This week's LitRock number on Issa's Sunday Service is the Beatles's I Am the Walrus, which takes the title character from Lewis Carroll's "The Walrus and the Carpenter" poem from the Alice book Through The Looking Glass. There is also the reference to Poe and the infamous fadeout ending with a recitation of King Lear courtesy of a BBC broadcast that happened to be on sometime during the recording sessions . Lennon was hitting all the stops on this one. Here's the lyrics.
This week's featured poem on the count up from Lilliput Review #1 comes from issue #16, October 1990. Enjoy.
A Short Poem
A short poem
should reach
at least
the left hand of God.
Daniel McCaffrey
from this year on
in my left hand, umbrella-hat
in the right, knapsack
Issa
translated by David Lanoue
best,
Don
the left hand of God. I like that. makes me wonder, of course, if the left hand of God hangs lower than the right hand, and if so why?
ReplyDeleteNot sure, seems righties always lead with their left ... then again, with the big G maybe we're talking tentacles here ...
ReplyDeleteAs a rightie with several leftie friends throughout my personal history, I'd like to express solidarity toward the lefty movement.
ReplyDelete"Right ain't always right,"
and so, and so...
-A. Scott Britton
Hey, there, A. Scott, good to hear from the lefty contingent. Next time I write to Dan McCaffrey, I'll have to check in with him on this ...
ReplyDeleteDon
say A.Scott glad to see
ReplyDeletey'all yet around...
still near here via The Red Line?
just looking around for (I think you did it) a
dictionary...? cldn't find it but i did find Childers' 1875 Dictionaty of the Pali Language (a facsimile, 2003)
which I am into his Preface
and all of the KAM words...
am righting with my write hand scrolling with my left