Friday, March 10, 2006

TRAVEL BLOG PART TWO

2/20 Dun Laoghaire

Always check what's going on in town wherever you travel. Checking over the brochures downstairs at a B & B in Dun Laoghaire south of Dublin I find announcements for the local theatre. Currently running? Juno & the Paycock for 15 Euros. I had it swapped 'round in my mind momentarily with Shadow of a Gunman my favorite O'Casey but even when my momentary thrill abatted I was still thrilled to see professional theatre for about twenty bucks. I never made use of student rush (is that what it's called) while at Emerson even when The Importance of Being Earnest played over at BU. I was too meek to figure out how the process of getting a seat for $10 actually worked. Since then I've seen five professional plays, three of the five while in Ireland.

Great to see dramakids loitering out front...Oh, before I go on remove the idea of a Georgian theatre from your mind. The theatre in Dun Laoghaire is in a large mall-like complex. The theatre itself is not unlike a megaplex movie theatre in size & design. Audience? Scruffy teens there seemingly on their own. The aforementioned dramakids. Older couples. A mom & her teenaged son. A teenage couple on a date. The boy brought along two friends too. Strange, no? I couldn't imagine this scene in the States. A group of kids way in the back shout to friends as they walk in. One checks phone for text as he walks in. This is modern Dublin. He's Black. Mates are white. They chat away excitedly. Mom & son beside me talk about the local match on the weekend. Footbal but soccer or Gaelic? This can be confusing in Ireland where some people say "soccer," as we do in the States, to refer to Association Football. For these people "football" means "Gaelic football". Other people say "football" & mean, what for us & some of the Irish, is "soccer". Generally in the east, where Dublin is, "football" means "soccer". The east tends to be more British. Some in the west call Dublin "West Britain". [to be continued]
Belle & Sebastian at Avalon (Boston, MA) February 28, 2006
Aaron.

Friday, March 03, 2006

Joe.

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

TRAVEL BLOG PART ONE
(transcribed from a 4 1/2 IN x 3 1/4 IN notebook w/ small changes)
2/19 GALWAY

Looking for...
Poets in Charlie Byrne's bookstore

Maurice Scully
Geoffrey Squires
Catherine Walsh
Billy Mills
Randolph Healy
Trevor Joyce
Austin Clarke
Thomas Kinsella's Wormwood

Eight swings & misses.

Go to Mullingar for music. Closed.
Head for a drink at the Blue Note on West William. Take a look. Walk on. No use trying to recreate the past.

At Charlie Byrne's find Midwinter Day for five euros. Find it as the shopkeepers begin to turn off the lights.
***
Past Dusk
Dark green football field
Indigo cobalt sky
Saffron yellow nightlamps
thrum & spot the distance
a dusting yellowing
the bluegreen scene
white Gaelic goalposts organize
the blueblack sky slopes
away from my eye then inverts
as I walk past
& look back
***
The Sullivan brothers butcher "Olivers Army" on You're a Star (sounds like Euro Star). (Later in the Irish Times I get the answer to the question I ask aloud: does anyone else *get* this?) "White nigger" becomes "white figure". The cheeriness. Argh. The judges love the upbeat tempo. Huh? "Send you to Johannesberg"? Cheery? "White figure"? What the fuck does that mean? ... praise heaped on 'em all around. (A judge says the brothers showed "killer instinct". No pun intended it seems.) I must be an alien. (I am an alien.) Where is Myles na Gopaleen to give these brothers their proper comeupance in tomorrow's paper.

Go to an old haunt. Name changed to Vinnies Take Away. (No apostrophe. Later see sign at an upscale restaurant in Dingle Town with the sign "Toilet's".) Vinnies Take Away is allegedly an "Italian Style Take Avay" but it's actually a chipper or chipshop (whichever designation you prefer). "Garlic chips" are the only vaguely "Italian" dish I see on the menu. But there're also "Mexican Chips" so...

No Club Orange at Vinnie's. That's disappointing. Also disappointing that curry is no longer a condiment. Now costs a euro. & now they put the vinegar on for you now.

For a month while I took a class at NUIG, I'd order a fishburger w/ chips & a Club Orange for under three pounds. (That was pre-Euro). Sometimes I'd douse the chips with salt & vinegar. Other times w/ the curry.

This meal was especially great w/ the windows of the place opened for the July breeze off Galway Bay. Also especially great after a wee smoke along the Corrib from the University nearly to the quays (where the chipper is).

Around the corner an army of swans live off the dole so to speak.

I will not try the Bar * B * Que Pork Rib Steak nor the Batter Burger at Vinnie's but I like to come here to write. Would that I could walk through my wardrobe and end up here. As it is, I find the place tonight without following directions. Let my feet take me.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Events I'll miss while in Ireland...

Sam Cornish Retrospective Author(s): Sam Cornish
Category: Reading
Date: Feb 22, 2006
Time: 7:00 P.M.

Location: The Zora Neale Hurston Literary Center
Address: Simmons College
300 The Fenway
Boston, MA

Someone please report on this for me...

*

Feb 25: Sam Witt & Keith Waldrop
at P.A.'s Lounge, 345 Somerville Ave. in Somerville, Mass.
Reading begins at 5:30 pm.
www.unionsquarepoetryseries.blogspot.com

*

Cat Power
Saturday, February 18, 2006
Berklee Performance Center
136 Massachusetts Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
8:00 pm

$25

w/ Memphis Rhythm Band

*

& I'll miss you but not you or you.

*

Friday, November 18, 2005

finally it has all come to this which is no way to begin at the beginning takes a specific knowledge of what is involved & what is not is what we've come here to discuss why else would you be here no one else is who you think you are special unique which cannot be more or less but a simple state like concepts in a row that help people understand the transitions between things there is a long flat space that is where we are nothing grows nothing improves with age it just gets old men are always looking for control there is no helping it work through the hole is round and will engulf the entire struggle if allowed

Monday, June 20, 2005

We begin talking when left alone.

We talk about the burden of talking & about how our talking is different from other talking.

Other talking is mere talking. Our talking is an experience. Our talking is Whiteheadian in method. Our talking is free jazz. Our talking consumes its own metaphors. What has their talking ever done? Now that I think of it what has your talking ever done? So I should say my talking is different from other talking. My talking consumes its own metaphors.

But secretly my talking is middlebrow & so recycles. My talking, I admit, is mostly self-help. My talking is your high school English teacher, a metaphor I resemble & have failed to consume. My talking fails to consume its metaphors & is not very different from your talking after all.

Not very different, but different nevertheless. Six-percent different? One out of every, say, seventeen utterances (give or take) is more politically committed or more poetically challenging or more rhetorically charged. One out of every seventeen isn't so bad.

Others, with a higher percentage, are the poets and writers and bloggers and emailers and letter writers to the editor whom I admire. I want to become them. I want to grow my percentage of difference. I want my annual rate of growth in different talking to exceed any increase in my overall appetite for talking.

I want new words for you. Words to give you. New ways of putting them together to say new things. New talking for you. (Do you hear the you narrowing?) & I want new ways of talking with you. New ways of words being between us. I want our talking to be different from other talking. I confess, your talking has done great things. Your talking made me forsake all other talking. There is no talking other than your talking which has to do with your words sure but then there's your voice too. A voice & a body go hand-in-hand, an unconsumed metaphor. Your voice & body go hand-in-hand while I'm over here just talking. Just talking & losing the sense of your talking. Your voice as a voice being heard but not talking. Your voice then a body outside your body but that is inside my body. That's were your voice goes eventually. So where does the talking go. The talking stays inbetween.

At the beginning I imagined that I was talking. I imagined talking while left alone with you but then I started writing instead -- writing while imagining talking. & then I imagined the talking itself but I was writing all the while not talking. I thought I was talking but I was writing. & then I finally imagined you. & at this point I realized I was writing not talking & I stopped hearing voice. Before I realized I was writing not talking, I heard voices. Voices that were talking & that became writing. Then I realized I was writing & I was alone with the idea of you but you were gone & I was writing about the idea of talking but the talking was gone. Now I'm left with all this writing.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

The notebooks are skinnydipping on the web.
The notebooks want to confess. To you.
The notebooks want to be read & they want to disavow their contents. The notebooks want it both ways.
The notebooks are plugs & outlets.
The notebooks will not keep their mouths (i.e. covers) shut.
The notebooks insult your intelligence.
The notebooks could fall into the wrong hands. You'd love that. Wouldn't you? Admit it. Come on, admit it.
The notebooks are desperate to fall into the wrong hands. The notebooks are on your side. The notebooks will be on the traitors list. My traitors list if I had a traitors list. Do I believe in a traitors list? Do you believe in a traitors list?
We were innocent without hands.
I now look differently at the word intelligence. Know what I mean? Go look it up for yourself.
The notebooks, finally, are a fiction. Go back to what you were doing. It was, no doubt, more important than this.

Monday, June 13, 2005

{Revised}
I jotted down all but a few lines of the following lines during interstices in yesterday's Joe Torra/Jim Dunn reading outside Toast in the Aspen shade of Union Square, Somerville. When I got to school this morning I found out a former student (one I know well) was in a bad car accident over the weekend...

Carland Torture

so much potential death
& then it happens
wha'ppen?
Bars & sutures
Keepin wha thegither?
wha frum m'self?
Y'cannae ta'it wi'yeh.

Sad torture.
Yr eyes stuck open
'til they dry.
Growth on yr throat.
Y'cannae coff i'owt.

Agonychrist-w/-us:

Ghosts steal lost keys
Ghost's steel: lost, missed.
Finger keys. Lingers there.
Mist: the pavement haze:
[unintelligible]
What happened?

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Themes in Literature

No, really it's true. That wasn't just to say so.
*
Go ahead. Come on... Just this once. It's all I ask. Do you really have anything better to do?
*
You've got two choices: laugh or cry. O.K. three: laugh and/or cry.
*
here
then
gone
*
& in the end
*
"What is this quintessence of dust?"
*
It's what dust does between the parentheses.
*
"The rest is silence."

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Misreadings of Hamlet are preferable to an oral history in which a mother is proud of her sons for fighting in Iraq, fighting to avenge the attacks of 9/11. I get angry at & on behalf of ignorance. Mother has nightmares about her sons. I've had nightmares about my brother. My brother, in one dream, returns from Iraq only to be stabbed in a poolhall in Ohio. His attacker later appears at a family picnic. I look at my dad and other brother. I know what I have to do. I wander the streets of Cleveland {I've never been} looking for the attacker, another Marine. Over the phone I half hear {from who?} that my brother has died or he's walked out of the hospital before his time. Either way before-his-time. I look & look. Down alleys. Through cold cross winds. All the buildings shuttered. Another brother shows up -- like he's always been there -- then he goes. I fade out; it's an off-white, pale scene.

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

My work is a bubble burst long ago.
My work doesn't.
My work begins at 7:30 but I arrive between half six and seven.
My work es mi trabajo.
My work es mis obras maestras.
My work coughs and sputters like the malfuctioning automaton in all those sci-fi shows I watched evenings and weekends as a kid.
My work is a body. The body is over seven feet tall. This allows me extra space to work on the body. I'm a klutz.
My work is plagiarized but new.
My work never ends but deadens.
My work is here. I am home now.
My work knows where you live. Read that as a threat but know in your heart-of-hearts that we'd prefer a heartfelt letter or heartrending email. Anything but silence.
My work knows the rest is silence.
My work keeps me up nights.
My work pays. My work spends. My work is in debt.
My work likes your work and would like to get together for drinks.
My work would prefer to drink on the job.

Friday, April 29, 2005

imagine my surprise what have you been up to and then the stampede the going over the coming under the several instances of heartbreak and failure to recognize the circumstances the blossoms the blossoms the blossoms are not what we wanted them to be so hold on to exterior signs as subterranean currents turn awry the name is action the pale cast of thought includes the guy from the movie the actress from the film where have you been i've been waiting

Friday, April 08, 2005

For Love Mutation

It wishes they would come untrue.

Echo of only up yours: stumble

into the confessional. They're mind-

less to say anything. It's all reruns.


Speaking of the devil, caustic

drivel repairs its own love. Wooden

ether not the moon but pretentious.

Finally, what is it can't stand


alone. Stadium pain. Minor repairs

in the infrastructure that it had to

but just couldn't transplant. Company

man better creep. Tag, you're it.

Monday, April 04, 2005

CHANGES INSIDE STARS

With complete attention he *took hold of* C.R.'s question. He rolled it over. Looked at the belly of it. Considered it. Then answered. The answer was more sincere than it needed to be. The question was loaded, had an agenda. (What question doesn't? How gullible do you think we are?) He knew the question had an agenda but answered through it. Not in spite of it. But *by way of* it. The answer was not of tremendous use. Not really. But the seriousness of the answer confirmed the agenda *as* a stance towards language and the world but not as a focus of attention. The answer -- the answer w/in the answer -- was get on w/ it. Get down to it. So we did.

I had been reading his Collected Poems. I would soon be reading his correspondence with C.O. I was an apprentice. I am an apprentice.

Friday, April 01, 2005

People are having fun with poems but I'm not.
People are fighting with weapons and without but I'm not.
People are dead or are near death but I'm not.
People are investigating the phrase "near death" but I'm not.
People are making things happen in a proactive manner but I'm not.
People are getting their shit together but I'm not.
People are fed up but I'm not.
People are thinking before speaking but I'm not.
People are seeing then believing but I'm not.
People are getting an education but I'm not.
People are planning to do something about it but I'm not.
People are buying now and paying later but I'm not.
People are working hard for the money but I'm not.
People are stealing from Peter to give to Paul but I'm not.
People are willing to go to jail to stand up for what they believe in but I'm not.
People are neither here nor there but I'm not.

Monday, March 21, 2005

The rest of this...
The rest of this was over before it began.
The rest of this is from the part of the dream you forgot.
The rest of this is incommensurate with your exqusite taste in word play.
The rest of this has a curfew.
The rest of this is taking Friday off to shop at the Mall of America.
The rest of this aspires to be the Mall of America.
The rest of this suddenly cries for no particular reason.
The rest of this is anti-corporate despite appearances. No, really.
The rest of this has been suspected of having the "Irish flu".
The rest of this will be just like that which came before only more so.
The rest of this would like to collaborate with you.
The rest of this is the rest of this.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

In case you were wondering...
Two sick adults, one healthy baby.
The Grave of Fireflies is a sad film.
Garden State is a bad film.
If one of the two sick adults becomes unsick that one hopes to join the protest on the Commons tomorrow...I love walking down the middle of streets but I do not like people shouting things I do not agree with in a human parade in which I'm a participant. But I do like shouting. If it's imaginative.
Van Lear Rose is a good album.
Woman King is a good e.p.
Thinking in terms of x is y is a relief when fighting headaches.
"You should be ashamed of yourself for removing 'I think" from the 'x is y' equation."
I am.
If you have them handy or can go get them, read Alice Notely's poems "The Two Cities Contrasted", "Constantinople", and "The City Drifting" instead of reading the rest of this. I am tempted to re-read them instead of writing the rest of this. I will succomb to temptation.