Deborah Wye
 which spirals around
as only Bourgeois could feel
the intricacies in art & labor
of this astonishing artist —
every man should study this artist
and this book —
Every woman is already born to it

[ BA ]