LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI
The Isolation Blues;
reflections during covid-19
“Am I the consciousness of a generation or just some old fool sounding off and trying to escape the dominant materialist avaricious consciousness of America?”
From a line in Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s book “Little Boy” a stream of consciousness novel published around the time of his 100th birthday
RIP to Lawrence Ferlinghetti; eternal hero, liberator of the amusement park mind, the quiet bookstore clerk as 1-man molotov, the impassioned, fundamentally decent, serrated furtive genius who came as close as anyone to writing the blueprint for how to fight the modern sickness. As long as Ferlinghetti was alive, a sliver of hope remained. A psychic ballast anchoring the spot on Columbus Avenue, the keepsake of ancient dreams & dimly remembered fables. Who wrote visionary & incisive poems into his 90s. Speaking to him was a sacred rite. Rest in poetry.
Tribute written by Jeff Weiss; a music journalist, critic and editor from Los Angeles, his blog is Passion of the Weiss
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Since April is National Poetry Month I am profiling one of our poetry greats who recently passed away at the age of 101, Lawrence Ferlinghetti who was the owner of City Lights Bookstore in San Fransisco as well as an independent book publisher, poet, novelist, artist and radical rabble-rouser. Ferlinghetti was present at The Six Gallery on October 7, 1955 when Allen Ginsberg first read his explicitly brilliant poem “Howl.” The next day he sent Ginsberg a telegram, “I greet you at the beginning of a great career. When do I get the manuscript of Howl?” Ferlinghetti published Ginsberg’s first book of poems titled “Howl” and the two of them were arrested on obscenity charges and went to trial in 1957 (both were acquitted). City Lights Bookstore and Publishing became a hub and headquarters for inadvertent thinking and revolutionary experimentation. The book store policy encouraged browsing and hanging around as long as you needed to. Some of his home-made signs read, “Have a Seat and Read a Book,” “Books Not Bombs,” and “Read Here Now.” Ferlinghetti published his own first book of poetry in 1958 titled “A Coney Island of the Mind” which went on to sell over a million copies. In the introduction it says the poems “were meant to be performed aloud with a jazz accompaniment.”
I came across an interview where Ferlinghetti was talking about his friend and fellow writer Thomas Merton who was a Trappist monk at Gethsemane Monastery in Kentucky. (They both had book contracts with the same publisher, New Directions.) He told the story of how Merton stopped in San Fransisco on his famous trip to the East in 1968 for a dialogue with Buddhist and Catholic monastics where Merton would tragically die in Bangkok while delivering a lecture. Ferlinghetti picked Merton up at the airport on October 14th and Merton stayed at the City Lights editorial apartment that night on 485 Filbert Street. The two of them walked to Alvina’s Coffeehouse on the corner of Grant and Union that evening and sat at a table in the front window talking poetry, world affairs and watching the women walk by. Lawrence joked that it was a natural Trappist interest, why not? In Merton’s book “The Asian Journal” that chronicles his trip to the East, October 15th is the first entry as he is on the plane leaving San Fransisco heading to Honolulu. Merton is lamenting the excess baggage fee he had to pay for bringing too much luggage and he writes in his journal, “Lesson number one: not to travel with so many books. I bought more yesterday, unable to resist the bookstores of San Fransisco.” I wonder what bookstore he was referring to?
Here are a couple of my favorite Lawrence Ferlinghetti poems. I hand copied them into a notebook when in true Ferlinghetti fashion I leisurely browsed and spent most of the day in a bookstore (that also had a cafe). Of course, try as I might I still ended up purchasing more books than I intended.
from A Coney Island of the Mind 4. In a surrealist year of sandwich men and sunbathers dead sunflowers and live telephones when some cool clown pressed an inedible mushroom button and an inaudible Sunday bomb fell down catching the president at his prayers on the 19th green. O it was a Spring of fur leaves and cobalt flowers when Cadillacs fell through the trees like rain drowning the meadows with madness while out of every imitation cloud dropped myriad wingless crowds of nutless Nagasaki survivors and lost tea cups full of our ashes floated by... from A Far Rockaway of the Heart 4. The present is a chance event that stretches on and on into the future and becomes it. The present is a piece of time a hollow arrow flying both ways through the universe an endless happening with some mute rhyme or reason a post-modern happenstance performed by some joker in a swallowtail coat or the Pope or some great happener and flesh be grass that bends and dies in every season even as at this instant a man in striped pajamas comes out on an uptown balcony and drops his house key to an eternal woman on the sidewalk but the shining key misses her outstretched hand and falls through a sewer grating in the city of New York and disappears forever into the greater mystery. 46. And every poem and every picture a sensation in the eye and heart something that jolts you awake from the rapt sleep of living in a flash of pure epiphany where all stands still in a diamond light transfixed revealed for what it truly is in all its mystery so a bird is an animal flown into a tree singing inscrutable melodies as a lover stands transparent screened against the sun smiling darkly in the blinding light.
Still in the woods,
Dave
April 12, 2021