Pretty Lanterns
When the airstream's on the hayload
&
the limb is on the tree
you can hang your pretty lanterns
where
my legs attach to me
we can take our gloves & stockings
&
arrange them on that tree
you can shake your pretty lanterns
&
light up the inner me
when we go all out & say so
that
the air is full of bees
summer's here & we're a partin'
&
we'll do what damn we please
but it's really not the springtime
&
the air aint full of bees
will you take your goddamn lanterns
get them off
my BVD's.
1991, from Larry's Songs
Pretty Lanterns is recorded on Ubik Sound's The Mad New Mexican
Holy Terror
Holy terror stalks the advent
of the coming of the Lord
when he’s lost his good right hand love
& lives by the crooked sword.
Larry Goodell
Pretty Lanterns is recorded on Ubik Sound's The Mad New Mexican
Curiously, for me, I just this minute discovered on the envelope
these lines following the song.
these lines following the song.
Holy Terror
Holy terror stalks the advent
of the coming of the Lord
when he’s lost his good right hand love
& lives by the crooked sword.
Larry Goodell
Roswell with the Plains rolling out into the Eyes
Eyes with the Plains rolling into the Bars
Bars where the Cattle cross into the Heart
Roswell where the Heart rolls out of the Bars
Bars with no Bars but Photographers arms
back from San Francisco talking of Pool
no Table no bars no way to find Home
Home from I am Roswell with the Veins in my Arms
Arms with the Plains rolling out of all Harm
Harm where you know it alive the Baby cries
Roswell with recorders & Plains with their Arms
to be one Born here St Mary's ordinary cross
Roswell with the Music He cleaned it up
Roswell with no name He never saw his town
Roswell never saw the town named from his name
Plains arms roll never knowing where they came from
Philanthropy an old thing naming from the Bars
no Bars only Home to some
trying to name an artist
who's really good at home in his voice
reading the names as they show up in the Plains
Home & Home again a name in the Bars
of Albuquerque Algodones Placitas home
Roswell with the name nobody calls it a home
Home it was & ever will be & be & be
Roswell with the name where
the flat ness rolls out
aflame in the ears to die Roswell old home a poet born to hear what
he hears her sitting home away in the tears
he left here to come back a dozen years of solitude
a chronicle of Paradise in trees they left to die
Artesian Roswell making making
empty clothes lines
I give you Silk Stockings for Yr Empty Bars
I give you back Roswell with its empty Death Wish
I give you back what you brot me Lines with a Stick
a Bat out of Carlsbad a Bag of loose Cotton
a reaping raping raiding woman cursing with the Dry Plains
I give you a Letter the Letter Z
Z for Zones Z for Cattle Brands unknown
Z for my Home never found never wandering
A Ghost of the Lovely Host who ate his Solid Wafer
& blessed the Town to turn it back where its Hope was found once
when you let the newly found Artesian wells spill out their
Giant wealth to give it in again & take the People Hatred
Hiding in DeBremond Stadium where the Football games
pounded it in turn it in the Spring River come back
flowing flowing in all the ways of fuck again.
Larry Goodell (written on envelope at Wendell Ott’s
in Roswell, NM, Sunday, 7Apr74)
She Got It Right
The Bible wrote a woman
to teach her how to be right*
but she wrote before the Bible
it never got it right.
Larry Goodell /6Jun91
First time best.
(Spicer
"Dictation" . . . )
*"write" I wrote in but I prefer original
which is on an envelope from Eileen Myles.
Today I received the incredibly beautiful and precious book of Emily Dickinson's envelope writings, each envelope whole or scrap of it carefully photographed with the typed text provided, from New Directions & Granary Books & the benevolent Steve Clay, The Gorgeous Nothings, by Dickinson, an amazing display of creativity in the act put to convenient paper . . .
this gift generated this putting together a few things: the "Roswell" poem is somewhat important to me having been a spontaneous act on a visit to my home town when at a party in the artist Wendell Ott's home, the poem started and I had to find an unoccupied room and tore open an envelope to write on . . . when I've read this to a younger audience I've, against my heart, substituted "fuck" for "love" but the original, as almost always, has the say . . .
in making my work presentable (on computer and printed out) I am constantly going back to the originals in the notebooks or, in earlier years, folders by year . . . as that first take in time and place allows little or no change in a different time and place since that would be contrary to the impetus, at least for me . . . I've spent too many years beating the dead horse of my uninspired poetry trying to whip the dead into living, a hopeless and exhausting and wasteful task . . . thank you Robert Creeley for giving me the hand up and out and into my own voice and possible unpretentious expression . . . the sounds can go deep and wide when true, true to one's cooperative self.
for That's A Poem which was written on napkins in a hamburger place in Shiprock, New Mexico, please see That's A Poem, from Napkin to Printed Page.
Larry Goodell / Placitas, New Mexico 3/14/2014
this post is for Steve Clay
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