
August 2006 Cover
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On the beat of a famous poem
By
Mitzel
It was a lovely spring day. I stepped outside my
store to have a smoke and a Fresca. My neighbor's
daughter, a young woman who had just finished her
first year at college, accompanied by two very
good-looking young
men (one of whom was lying upside down on the
stoop stairs), was screaming out loud. She had a
book in her hand and was, presumably, reading
from a text. I tried to listen to the words through
the screaming.
Suddenly, I got it! They were reading from
"Howl," Allen Ginsberg's signature
poem. And, I guess, a screaming version of "
Howl" was entirely appropriate. It was 50
years ago this year that "Howl" was first
published in
a City Lights edition. The publisher, Lawrence
Ferlinghetti, was later indicted on an obscenity
charge (he beat the rap). The poem has gone on to
become a central event in the Beat literature and a
founding text of the
American counter-culture of the 1950s and 1960s.
My neighbor's daughter and her friends finished
their reading-- and, yes, the one young man read
his portion of the poem while upside down, also
completely appropriate (how did
they know?)-- and then she told me: "Here we
are, right in the heart of Boston's financial district,
broadcasting 'Howl.'" I found the whole
spontaneous event just delightful. I dashed into the
store and pulled a copy of this nice
book-CD release of Ginsberg's and gave it to her.
The release is from "The Voice Of The
Poet" series, the editor of which is J.D.
McClatchy, and has a CD in which Ginsberg reads
"Howl" and other texts.
Ginsberg had worked on "Howl"
for a couple years before it was published. In the
new book,
'Howl' Fifty Years Later: The Poem That
Changed America,
edited by Jason Shinder, there is included a
reprint of Ginsberg's
May, 1956, mimeographed production of "
Howl," which he handed out to friends,
published here for the first time. Ginsberg had his
first public reading of "Howl" in San
Francisco, during the high-water moment of the
San
Francisco Renaissance. Timing is all. It's hard for a
poem to get famous. Just as hard for a poet.
Ginsberg went on to read "Howl" in
venues around the world. Ginsberg became
something larger than just another American poet.
He
became an icon, not something I would aspire to.
But the poem spread to everywhere. There's a
famous photo of a group of cadets at one of the US
military institutes, sitting around a table, in their
smart uniforms, reading copies
of "Howl" (if memory serves, one cadet
is scratching his head). The photo is both jarring
and wholesome at the same time, something hard
to explain.
Should a poem be as long as "
Howl"? Walt Whitman's ghost hovers over it
and Walt wanted his garrulousness to be as big as
the country, which strikes me as a bit of hubris.
"Howl" is also very New York, very talky,
and infused with Ginsberg's Jewish heritage. It is a
paean to injustice collecting, if you want to employ
a phrase fashionable with some anti-gay shrinks of
the 1950s. But still news today. And still a great
poem. And the
injustices are still out there to be collected!
Still I wonder. Cultural artifacts are new for
each new generation-- witness my neighbor's
daughter's delight in screaming out "
Howl" to passers-by in the financial district.
Yet the monoliths are no longer new; busloads
of tourists see the Pyramids all over again. But
there is another consideration. Don't the fabulous
cultural moments get worn down over time, like
great rocks massaged by the eternal tides? Having
created "Howl," Ginsberg
was stuck with it for the rest of his life, though, of
course, he did move on and created a vast body of
work. Think of Judy Garland and "Over The
Rainbow." Could she ever get away from it?
Did she want to? (I once made the
joke: that Judy, late in her life, staggered into a
"Judy Garland Look-A-Like Kontest,"
sang "Over The Rainbow" and came in
third! Proving that, at some point, once an artifact
becomes universal, others can do it better than
the creator, sort of the theme of Henry James's
story, "The Real Thing.") Not quite like
Kate Smith and "God Bless America,"
lucky she had it. And God bless Kate herself! And
Totie Fields too! Being a public celebrity is a big
job-- you have to perform. Again and again. "
Play it again, Sam!"
Ginsberg was a political and cultural radical
and dedicated his life to this mission. I recall Tony
Kushner criticizing Ginsberg for having marched
with the NAMBLA contingent in some gay pride
parade years ago. What
was the point? Did Tony Think Allen was going to
change stripes in old age? Odd.
Three decades after he first published the
poem, Ginsberg wrote: "In publishing 'Howl,' I
was curious to leave behind after my generation an
emotional time bomb that would continue
exploding in US consciousness in
case our military-industrial-nationalist complex
solidified into a repressive police bureaucracy. As a
sidelight, I thought to disseminate a poem so
strong that a clean Saxon four-letter word might
enter high school
anthologies permanently and deflate tendencies
toward authoritarian strong-arming (evident in
later-50's neoconservative attacks on Kerouac's
heartfelt prose and Burroughs's poetic
humor)."
Moloch!
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