|
Classic and Contemporary Poetry
AT APOLLINAIRE'S GRAVE, by ALLEN GINSBERG Poem Explanation Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: I visited pere lachaise to look for the remains of apollinaire Last Line: I am buried here and sit by my grave beneath a tree Subject(s): Apollinaire, Guillaume (1880-1918); Poetry & Poets; Surrealism | |||
I visited Père Lachaise to look for the remains of Apollinaire the day the U.S. President appeared in France for the grand conference of heads of state so let it be the airport at blue Orly a springtime clarity in the air over Paris and over the froggy graves at Père Lachaise an illusory mist as thick as marijuana smoke Peter Orlovsky and I walked softly thru Père Lachaise we both knew we would die and so held temporary hands tenderly in a citylike miniature eternity Roads and streetsigns rocks and hills and names on everybody's house Looking for the lost address of a notable Frenchman of the Void to pay our tender crime of homage to his helpless menhir and lay my temporary American Howl on top of his silent Caligramme for him to read between the lines with Xray eyes of Poet as he by miracle had read his own death lyric in the Seine I hope some wild kidmonk lays his pamphlet on my grave for God to read me on cold winter nights in heaven already our hands have vanished from that place my hand writes now in a room in Paris Git-le-Coeur Ah William what grit in the brain you had what's death I walked all over the cementery and still couldn't find your grave what did you mean by that fantastic cranial bandage in your poems O solemn deathsead what've you got to say nothing and that's barely an answer You can't drive autos into a sixfoot grave tho the universe is mausoleum big enough for anything the universe is a graveyard and I walk around alone in here knowing that Apollinaire was on the same street 50 years ago madness is only around the corner and Genet is with us stealing books the West is at war again and whose lucid suicide will set it all right Guillaume Guillaume how I envy your fame your accomplishment for American letters your Zone with its long crazy line of bullshit about death come out of the grave and talk thru the door of my mind issue new series of images oceanic haikus blue taxicabs in Moscow negroes statues of Buddha pray for me on the phonograph record of your former existence with a long sad voice and strophes of deep sweet music sad and scratchy as World War I I've eaten the blue carrots you sent out of the grave and Van Gogh's ear and maniac peyote of Artaud and will walk down the streets of New York in the black cloak of French poetry improvising our conversation in Paris at Père Lachaise and the future poem that takes its inspiration from the light bleeding into your grave II Here in Paris I am your guest O friendly shade the absent hand of Max Jacob Picasso in youth bearing me a tube of Mediterranean myself attending Rousseau's old red banquet I ate his violin great party at the Bateau Lavoir not mentioned in the textbooks of Algeria Tzara in the Bois de Boulogne explaining the alchemy of the machineguns of the cuckoos he weeps translating me into Swedish well dressed in a violet tie and black pants a sweet purple beard which emerged from his face like the moss hanging from the walls of Anarchism he spoke endlessly of his quarrels with Andr?? Breton whom he had helped one day trim his golden mustache old Blaise Cendrars received me into his study and spoke wearily of the enormous length of Siberia Jacques Vach?? invited me to inspect his terrible collection of pistols poor Cocteau saddened by the once marvelous Radiguet at his last thought I fainted Rigaut with a letter of introduction to Death and Gide praised the telephone and other remarkable inventions we agreed in principle though he gossiped of lavender underwear but for all that he drank deeply of the grass of Whitman and was intrigued by all lovers named Colorado princes of America arriving with their armfuls of shrapnel and baseball Oh Guillaume the world so easy to fight seemed so easy did you know the great political classicists would invade Montparnasse with not one sprig of prophetic laurel to green their foreheads wars- Mayakovsky arrived and revolted. III Came back sat on a tomb and stared at your rough menhir a piece of thin granite like an unfinished phallus a cross fading into the rock 2 poems on the stone one Coeur Renvers??e Other Habituez-vous comme moi A ces prodigies que j'annonce Guillaume Apollinaire de Krostrowitsky Someone placed a jam bottle filled with daisies and a 5&10C surrealist typist ceramic rose happy little tomb with flowers and overturned heart under a fine mossy tree beneath which I sat snaky trunk summer boughs and leaves umbrella over the menhir and nobody there et quelle voix sinistre ulule Guillaume qu'es-tu devenu his nextdoor neighbor is a tree there underneath the crossed bones heaped and yellow cranium perhaps and the printed poems Alcools in my pocked his voice in the museum now middleage footsteps walk the gravel a man stares at the name and moves toward the crematory building Same sky rolls over thru clouds as Mediterranean days on the Riviera during war drinking Apollo in love eating occasional opium he'd taken the light one must have felt the shock in St. Germain when he went out Jacob & Picasso coughing in the dark a bandage unrolled and the skull left still on a bed outstretched pudgy fingers the mistery and ego gone a bell tolls in the steeple down the street birds warble in the chestnut trees Family Bremont sleeps nearby Christ hangs big chested and sexy in their tomb my cigarette smokes in my lap and fills the page with smoke and flames an ant runs over my corduroy sleeve the tree I lean on grows slowly bushes and branches upstarting through the tombs one silky spiderweb gleaming on granite | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON THE ROAD TO SAN ROMANO by ANDRE BRETON YOU TAKE THE FIRST STREET TO THE RIGHT by ROBERT DESNOS ARBITRARY FATE by ROBERT DESNOS BUT I WAS NOT UNDERSTOOD by ROBERT DESNOS |
|