Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Jack Spicer


To satisfy the odd urges of RP Thomas in Phoenix I have set in motion a plan to deliver a video of Dooley reading Jack Spicer, the voice of the San Francisco Renaissance.

Ed. Note:  Thomas called Dooley's book, People, Polemics and Pooh-Pah, "splendid."

Spicer, who spurned the "Beats" after co-founding the Six Gallery with a group of painters; who argued intelligently that poetry does not come from writing but rather from Martians and other "Outsiders."

This is the poem Dooley shall tackle, with visuals I have yet to complete while risking nothing but the fucked-up fate of my dreams to relate:

A Poem For Dada Day At The Place April 1, 1958

I

The bartender
Has eyes the color of ripe apricots
Easy to please as a cash register he
Enjoys art and good jokes.
Squish
Goes the painting
Squirt
Goes the poem
He
We
Laugh.


II

It is not easy to remember that other people died
          besides Dylan Thomas and Charlie Parker
Died looking for beauty in the world of the
          bartender
This person, that person, this person, that person
          died looking for beauty
Even the bartender died


III   

Dante blew his nose
And his nose came off in his hand
Rimbaud broke his throat
Trying to cough
Dada is not funny
It is a serious assault
On art
Because art
Can be enjoyed by the bartender.


IV

The bartender is not the United States
Or the intellectual
Or the bartender
He is every bastard that does not cry
When he reads this poem.


TS

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