Michael McClure was there—an attendant the birth when the squalling
slippery babe nearly fell to the
floor before ardent arms saved it. Which
is to say that he was one of the five young,
obscure poets who read in the smoky confines of San Francisco’s
Gallery Six on October 7, 1955. That was the famed event where Kenneth Rexroth, a Bay Area bohemian bard of an earlier
generation, introduced largely unheralded
young poets Allen Ginsberg, Philip Lamantia, Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen,
as well as McClure. Famously it is where
Ginsberg first read Howl. A drunk Jack Kerouac refused to read his own work but cheered the other poets on, shouting “Yeah! Go! Go!” during their performances. It was a memorable moment and was almost instantly mythologized as the “Birth of the Beat.”
McClure
went on to be a continued counter-cultural presence in the Rock & Roll era
hobnobbing and collaborating with the likes of Bob Dylan, the Doors,
and others.
McClure, poet, playwright, novelist,
and documentary filmmaker was born
in Marysville, Kansas on October 20, 1932 and raised
there and in Seattle. He was educated at the University of Wichita, the University
of Arizona, and San Francisco State
College—where he studied with poet Robert
Duncan.
He was the author of numerous collections of
poetry, including Persian Pony (2017),
Mephistos and Other Poems (2016),
Of Indigo and Saffron
(2011), Mysteriosos and Other Poems
(2010), Rebel Lions (1991),
and The New Book/A Book of Torture
(1961).
“McClure’s poetry combined spontaneity, typographical
experimentation, Buddhist practice,
and body language in performance to
merge the ecstatic and the corporeal,” according to his Poetry Foundation bio. Publishers
Weekly noted of his work, “McClure infuses ecstatic direct address and
colloquial diction with an exquisite sensibility, one that reveals the world in
its ordinary complex gorgeousness.” He
frequently performed his poetry with musical
collaborators, including composer
Terry Riley, and recorded several
CDs with Doors keyboardist Ray
Manzarek.
He wrote more than 20 plays and musicals,
several television documentaries,
and the song Mercedes Benz, which was made famous by Janis Joplin.
His 1965 play The Beard, which
depicted an imagined sexual encounter
between Jean Harlow and Billy the Kid, gained notoriety when it was unsuccessfully brought to trial on charges of obscenity. Kerouac based the character Pat McLear on him in his autobiographical novel Big
Sur.
McClure's honors included a fellowship from the Guggenheim Foundation, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Alfred Jarry Award, a Rockefeller grant for playwriting, and an Obie Award for Best Play.
McClure was even honored on a postage stamp.
McClure taught poetry at California College
of the Arts for over 40 years. He lived in Oakland with his wife,
the sculptor Amy Evans McClure,
before his death on May 4, 2020 in 2020 at age 87.
McClure burst on the scene reading this poem at
the Gallery Six event.
For the Death of 100 Whales
In
April, 1954, Time magazine described
seventy-nine bored American G.I.s stationed at a NATO base in Iceland murdering
a pod of one hundred killer whales. In a single morning the soldiers, armed
with rifles, machine guns, and boats, rounded up and then shot the whales to
death.
Hung midsea
Like a boat
mid-air
The liners
boiled their pastures:
The liners of
flesh,
The Arctic
steamers
Brains the size
of a teacup
Mouths the size
of a door
The sleek wolves
Mowers and
reapers of sea kine.
THE GIANT
TADPOLES
(Meat their
algae)
Leapt
Like sheep or
children.
Shot from the
sea’s bore.
Turned and
twisted
(Goya!!)
Flung blood and
sperm.
Incense.
Gnashed at their
tails and brothers
Cursed Christ of
mammals,
Snapped at the
sun,
Ran for the
Sea’s floor.
Goya! Goya!
—Michael
McClure
The
Chamber,
dedicated to Kerouac, was included in McClure’s Of Indigo and Saffron: New and
Selected Poems published in 2011.
The Chamber
for Jack Kerouac
IN
LIGHT ROOM IN DARK HELL IN UMBER IN CHROME,
I sit feeling the swell of the cloud made
about by movement
of arm leg and tongue. In
reflections of gold
light. Tints and flashes of gold and
amber spearing
and glinting. Blur
glass…blue Glass,
black telephone. Matchflame of
violet and flesh
seen in the clear bright
light. It is not night
and night too. In Hell, there
are stars outside.
And long sounds of cars. Brown
shadows on walls
in the
light
of the room. I sit
or stand
wanting the huge reality of
touch and love.
In the turned room. Remember the
long-ago dream
of stuffed animals (owl, fox) in a dark
shop. Wanting
only the purity of clean colors and new
shapes
and
feelings.
I WOULD CRY FOR THEM USELESSLY
I have ten years left to
worship my youth
Billy the Kid, Rimbaud,
Jean Harlow
IN DARK HELL IN LIGHT ROOM IN UMBER AND
CHROME I
feel the swell of
smoke
the drain and flow of motion of exhaustion, the long sounds of cars
the
brown shadows
on
the wall. I sit or stand. Caught in the net of glints from corner table to
dull
plane
from
knob to floor, angles of flat light, daggers of beams. Staring at love’s face.
The telephone in cataleptic light.
Marchflames of blue and red seen in the
clear
grain.
I
see myself—ourselves—in Hell without radiance. Reflections that we are.
The long cars make sounds and
brown shadows over the wall.
I am real as you
are real whom I speak to.
I raise my head, see over
the edge of my nose. Look up
and see that nothing is
changed. There is no flash
to my eyes. No
change to the room.
Vita Nuova—No! The dead, dead world.
The strain of desire is
only a heroic gesture.
An agony to be so in
pain without release
when love is a word
or kiss.
—Michael
McClure
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