Showing posts with label John Elsberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Elsberg. Show all posts

Friday, October 19, 2012

Small Press Friday: John Elsberg, Rest in Peace

  Photo from ČERVENÁ BARVA Press


A while back, a friend emailed me to say John Elsberg had died.  John was a fine poet and the long time editor of the American version (and ultimate the British version when they merged) of the seminal small press magazine, BoggMany of the finest small press writers of recent generations were published there, or wish they had been.

I met John at a small press poetry fest (Chester A. White!) in Pittsburgh back in the 80s sponsored by Harry Calhoun's Pig in a Poke / Pig in a Pamphlet productions. I've posted about that weekend previously, at the time of the death of another participant, Lou McKee.  John was a gentleman and a solid editor and, though I didn't interact with him much that weekend - there were too many far less sober personalities to bounce off of - I got to know him a little better over the years as we corresponded and I ended up publishing a number of his shorter pieces.

I knew I wanted to do a little tribute to his generous spirit, so I started looking around for info about him.

So what's taken so long?

Well, because I could find precious little information. There is a fine short obit here by Wilson Wyatt. Aside from that, not much, at least on the net. So, I contacted a few people from the small press scene who'd met John and invited them to submit their thoughts or, in some cases, poems concerning John Elsberg. Their responses follow.

But first, I'd like to begin though with a very unusual production of John's from 1998, published by Jim Kacian's Red Moon Press. The "book," A Week in the Lake District, was a finalist for Virginia Poetry Book of the Year (Virginia State Library), and below you will get an inkling why.

click to enlarge
 
click to enlarge

There are some solid poems here - the whole is something of a haiku journal, complete with artwork, as pictured above. There is a sense of observation and a lovely picaresque quality, along with a poem that occasionally jumps out of the narrative that to resonate in a variety. The poems are all monostitch, one-line haiku. Here's a couple, including the opener


arriving    branches brush the side of the bus


If one can image the state of excitation at arriving at one's long sought destination, the branches add a quality that must have been at once nerve wracking and exhilarating.


the hiking guide's wife   her porcelain dolls


Sometimes we see the extraordinary in the ordinary, especially in an unfamiliar locale. This could at once be lovely or horrific depending on the mood, at once pulling the reader into the poem to interact.


warm sun   the sheepdog barks when she finds water


This reminds me of the famous Issa haiku of the dog leading the family to a grave.


       Visiting the graves
The old dog
        Leads the way


In John's poem, the sheepdog, although hot itself, is barking to let its companions know what has been discovered. Both poems, Issa's and John's, bring out the sentient quality of each animal in a truly lovely way.

-----

Following are the responses from a number of small press folks I mentioned contacting. After those, you'll find a broadside entitled Small Exchange, which I published, and is now in electronic form (LR #104, April 1999).

It seems to me that sharing John's work with everyone is probably the best possible tribute I might give him. If anyone would like a paper copy, I'll send it to you free for a standard sized SASE, one first class stamp only  (send to: Lilliput Review, Don Wentworth, Editor, 282 Main Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15201). Or you can throw a dollar in the Paypal donation coffer on the right side bar of this with a note saying it is for the John Ellsberg broadside and I'll send it along.

We'll begin with Jim Kacian, then Rick Peabody with a reminiscence, David Greisman of Abbey magazine, Ron Androla with a set of poems for John, Harry Calhoun with a few thoughts and a poem, and then John's broadside


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

Jim Kacian, editor, Red Moon Press:

On publishing A Week in the Lake District:  That was fairly early in the life of red moon press, and I was interested in trying my hand at some new designs and working with new materials. The "pages" were printed on gilclear, which is non-absorbent, so once we printed them (it was printed locally here in winchester [ed.: Winchester, VA]) we used up all the available counterspace laying pages around so they could dry without smearing, (which) took days. Once dry, the pages were cut into strips, hand-assembled and ordered, then drilled and tied with a ribbon, using a bone catchment, and placed in hand-made slipcases you've seen the result: certainly a quirky book of haiku, but also distinctive. We do have a few copies left though i don't list them on my website, figuring I'll probably sell them at our 25th anniversary, 6 years away

I met John at the Bethesda (Maryland) Book Fair, we had adjacent kiosks in 1994 (i think it was) neither one of us sold much, but we had time to get to know each other. We admired each others hat, which is what started the conversation: they were similar, his a western-style wide-brim, mine from Australia. From that we asked about each other's work, and when he discovered i published haiku (mirabile dictu!) we were off. We've stayed in touch these nearly 20 years, mainly through sharing books and notes, and he's published some of my work in Bogg over time.
I'm sorry to hear he's gone—it’s certainly unexpected—he was always lively and energetic, and though I know it happens to all of us, I didn't expect John to go for some time
You might add that John was a champion of small press gatherings and readings ...

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

Richard Peabody, Editor, Gargoyle:

John took me seriously when I was starting out. He made me feel comfortable and relevant as both a poet and editor. Somehow he had the ability to glide between the strata of academic poets, indie poets, and open mike poets. He was comfortable talking to any and all of them. He was quick with a smile, an anecdote, a suggestion, a laugh. He was a buffer for me in my early Writer’s Center days because he would maintain my legitimacy to the powers that be who wrote me off as another in a long line of angry brats. He listened to me and I took his advice. When I floundered about with Gargoyle and was overwhelmed with submissions he came aboard as a Contributing Editor in 1977, and after a job offer sent me to North Carolina, he stepped in as Fiction Editor from 1979-1981.

John via Bogg, was my first intro to the thriving British indie press scene. Through him I came in contact with Andy Darlington, Steve Sneyd, Graham Sykes, Pete Mortimer, Tina Fulker, and tons more.

I was just going through his papers and files today with John’s wife Connie. There was a file entitled “Rick Peabody Chapbook.”  We’d talked about that 5-6 years ago. And there was the file. John still planning it as a project down the road. I'm floored.

 When Zenon Slawinski asked me to takeover a floundering radio show on WPFW called “Writer’s Workshop on the Air” I enlisted John, along with Kevin Urick, Eric Baizer, and guests co-hosts throughout our 2-year run back in the 70s. Those tapes are all part of the Pacifica archive.

Impossible to accept that he’s gone.

In a separate email, Rick also mentioned that John contracted liver cancer which took him in 3 weeks from diagnosis to death and that there were only 3 poets at the little get together at the house. There was no service open to anybody but family. 

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

David Greisman, publisher, Abbey


I did not know John well, but our two or three dozen encounters over the years were something to treasure.  I did write a few words on John's passing in the last Abbey. Rick's got a great remembrance coming out in the Delaware Poetry Review, and Eric Greinke, who collaborated with John on two chapbooks recently, has an equally nice piece in the new Presa.


As I've probably said before, I ripped off John's approach to organizing poems in something other than the standard alphabetical approach.  "Ripped off", yes, but I could never equal the wonderfully sneaky way he'd place poems in Bogg.   John's history with Abbey spread over 32 years and some 21 appearances (including an interview early on in Abbey's existence and later a very funny self-interview in Abbey #100).  I also lucked out to print a number of his poems in that 32-year span, work that was simultaneously precise in phrasing yet never devoid of his underlying passion for language and life.


In some recent emails with Rick, I mentioned what I always thought was a certain twinkle in John's eyes whenever we'd meet up, whether that was at some of our lunches -- we were both for quite a long time federal government employees -- with Rick at The Irish Times just west of Union Station in Washington or at readings at the various Writer's Center locations over the past few decades.   He seemed to relish so much, whether it was family, friends, or literature.  


Not your typical poet/publisher and thank god for that.

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


Ron Androla, Pressure Press:


Haiku The Dragonfly

(For John Elsberg, r.i.p.)



On reversible water
An orange dragonfly hovers a
Moment in wet time

*

Winter, as white as
Who I think I have become,
Whirls like an anvil siren

*

Toast the Potomac
With our cloudy beers –
John, you fill with yes

*

Precision demands French words
Focus focus & focus
Dreamy, Washington poet

*

Dragonfly mysticism
A billion eye bulbs burst
Tasting rocks with toes

*

Evening ends across
Ends of the evening cross
Crucified by poetry



The Moment Of A Poem

(For John Elsberg, r.i.p.)



We crab down pieces of a mossy,
Rock cliff, fast, stop, fast, freeze,
Fast left. Skeleton bone surrounds
Our meat & sense of existence.
Orange shell eggs our cold
Disgust & so much seagull shit
Spatters against this side of the
World. “I wish I was a blue cat,”
You dream you say. A poem is
Always a dream. A toilet bowl fills
With blue crabs, severe cliffs, &
What poets in England discover:

You.


Alone With You

(for John Elsberg, r.i.p.)



My love, her green eye,
Her blue eye, & the flow
I feel of her
Love, touches an edge
Of my gray goatee.
Preceding an epiphany of
Beauty,
Shatter, like a
Proton tambourine,
To be a
Man.
Then, with correct
Integrity, shoot a shotgun
Full of blood & veins
At the Moon. My love,
Her mysterious actions,
Her odd, visual renditions,
& the rush I feel
Of her
Love, listens to my last poem.


His Pipe

(for John Elsberg, r.i.p.)


If burning bacon grease is
Music, specifically as intricate
As Jazz, Monk, Coltrane, D.C.

Traffic, brushing teeth with
Black jello, to be a flesh flute
As apple trees turn to dreams

Shuddering against another
Quaking sunset in the center of
History; a black stem

Perspires, the pipe
Is so goddamn, deliciously
Hot. Fire plums at the poets.

They are reading Mr. Williams,
Failing to fit what exists with
What never occurs

Blistering From History

(for John Elsberg, r.i.p.)



Tiny finches, I half-smile
From my office chair.
30 years ago I realize most
Everything that is D.C. Is
Concrete, even a few atoms
Tucked in a blade of grass
Are cement here. I accept
This observational precision:
Eisenhower was our last
President. Read & study.
It amuses me to talk to
Toxic cows.




Face (for John Elsberg, r.i.p.)

A generous, chunky cheese
Sandwich, a pint of whiskey,
A few packs of Marlboro's,
Mags & poems, late '70's
On a 15-hour bus south at
3 in the morning. Arriving,

I am to look into a crowd for a
Man holding an issue of
BOGG in front of him.
This is John Elsberg.
This is John Elsberg driving his
Wife's small car to their

Flat where we feast on
Spaghetti & wine.
This is my first, ever, reading,
Next afternoon at someplace
Named The Writer's
Center – John got me there.

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



What can I say? You know he came to a few of the Pig in a Poke readings in the 80s and he published for my money one of the great quirky and quintessential small press mags of that period in Bogg. His taste and sense of humor and style will be sadly missed. He was like David Greisman of Abbey with a slightly higher budget.

He was also a fine poet, as you say. One tribute that I can offer to him, and you can share this or keep it to yourself, but a poem of mine that he had the balls to publish in Bogg way back when found its way into my collection of my older stuff, Retro. It's still a showstopper when I use it for comic relief in my readings and I always think of John when I read it. Here it is. Requiscat in pace, Mr. Elsberg. 


In The Hallway Outside The Dean's Office At The College Of Fine Arts


There's a statue of Diana,
the goddess of the hunt.
When I peek beneath
her marble skirt,
I see she has no

real existence
because her legs are sculpted together
at the upper thigh.
No human could live
like that!  I point this out

to a guy in the office
but he doesn't care
about art.  He likes politics.
He shows me a photo
of Reagan giving a speech

under a bust of Lenin.
I tell him I'd rather see
the bust of the blonde
secretary down the hall.
I'm kidding, I prefer brunettes,

but I wonder
why humor and art
so often emerge
from the clothes
we hide them under. 

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



Small Exchange by John Elsberg, Lilliput Review, #104

(if you have difficulty with the widget below, click here)










When browsing the issue, navigate with the bar across the top of the screen - you can change the page view by clicking on the single or double page icons on the right of the bar or use the slider on the left to zoom in. Flip pages back and forth with the arrows.

R.I.P., John.

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



world of man--
in a little stone field
catching fleas
Issa
translated by David G. Lanoue





best,
Don 

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Friday, December 26, 2008

R. H. Blyth's Haiku



Last night I wandered from my previously stated purpose of mining R. H. Blyth for more Shiki translations and sat down with the 1st volume of R. H. Blyth's 4 volume Haiku, opening it up to the preface and beginning to read. I was positively knocked out; it is, simply, transcendent. I've plumbed these 4 volumes over the years for many of the hundreds and hundreds of poems by acknowledged Japanese masters of the haiku, by poet and by season (the later being the general schema of the volumes). Let me let Blyth speak for himself:

-----
The history of mankind, as a history of the human spirit, may be thought of as consisting of two elements: an escape from this world to another; and a return to it. Chronologically speaking, these two movements, the rise and fall, represent the whole of human history; and the two take place microcosmically many times in peoples and nations. But they may be thought of as taking place simultaneously or rather, beyond time, and then they form an ontological description of human nature.

-----There seems to me no necessity, however, to make a Spenglerian attempt to show from historical examples how there has been a movement towards ideas, ideas, abstractions; and a corresponding revulsion from them. In our own individual lives, and in the larger movements of the human spirit these two contradictory tendencies are more or less visible always, everywhere. There is a quite noticeable flow towards religion in the early world, and in the early life of almost every person,-and a later ebb from it, using the word "religion" here in the sense of a means of escape from this life.

-----The Japanese, by an accident of geography, and because of something in their national character, took part in the developments of this "return to nature," which in the Far East began (to give them a local habitation and a name) with Enô, the 6th Chinese Patriarch of Zen, 637-713 A. D. The Chinese, again because of their geography perhaps, have always had a strong tendency in poetry and philosophy towards the vast and vague, the general and sententious. It was left, therefore, to the Japanese to undertake this "return to things" in haiku, but it must be clearly understood that what we return to is never the same as what we once left, for we have ourselves changed in the meantime. So we go back to the old savage animism, and superstition, and common life of man and spirits and trees and stones,-and yet there is a difference. Things have taken on something of the tenuous nature of the abstractions they turned into. Again, spring and autumn, for example, non-existant, arbitrary distinctions, have attained a body and palpability they never before had. We also, we are the things,-and yet we are ourselves, in a perpetual limbo of heaven and hell.

-----It was necessary for us to prostrate ourselves before the Buddha, to spend nine long years wall-gazing, to be born in the Western Paradise. But now, no more. Now we have to come back from Nirvana to this world, the only one. We have to live, not with Christ in glory, but with Jesus and his mother and father and brothers and sisters. We return to the friends of our childhood, the rain on the window-pane; the long silent roads of night, the waves of the shore that never cease to fall; the moon, so near and yet so far; all the sensations of texture, timbre, weight and shape, those precious treasures and inexhaustible riches of every-day life.

-----Haiku may well seem at first sight a poor substitute for the glowing visions of Heaven and Paradise seen of pale-lipped asceties. As Arnold says:

----------Long fed on boundless hopes, O race of man,
----------How angrily thou spurn'st all simpler fare!

Haiku have a simplicity that is deceptive both with regard to their depth of content and to their origins, and it is the aim of this and succeeding volumes to show that haiku require our purest and most profound spiritual appreciation, for they represent a whole world, the Eastern World, of religious and poetic experience. Haiku is the final flower of all Eastern culture; it is also a way of living.



There are some deep, even ticklish and, occasionally, seemingly nonsensical waters to navigate here. Be that as it may, my thought is sit at the feet of a master and learn. If there is anyway for someone from the West to understand what haiku actually means in Japanese culture, this is it. No matter whether you agree or disagree with Blyth; there is just too much here not to revel in. Admittedly, this is the beginning of a potentially long, four volume journey but I'm hoping to see it through in '09. I have a feeling I'm going to need a good deal more of pluck than lucky, but I'll just have to see. And I'll report back.

Here's a couple of poems I came across this week worth a gander:


Mary Oliver's Morning Poem
Jane Kenyon's Taking Down the Tree


The Oliver poem is an outgrowth of all the reading I've been doing for the 3 Poems discussion group; it is a good one, really representative of all her work. If ever there was a poet constantly working and reworking the same territory, it is Mary Oliver and, despite what many critics have to say, this is just why she should be cherished. She points to nature in its myriad manifestations and takes from it a solid, spiritual, all-encompassing world view.

Not too shabby.

For more on Oliver, check out my post on Eleventh Stack dealing with her best collection, the audiobook entitled At Blackwater Pond: Mary Oliver Reads Mary Oliver.

The Kenyon poem nails what many of us will be doing over the coming days and weeks, taking down the tree. In this piece, Kenyon harkens back to the pre-Christian tradition of the solistice tree and its original purpose, something we all know and feel on an instinctual level but rarely articulate. Darkness, be damned.

Right now, I'm reading poetry volumes by Richard Brautigan, Robert Bly, and James Wright in preparation for featuring work that has been selected for the Near Perfect Books of Poetry list (183 and counting - will we make to 200?). Three poems from the Wright volume, The Branch Will Not Break, have already posted. In addition, I'm reading From the Other World: Poems in Memory of James Wright from Lost Hills Books for a future print and possibly blog review. Like so much tree tinsel, the Blyth volume has distracted me from Matsuo Basho: The Master Haiku Poet by Makoto Ueda, which I will be getting back to I hope.

If I'm not careful, I'm gonna run out of bookmarks.

This week's dip into the Lilliput archive comes from October 1994, with a nifty, if slightly faded cover by the irrepressible Wayne Hogan. Hope something grabs you here.



Cover art by Wayne Hogan




As This Morning

we have forgotten so much:
how afternoon light
will warm us. the
way our bodies are.
how fingers will move
into a shadow so
slight, there is
hardly room for
the world.
Mike James





After Sex

I watch her getting dressed.
She dips her head slowly,
her hair flops away
from the crown
in a swirling semaphore
of golden petals.
Clothes float up from the floor
like butterflies.
John Grey





Monoepic

Wonder.

Richard Kostelanetz





and O
------how he loved is tenderness
-------------when he touched her
John Elsberg





November Sunday Madonna

curls into herself,
the last leaf
on the maple
wind blown
and twitching
still holding on
Lyn Lifshin





¶writing is motionless
-when I am done.
-my shadow
-on the path of the path.
Scarecrow



best,
Don