I
met the poet Jack Micheline in 1970 in New York City at Dr Generosity's,
a saloon at 73rd and Second on the East Side. I waited tables
there and helped run a Sunday afternoon reading series and was
editor and publisher of the Dr`Generosity Press, which from
1969 through 1972 put out a number of books and broadsides of
poetry.
Of
all the poets who came through the Doctor's doors, and the list
is long and impressive, Jack was the only one who was a full
time poet. I mean that's all Jack did, be a poet. He had no
regular job, didn't teach, and at the time was sleeping on the
subway. For drink and food Jack would take a poem or two in
typescript, make copies, staple the pages inside a brown folder,
and on the cover write the poem's title with a marker. On the
inside there was a cover page with the title and Jack's signature
and the edition number, like This Is Copy 3 Of A Limited Edition
Of 10 Copies, again`written by Jack with a marker. These productions
he peddled for a few dollars each in saloons and on the street.
Jack called them Midnight Special Editions.
At that time there were several saloons with regular poetry
readings, uptown and downtown, The Tin Palace and St. Adrian's
among them. Jack always showed up for these events, and always,
invited or not, got on stage and
recited a piece or two. Never read, always recited. He knew
all his poems by heart. Other poets carried briefcases stuffed
with paper, Jack carried his poems in his head.
At some point in the early 70s Jack moved out to San Francisco
and we kept in touch by mail. In 1975 I was involved in the
production of a book of his, Street of Lost Fools. I lived in
Westhampton and had a studio connected to the garage behind
the house, where I drank and wrote and kept the pot belly stove
cranked up to 80 degrees. One winter night I ran out of plugs
of wood for the stove, there was snow on the ground outside
where the woodpile sat, I was shirtless and drunk and dreaming
myself in Hawaii. No way was I going to get bundled up to go
out in the freeze and get wood, no way. So I fed 30 or 40 unbound
copies of Jack's book into the pot belly. The stove glowed.
Never has any poet's work given me such immediate satisfaction.
In 1980 I moved back to Hawaii and lost touch with Jack. I got
sober and realized the book burning was a terrible thing to
do. I had to make an amends to Jack, but I had no idea where
he was. So I wrote this poem to him:
To
The Poet Jack Micheline
On the Occasion of
Another Saloon Reading
This
ain't no Philharmonic Jack
no high walled box built
to amplify the lack which is
any tight wound string's condition
no
straight backed hall raised
to reassure the greedy fry
that increase of sound
equals the sum of the song
no
tall structure stuffed
with poached fish eager
to bathe in the gentle rip
of your rough songs.
A
tavern where no cultured poet
dares lay academic intestines bare
for fear of guts
a
bar where no thought lives
whose truth is hidden
behind wooly words
a
saloon where any poem
is only as good as a turn of the head,
quiet vocabulary of the eyes
a
roomful of strangers
come to drink and
listen each to his own voice.
Current
poets ripple
in closed schools together
degreed, monied, granted
stiff
fish listening only
to each other, learning
only from each other
and
though this tiny pond
passes for the sea of poetry
here in the big city
you
Sir,
scotch and ginger aristocrat
true man of the art whose book
is written on the living heart
though
cut by age and passing fashion
you come on Sundays
to read yourself
in this saloon.
Consider
this a sonnet on your door.
That was my amends to Jack, a true poet. I never thought I'd
see him again. Then one night I got a call from Jack, drinking
in a Village bar with the poet Dan Murray who had my phone number.
9 o'clock for me in Hawaii and 3am for them in New York. It
was great to hear Jack's voice again. I got his address and
we resumed correspondence. I told him about the books used as
fuel and sent him the poem. He told me the burning was okay
since I had to keep warm, and said he liked the poem, he was
making copies to give out on the streets in San Francisco. Then
I was in New York in 1994 and saw Jack on Bleecker Street, we
had coffee and he said he was waiting for the limo to take him
to the studio, he was taping the Conan O'Brien show. Next day
he came out to Riverhead and on to Sag Harbor for a reading
at Canio's and we spent the night as guests of a lady poetry
lover whose name escapes me and the following day taped a television
segment having to do with Street Press, which was the publisher
of Street of Lost Fools. We had a good time. Then Jack went
back to the West Coast and I went back to Hawaii. We wrote back
and forth until Jack passed away.
I had quite a collection of letters and drawings and paintings
Jack had sent me over the years. I needed to get new teeth so
I sold them as a package to a person who collects things like
that. I got the teeth and felt I should let Jack know about
it, that once again I had used his writing for my personal satisfaction,
so
I wrote him this poem:
It hasn't changed Jack
they're still whipping the metal flanks
for speed and anybody of worth
has been turned out into the cold.
It's
coming to a boil again
with new and bigger weapons,
any day now a bright light will dull
the sun and biochemistry lay waste millions.
Poetry's
a murmur, starved thin
with washboard ribs, living
on the outskirts, taught in college
by mortgages in suits.
At
least the night is quiet, full of peace
and sleeping birds dreaming dawn.
What's it like there ? Is it Paradise
or just another dry mouth morning?
I'm
selling all your books and letters
because I need new teeth. I know
for teeth or hunger you'd forgive me Jack.
I've got food but nothing to eat it with.
Ray
Freed
Kona, December 2000
Ray
Freed has published several books of poetry, most recently 'All
Horses Are Flowers'. He lives on the Kona Coast of the Big Island
of Hawaii. 'To The Poet Jack Micheline On The Occasion Of Another
Saloon Reading' was first published as a broadside by Hualalai
Press in 1990.
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