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Erik K.

Erik Kestler


Last Updated: 11/19/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 19
Sign: Aries

City: Linthicum Heights
State: Maryland
Country: US
Signup Date: 12/1/2005

Who Gives Kudos:


Friday, December 05, 2008 

Current mood:  blustery
Category: Writing and Poetry

I'm leading a discussion of the great beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti this Saturday at noon at the Pratt Library main branch (400 Cathedral St., across from the Basilica) in the scary Poe Room. Refreshments served. It's free and you can just listen or talk or whatever you like.

"Dog," by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

The dog trots freely in the street

and sees reality

and the things he sees

are bigger than himself

and the things he sees

are his reality

Drunks in doorways

Moons on trees

The dog trots freely thru the street

and the things he sees

are smaller than himself

Fish on newsprint

Ants in holes

Chickens in Chinatown windows

their heads a block away

The dog trots freely in the street

and the things he smells

smell something like himself

The dog trots freely in the street

past puddles and babies

cats and cigars

poolrooms and policemen

He doesn't hate cops

He merely has no use for them

and he goes past them

and past the dead cows hung up whole

in front of the San Francisco Meat Market

He would rather eat a tender cow

than a tough policeman

though either might do

And he goes past the Romeo Ravioli Factory

and past Coit's Tower

and past Congressman Doyle of the Unamerican Committee

He's afraid of Coit's Tower

but he's not afraid of Congressman Doyle

although what he hears is very discouraging

very depressing

very absurd

to a sad young dog like himself

to a serious dog like himself

But he has his own free world to live in

His own fleas to eat

He will not be muzzled

Congressman Doyle is just another

fire hydrant

to him

The dog trots freely in the street

and has his own dog's life to live

and to think about

and to reflect upon

touching and tasting and testing everything

investigating everything

without benefit of perjury

a real realist

with a real tale to tell

and a real tail to tell it with

a real live

barking

democratic dog

engaged in real

free enterprise

with something to say

about ontology

something to say

about reality

and how to see it

and how to hear it

with his head cocked sideways

at streetcorners

as if he is just about to have

his picture taken

for Victor Records

listening for

His Master's Voice

and looking

like a living questionmark

into the

great gramophone

of puzzling existence

with its wondrous hollow horn

which always seems

just about to spout forth

some Victorious answer

to everything

Currently listening:
Olivier Messiaen: Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum; Chronochromie; La Ville d'en haut
Release date: 1995-10-17
Alyce
Alyce Wilson

 
I love Ferlinghetti. I want to be him in so many ways.

 
Posted by Alyce on Thursday, December 04, 2008 - 11:24 PM
[Reply to this
Chuckie B

 
Last year, when I made a trip to SF, I made a stop into his bookstore and bought an Original Scroll copy of On The Road there. Hell, the entire 2nd floor is dedicated to nothing but beat poetry if I recall. I highly recommend it if you ever wind your way to the Bay.

 
Posted by Chuckie B on Friday, December 05, 2008 - 3:20 PM
[Reply to this
Bill Leighly

 
This is great. The poem reminds me of an iroo (dog) I once saw trotting purposefully down the crowded early morning street in Mambajao, Camiguin, Ph. I said "look, an iroo!" and he swung his gaze my way in acknowledgement, tongue lolling, but nor breaking stride. I said "Bugs, where is the iroo going?"and she said "home.
"

I wish I could be at this talk, man!
 
Posted by Bill Leighly on Friday, December 05, 2008 - 3:21 PM
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