Posted on 09/14/2006 8:09:29 AM PDT by .cnI redruM
Some people have a favorite poem. Not me. I have a least favorite and I remember precisely the moment when I knew that it was utter rubbish. It happened while I was reading The New Criterion, whose 25th anniversary is now upon us about which more in a moment.
The poem is Howl, by Allen Ginsberg and oh, gentle reader, how it reeks to high heaven. Although its vulgar and verseless or perhaps because its vulgar and verseless Howl is routinely hailed as one of the finest accomplishments of the so-called Beat Generation. Earlier this year, it was the subject of adoring book, The Poem That Changed America. Yet Id rather spend an entire lunar cycle listening to Triumph the Insult Comic Dog bark at the moon than read this pathetic poem again.
I first encountered Howl in an English class at the University of Michigan. It was a survey course on poetry and our text was one of those thick anthologies full of small print and cheap paper. We covered a lot of ground that semester Shakespeares sonnets (all of them), the metaphysical poets, the British romantics, Matthew Arnold (about whose Dover Beach I wrote a paper), the modernists, and so on.
Then came Howl. It blew me away with its sheer awfulness. Consider a couple of characteristically wretched lines, which apparently describe Ginsbergs circle of friends and acquaintances:
who bit detectives in the neck and shrieked with delight in policecars for committing no crime but their own wild cooking pederasty and intoxication, who howled on their knees in the subway and were dragged off the roof waving genitals and manu- scripts...
Theres a lot more where this came from, unfortunately including a notorious line, which I wont reproduce here, that led to an obscenity trial in which the poems publisher was acquitted. (A brief account may be found here the rub is that the trial proved the maxim that theres no such thing as bad publicity, because it turned Ginsberg into a free-speech hero and encouraged people who should have known better to sing his praises.)
When I read Howl, toward the end of the term and in the wake of so much genuinely good poetry, I was confused. My professor was a sensible guy. He had exposed us to the classics and seemed to appreciate them. So why did his syllabus carve out a place for this abomination?
My first response was to question my own judgment: Was I missing something? My second response was to go to the library and learn what I could about Howl and its author.
Thats how I discovered The New Criterion, the monthly journal of art and culture. Technically, what I discovered was a book: The New Criterion Reader, a compilation of the best that had been thought and said (to coin a phrase) on its pages during its first five years. And specifically, what I discovered was an article by Bruce Bawer, on page 350: The phenomenon of Allen Ginsberg.
It was a revelation to me. I wasnt alone! Here was an acid-tinged review of Ginsberg and his career:
Since Howl, he has published (and read from a thousand platforms) over a dozen books of poetry, and the recipe has remained pretty much the same throughout: take one part anti-Establishment rhetoric, one part sexual indelicacy, one part scatology and general grubbiness, and mix rather sloppily. Voila a book of poetry.
There was plenty more, including a dazzling, two-paragraph conclusion that explained why critics honored Ginsberg and why their love for him and his work has done real damage to our culture. The poem that changed America? Yeah, for the worse! I wished that Bruce Bawer was my poetry professor. Either he would have given a great lecture on Howl, or he would have had the good sense to skip the poem entirely.
From this experience, I developed a real fondness for The New Criterion, which is now embarking on its 25th year of publication. It was founded by Hilton Kramer and Samuel Lipman, a pair of New Yorkers who had become distressed at the state of cultural criticism. Almost everywhere [criticism has] degenerated into one or another form of ideology or publicity or some pernicious combination of the two, they wrote in the first issue. Since then, The New Criterion has come out ten times a year to fight the culture wars, issuing broadsides of common sense as it struggles against the likes of Ginsberg and those who take him seriously.
In its first 25 years, The New Criterion has published a ton of smart writing. And it hasnt merely criticized the bad, as important as that chore is. It has also performed the task of battling cultural amnesia, as an editorial comment in the double-sized September 2006 issue says. From our first issue nearly a quarter century ago, we have labored in the vast storehouse of cultural achievement to introduce, or reintroduce, readers to some of the salient figures whose works helped weave the great unfolding tapestry of our civilization. In terms of people, The New Criterion has propelled the careers of Kramer (now easing into retirement) and Lipman (who died in 1994), it helped launched those of Erich Eichman (now an editor at the Wall Street Journal), Roger Kimball (who is currently The New Criterions co-editor, with Kramer), and Heather Mac Donald (who did some of her first professional writing on its pages). (I tell the story of The New Criterion in a little more detail in A Gift of Freedom.)
We at NR have many ties to The New Criterion its editors and writers often appear on our pages and our people often appear there. NRs managing editor Jay Nordlinger is The New Criterions music critic. (One of the best essays hes written, anywhere, was on the state of classical music, and it ran in The New Criterion.) John Derbyshire also writes frequently for Kimball & co.and a few years ago, Derb penned a very nice tribute to them here. The current issue features not only these two but also pieces by NR regulars Andrew C. McCarthy and David Pryce-Jones.
Ive contributed a couple of pieces to The New Criterion as well, when my inner lit major has needed a special outlet: Ive written on the classic Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the ancient epic of Gilgamesh. I dont expect either of these short essays to make it into a 500-page, 25th anniversary anthology that Ivan R. Dee plans to publish in the spring. But I do hope that in the not-too-distant future, a college student, searching for signs of intelligent life on campus, will pull it off a library shelf and discover what I did nearly 20 years ago.
I still managed a B in the course. I admire the man for not gunning me down for that quip.
Howl sounds like a poem that Leonard-Pinth Garnell would have featured on "Bad Poetry" on the old SNL.
I feel grateful to have totally missed this. I thought Allen Ginsberg was an economist, to the extent I thought of him at all.
I like the World War I poets - Rupert Brooke, Siegfried Sassoon, etc.
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That was my reaction as well. Not to mention, that Ginsberg appeared to be a very disturbed individual.
I actually like "Howl." I realized from first hearing that the message is totally bogus but I love the over-top-melodramatics and the disconnect between them and Ginsburg's quiet nasal voice (although he got into some hysterics in 60s' readings.)
P.S. I'm also quite a fan of Kerouac's writing.
By way of funny parody....
"http://www.litkicks.com/Texts/Yowl.html"
I encountered Allen Ginsberg in person a couple of times during the seventies and he was easily recognizable by being even more grubby and unkempt than the nearly anyone I had ever met, which was no mean feat in those days...and his appearance was more palatable than his personality.
With further apologies to awful Allen...
http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2000/03/22/howl/index.html
New Criterion is first rate.
During the 70's & 80's I used to drink at West End Cafe on 114st & B-way Across the street from Columbia University. I even read poetry there once or twice. The West End was an old hang out of Ginsberg during the 50's.
At the time Ginsburg lived in Colorado. He would come back to NYC from time to time to do a reading. I attended some of the readings. I never cared much for Ginsburg's stuff. For all his focus on excretions and emissions and such his writing is inhuman. But he was a pretty animated guy.
ping
I suppose students should have a look at "Howl" and "Kaddish" just to see what the Beat Generation poets look like.
Great poetry? No.
I have met Hilton Kramer and Roger Kimball a few times, and admire them both.
The only point I disagree with them on is that Kramer glorifies High Modernism and pans everything that followed it. I think high modernism was also vastly overrated in its time. I don't think Jackson Pollock or the Abstract Expressionists are worth much more than the pop artists who followed them. Both movements are essentially decadent, IMHO. Perhaps Pollock aimed higher than Andy Warhol, but I don't think in the end that either is worth a place in the museums.
I also like Howl. It's just one long screech of madness but it has a lot of energy and -- more or less accidentally -- some powerful lines mixed in with the nonsense. I can't imagine asking students to analyze it in class because obviously it is insane. Either you buy the whole package for what it is, or you don't.
Of course it was a one-off performance. Ginsberg had the ability to go on to write better things, but he settled for becoming a parody of himself. From a PR point of view this worked out well for him. I believe he was the only American poet of his generation who made a living from his work.
City Lights in North Beach?
I'm more paleo-conservative than him on art. If it's past Representative-Expressionism, I don't buy it.
It was great looking at the faces of the customers: they were horrified at themselves for being relieved that the smelly mess was being tossed out on his ear.
Cicero --
I share your doubts about High Modernism and never cared much for the Abstract Expressionists. Still, about 15 years ago my father -- a retired steelworker with a high school education -- visited NYC and I took him to MOMA. All art was new to him. He wasn't impressed with the water lillies. But LOVED the Pollacks. He saw the one that used to hang in the hallway near the escalator and exclaimed, "Now, there's a painting." It made me think that there might be something to Pollack after all.
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