Book Review
The Poetry And Life Of Allen
Ginsberg: A Narrative Poem, Edward Sanders, The Overlook Press, 2000
…he came out of the womb, came
out roaring, came out roaring maybe already with those life-long tinkle bells
already welded to his fingers, asking ten thousand questions (and only getting
about eight thousand, give or take a few, answers), life questions, death
questions, hi how are you what makes you tick questions, hi how are you, why
this, why that, in a world he had not created, and had not, no way, been asked
about creating, a common malady of the young, of those fresh from the womb. He
came out of the Jersey night, the already crowded William Appleton Williams-Louis
Ginsberg Jersey night, all jet black against the red brick factory rivers,
against the short breeze floating in from brave Atlantic seas, and against up-shore
big river cities. He came out of the
hard brick world to sing that queer shoulder to the wheel plainsong after escaping hard toil Paterson, all used up (since about
1912 or 1913) and headed to the bright lights of New Jack City (jack literally
please, Jack Kerouac, Jack of the dark-haired night, jack of the beat, the
sullen heart beat), the 1940s middle of war New Jack City night, hard-pressed to conquer million words, not
prose words, but beat words, words that
would flow together in that juiced-up be-bop jazz infused world.
But there was more, that
plainsong was a dime a dozen, maybe cheaper, as every literary flash hitched
his or her star to some cooled out Birdland blast, some Monkish madness, some Dizzy
swagger, and so he , restless, 1930s generation restless, hobo nation restless,
back from Pacific atolls and Saar valley hide-outs restless, ready to take that
first Packard and head west, head to the frontier, the closed frontier and sing
his plainsong there, and he did, and the world turned on his dime for just that
minute. And no rest, no rest for those who chant howl, howl, howl to a candid
world, kindred, brethren, and so he was able to world-historic flourish, to work,
despite the mad devil’s workers around him (who, if you can believe this, called
him mad, called him fag, called him obscene, called him, Christ-killer as if
that would do any good among the felon youth ready to listen).
And then the music faded, the
music of his be-bop youth (pictures still fresh in the mind’s eye of hard-edged
Jack, golden all-American East boy, cigarette in his hand, golden west boy, all-American
West boy, Neal, and Allen, the prophet, although not in prophet garb then, pulling
the air out of the tires out of the New York City night) long gone to seed,
long gone to souvenirs shops and literary hustles. The music of his manhood
faded too (picture of Dylan and Allen up in Jack’s grave land a scene putting
paid to two generations who tried to ride the curve, tried make that jail break
before the deal went down, as the greed heads, the suit boys, the fruit salad boys,
the spin doctors, the language thieves, pulled down the hammer on the last best
hope). Pulled it down hard, hard enough to stick. He cried in the wilderness
night, cried picking his spots, a cause here, an individual case there, and
cried out over eleven hundred, count them, pages of collected non-stolen word s
before doctor death who stalked him fiercely flitted the flame.
Some of us were too late to catch the rising tide
of howling mad beat poet Allen Ginsburg. And so caught him at the edge of the1960s
fury in high tinkle bells and mantra when other things like war, injustice and
inequality filled our plate, filled it to fully to think of poetry or chant (a
mistake, regretted). Others like the poet and musician Ed Sanders, kind of
traversed both edges, as well as kinship, and so like any serious poet his had to
express his take, his look, his friendship, his love of that mad monk max daddy
poet in the manner appropriate- a narrative poem, a worthy way to honor a
fallen comrade.
…and hence this song, this life song,
the only real way the max daddy wordsmith of the beats, the max daddy wordsmith
of the hippies could be remembered, remembered by one who lived the air of the break-out
times, and they were the times.
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