Friday, December 24, 2010

splakeus and lillies: a collection of short poetry


t. kilgore splake has been with me, that is has been publishing in Lilliput Review, since almost its inception in 1989.    An upper Peninsula of Michigan poet who has dedicated all to the muse (or the Muse), he rides the wave of words from Whitman through Kerouac, Vonnegut, Ginsberg, Brautigan, Jim Harrison and on and on.  When I think of Albert Huffstickler, I think of t. kilgore splake, poets who reach beyond the normal poetry audience and touch the hearts of everyday folks, and yet, at the same time, are poets' poets, at least in the universe of the small press.

splake volumes arrive in my mailbox with astounding regularity, as do big fat envelopes full of poems, musing letters, and rafts of articles from here, there, and everywhere.  The latest collection to come my way is pictured above, entitled splakeus and lillies (Moon Publishing), revealing in the title a thing or two about its creator.  The lillies of the title are not misspelled, as one might think at first glance: those lillies are these Lillies, issues of Lilliput Review or, more specifically in tom's case, short poems, which he refers to as "lillies" as a kind of homage to the little magazine for which this is the blog.  In a delightful example of the kind of hyperbole mr. splake is capable of, here is his explanation:

since 1989, the term "lillies" has come to define the short poem in the world of american small press operations (italics added).  

So, letting that serve as both an explanation, a disclaimer of objectivity, and a magnificent example of what Huck Finn characterized as "a stretcher," here are three little gems from this collection, replete with the stripped to the bone punch and power of the short poem as executed by t. kilgore splake:



      after christmas
  vacuuming pine needles
behind grandfather's clock
adjusting heavy pendulum
  seconds ticking slower




       january thaw
   icy mist shadowing
buddha face moon smile
   muting alan's distant
       celestial "howl"





   poet's hmo
    winchester
2 inch number 6
 20 gauge only



Author w/ his UP Poet Tree



-------------------------


This week's featured poems, two of them this time, comes from issue #118, a broadside by M. Kettner entitled "Highku."    The title says it all:






Two poems by M. Kettner





#795
   high:
   ocean breeze
        on a crate of oranges








#731
   high:
   brass band out of tune.
   dried seaweed on a fishnet.




And one from the master:


drinking cheap sake--
this cuckoo
this grove
Issa
translated by David G. Lanoue








best,
Don

PS  Get 2 free issues     Get 2 more free issues     Lillie poem archive

Go to the LitRock web site for a list of all 82 songs
Hear all 82 (or so) at once on the the LitRock Jukebox


4 comments:

TC said...

"...since 1989, the term 'lillies' has come to define the short poem in the world of american small press operations (italics added)."

Henceforth I'm going to have a hard time not thinking of any beautiful and deep short poem as a "lilly".

Don, if anybody since R.H. Blyth has done more than you to define for us the essence of this essential heart-form of the poem, I don't know who it is.

Thanks for everything, always.

Issa's Untidy Hut said...

Tom

Well, this small collection of words means so very, very much ... thanks.

"Essential heart-form of the poem" - I will be remembering that myself, as it feels as if a link to sutras
of yore.

Don

Anonymous said...

I didn't 'drop back in" until about 2000
so
sad to say or more accurately GLAD TO SAY
that
this is my first taste of anything splake
(that january thaw piece REALLY

grabbed my me I just ate it ... entirely

&I am thinking to now from on to call my
"shorties" ..."lillies"!


K.

Issa's Untidy Hut said...

Thanks, Ed ... glad you got a taste of T. Kilgore Splake - a regular correspondent of Albert Huffstickler - all around good guy, working his row, day after day, year after year -

I very much appreciate your kind words - lillies, indeed. Don