Friday, January 1, 2021

LONGHOUSE AT 50 YEARS OLD (TODAY) ~

 



50 Years

                                                               for Olga Cabral and Ann Perkoff


Here we are now 50 years old at Longhouse. Someone asked me

recently, "you must have been very young when you started?"

I was, but also draft age. I had been drafted into the Army in 1971, 

resisted that war, as I already had years before, but it becomes a whole 

other animal when they come for you. So my draft board put me

 in Vermont as a C.O., but I was coming anyway, being a kid 

raised in the neighboring Berkshire hills.

All it took was a mimeograph machine, as some of the finest small press

publications of the 1960s had already taught me but it would be many years

before I ever saw a copy, being a country boy. My roots were in the woods

and I would go (by correspondence) to many poets around the United States,

 who lived a similar discipline and almost all were friendly. Nothing's 100%.


The first press I had was called "One Night Books" (1971) and I handmade two

 anthologies from that imprint — both titled "Remember the Time in the Tent"

 and a sheaf of small booklets 

of my own work. A friend at the time even cut out a woodblock 

I still have with the press name on it.




Soon I was working from "Our Poets Workshop" because I was leading a once

a week poetry gathering at a local unaccredited college fitted smally

with misfits and marvels and each week I brought poets work

 in for everyone to read and the first poet was Cid Corman.

By 1974 Cid and I were in direct contact from Kyoto to Vermont

and that relationship would go strong until Cid's passing in 2004.


By 1974 I was moving "Our Poets Workshop" to simply "Workshop"

and rolling out issue after issue, all on mimeograph and everything

was sent away free. Robert Bly wrote me back to say, "Put a price on it, even a dollar."

Noel Young from Santa Barbara cried, "Staple the sheets!"

 Poets sent me their work, their postage stamps

and if they had any money, they were generous. How does one

keep things going at such an adventure stuck out in the woods

without a vehicle, without a driver's license, without private income?


origin

I arrived to this location along a wood's river with a backpack on my back

and a minister friend who read Thomas Merton as I had, deeply, and he

told me he had just bought an old hunter's cabin ten miles out of town

in the woods — no heat, no running water, no plumbing at all, no nothing —



but it had a roof and 16 bunk beds and if I was willing to take on

renovating that cabin, and his own house on the land, plus his long roadside

of stone walls, I could have the place for free. I had never touched stone walls

in my life. I had worked all my teenage years as an apprentice carpenter 

for a long standing lumber family, but doing what you're told and knowing

what to do when you're not being told are two different worlds.


I began my carpentry tearing out all those sixteen bunk beds 

and the lumber would have to become

my firewood for the start of a long winter. In the spring I would begin rebuilding

stone walls and fifty years later I haven't stopped. I took to those walls and

many soon took to me and began to hire me to repair and build and

also lay up stone walls. When a farmer hires you to build his stone walls

you've sort of passed whatever test is out there. 


It's now 1976 and I'm changing

all the press name to "Longhouse." I'm working as a builder, I'm publishing poets

regularly in all handmade journals, booklets, postcards, broadsides, sheafs, 

and my first book of poems has been out two years. A lovely young

woman has also been with me those same two years after my first two 

years alone and living and working as a hermit. I'd seen her in passing

 after my long hikes or hitchhikes into town, but she's the one who

 bicycled out those ten miles to find me, to see me, to land me. 


Susan.

Now there's a Longhouse to become something — love, very hard

work, writing, publishing, corresponding by mail (which was everything),

friendships, co-building workers, the river, the woods, and never stop at

least every week or every month, every season, right up to present time

publishing someone, and giving it away free.

The church where I worked as sexton had a mimeograph machine.

The law office where Susan worked had a photocopy machine.

Say no more.

 

Libraries pay. Collectors pay.

Readers on the search pay, and eventually (by then, 40 years) we would direct the

Longhouse into publishing full size books, establish a bookshop, and for the 

last ten years I have whittled down all my building and stone work away

from customers for pay, allowed the bookshop to work for us, and put

all my building trade into cottages and huts built on our property. At last

count there are nine. Ten may be enough. 


During the pandemic of 2020

more and more passers-by could be seen on our back road on bicycles, on-foot

slowing down in vehicle after vehicle and if they could catch us out there

at work they'd shout up, "I love your place" and we'd wave back, and some

would walk up and politely ask, "what is this (pointing to the forest buildings) all about? 

 Were they for rent? Was it a writer's colony? Was this an institution?" 

All logical questions. I guess it could be called a sort of institution:

 the Longhouse-been-here-a-long-time-and-ain't-going-away-institute. 

It doesn't cost a thing. Just a certain love.


[ BA ]


(it's an even longer story — a son was born, there are

granddaughters — but for another time)


Links to the Longhouse Bibliography



photograph above by bob arnold:

after all our woodsheds are filled to the brim

finding the very back door to the kitchen

fits in as an ideal woodshed all its own.

Close by, handy.

December 25, 2020







Thursday, December 31, 2020

REMEMBERING JEAN VALENTINE ~

 



J E A N     V A L E N T I N E


1934 ~ 2020




IKE & TINA TURNER ~

 







SPADE COOLEY ~

 





AND SNOW ( RUSSELL EDSON ) ~






Silent in the woods where snow is falling

Silent in their hoods where snow is falling

Snow-things

Tree-brown

And lovely snow

White and falling


Under the needled wing snow is falling

Fluffy white oh fluffy flight

In and out the wind night


Came snow and they

And the trees and the rocks

And the houses and the lights

Came snow and they

Through the woods


And light

And through the woods

And red children faces

And winter apples

And light and night.



and snow



________________


Ceremonies in Bachelor Space

Russell Edson

Tough Poets Press



Who in the hell is Tough Poets Press?

Who knows. I saw a listing for the book

and liked that it was Edson, one of his books 

I didn't know, hadn't read, and the title and the

book design had Edson written all over it, and now

I see it was Edson's first book, published by

Black Mountain College, of all places, in 1951.

For some reason, and again holding to the Edson

aura, the contents of the book are in public domain

due to non-renewal of its original copyright, and so

the sharp-eyes in Arlington, Massachusetts at Tough

Poets Press, with the help of many (they list all the names)

on 49 Churchill Avenue, came through and published this book.

I'm very glad  they did. I have a sneaky feeling Tough Poets is

onto a very good thing, re-issuing the likes of Kirby Doyle, Gil

Orlovitz, Gregory Corso, Marvin Cohen, Johnny Stanton,

Donald Newlove — what could go wrong!  — Seymour Krim,

Dan Propper and Jack Micheline should be in the wings.

It seems the Edson is print-on-demand, so come one and

come all. NOTHING by Edson should be passed up.

I saw him read once in a cellar environment with

cellar people as his audience and it was beloved.


[ BA ]




Wednesday, December 30, 2020

RE-READING ROBERT CREELEY (THIRTY THINGS) ~

 





Laughing



Who enters this

kingdom. And

the people

formed in rock.





The Temper



The temper is fragile

as apparently it wants to be,

wind on the ocean, trees

moving in wind and rain.





No



No farther out

than in —

no nearer here

than there.





Here



Here is

where there

is.





Xmas Poem: Bolinas



All around

the snow

don't fall.


Come Christmas

we'll get high

and go find it.





Xmas



It commonly sings,

this Christmas.





But


      for Stan's birthday


if we go back to where

we never were we'll

be there [REPEAT] But





A



head of

the outside

inside.





A Loop



No

one

thing


anyone does





Still



Still the same

day?

Tomorrow.





One Day



One day after another —

perfect.

They all fit.




__________________________

Robert Creeley

Thirty Things

Black Sparrow

1974




one more of those tiny books I love


Tuesday, December 29, 2020

LINDA GREGG ~

 


Linda Gregg in her element, in a nicely pressed top



Glistening

_______________


As I pull the bucket from the crude well,

the water changes from dark to a light

more silver than the sun. When I pour it

over my body that is standing in the dust

by the oleander bush, it sparkles easily

in the sunlight with an earnestness like

the spirit close up. The water magnifies

the sun all along the length of it.

Love is not less because of the spirit.

Delight does not make the heart childish.

We thought the blood thinned, our weight

lessened, that our substance was reduced

by simple happiness. The oleander is thick

with leaves and flowers because of spilled

water. Let the spirit marry the heart.

When I return naked to the stone porch,

there is no one to see me glistening.

But I look at the almond tree with its husks

cracking open in the heat. I look down

the whole mountain to the sea. Goats bleating

faintly and sometimes bells. I stand there

a long time with the sun and the quiet,

the earth moving slowly as I dry in the light.






To Be Here

_____________



The February road to the river is mud

and dirty snow, tire tracks and corncobs

uncovered by the mildness. I think I am

living alone and that I am not afraid.

Love is those birds working hard at flying

over the mountain going somewhere else.

Fidelity is always about what we have

already lived. I am happy, kicking snow.

The trees are the ones to honor. The trees

and the broken corn. And the clear sky

that looks like rain is falling through it.

Not a pretty spring, but the real thing.

The old weeds and the old vegetables.

Winter's graceful severity melting away.

I don't think the dead will speak.

I think they are happy just to be here.

If they did, I imagine them saying

birds flying, twigs, water reflecting.

There is only this. Dead weeds waiting

uncovered to the quiet soft day.




Kept Burning and Distant

______________



You return when you feel like it,

like rain. And like rain you are tender,

with the rain's inept tenderness.

A passion so general I could be anywhere.

You carry me out into the wet air.

You lay me down on the leaves

and the strong thing is not the sex

but waking up alone under the trees after.




_____________________


Linda Gregg

Sacraments of Desire

Graywolf Press

1991



Sweetheart and I once upon a time

had an evening meal with Linda Gregg

and she asked me if she could sign a copy

of her book I had with me — and now that

she is gone, I am happy she did, adding a bit of

decorative scroll to her inscription which seemed

to be part of our all together get together. In another

twist of fate, she could have been one of the Beats,

but her beautiful working mind was always in the clouds.


[ BA ]





Monday, December 28, 2020

POETS WHO SLEEP #31 ~


P O E T S     W H O     S L E E P


______________________



                                           drawn & scribed by Bob Arnold



Sunday, December 27, 2020

TONY RICE ~

 


1951 ~ 2020




RE-READING 'MY HEART IS LIKE AN OPEN JELLY JAR' ~



 



Ronald,

I have been reading My Heart Is Like An Open Jelly Jar 
all the while. It’s the last thing I read before falling off to sleep each night. 
My previous late night book for a week was Rockwell Kent’s WILDERNESS, 
my favorite of all his books. Christmas time in Alaska. 1920. 


The first dare of the poet is setting up each poem in a form syntax that most will either balk at — perhaps the serious reader — and it may attract the playful but as with everything you do in writing, it is both playful and deadly serious, even though as with the best of the ancient poets, your subjects are mainly frivolous. Your poems aren’t written, they’re told. I taste them. And I can think of no modern poet in America who does this with such aplomb and delight. You not only write excellent poems, you do so daring the reader to be as attentive as you are to a lover shaving her armpits, or leaves gathering like battleships, walks out to nowhere, the light and the shade, the petals that drop in the quiet of a dark room. Dearly masterful. You have to believe me. 

Not only are your poems structured into shapes, but I detected not one line was manipulated from its meaning to make each shape. Marvelously the poem shape and the poem strength and meaning align one to the other, it’s craftsmanship. Apollinaire could do this, Louise Landes Levi does this, precious few, and those that attempt it are usually disguising that little is behind the playful structure. We get acorns, bombs, missiles, leaves and poems that flow as song with you.

 Bravo maestro. You’re a poet who has seen life and death. You can’t help yourself but wake up and write, walk outdoors and write. And you’re a poet I would want to meet.


[ BA ]


Yggdrasil Press

2020




Friday, December 25, 2020

OLD TIME SHUFFLE ~

 








SHAMAN DRUMMER ~

 









HAVING EMERGED OUT OF OBLIVION ~






ISN'T THIS THE YEAR, OF ANY YEARS,

the past 70 years, to be reading and viewing

again, the life and dream paintings of

Hieronymus Bosch?

Yes? 

Yes.

Haven't you felt like someone,

maybe an evil monkey,

has been sticking a sharp stick up your ass. . .

or else a reptile is wrapped with a very long

tail around your neck, and it isn't

with comfort. . .you're a pushing-self

inside a large wheel perforated with nails. . .

later, two creeps that look like lizards in steel

helmets are holding you upside down,

bare-assed, on the edge of some funnel. . . 

or is that you with a spike

driven clean through your head?

Closeby, there's a guy walking, barely,

with his head locked in a saucer — 

anyway,

you're always naked, filthy, and a

 mysterious woman wearing a veil

is riding behind you on a platypus.

Of course she is.

A farrier is shoeing both a naked woman

and a naked man with the farrier's

open fire pit flaring and mighty

off the fuel of a torched corpse. . .

GO complain! 

there's an entire

village of people swimming ahead

of you and most are drowning in the

swamp, or is it the waste of centuries?

The color of the pond or lake or river or ocean

doesn't look good —

Virus

 Pandemic

 — we've been

here before,

except we haven't.

The bonfires ahead?

Set by the grinning imbecile in charge.



MERRY

CHRISTMAS!





santa drawn by bob 12/24/20

HB Complete Works by Stefan Fischer (Taschen)

Andre Breton gives us the title


[ BA ]