Howl, for Carl Solomon. Mimeographed for the Six Gallery Reading.
Ginsberg, Allen
From Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since September 24, 2003
From Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.
Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since September 24, 2003
About this Item
Two sheets from an exceptionally rare privately produced mimeographed printing of Howl, preceding the firstÂedition. One of 25 copies printed on rectos only in purple ink typed by the poet Robert Creeley and printed by Marthe Rexroth at S.F State, where she was a secretary, for the famous Six Gallery reading (also known as Six Angels in the Same Performance). This event, which took place at 3110 Fillmore Street in San Francisco on October 7, 1955 was the first important public poetry exhibition heralding the West Coast literary revolution of the Beat Generation. At the reading, five talented young poetsâ "Allen Ginsberg, Philip Lamantia, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder, and Philip Whalen presented some of their latest works. They were introduced by Kenneth Rexroth, who was a kind of literary father-figure for the younger poets. It was at this reading that Allen Ginsberg performed the piece in public, which had been advertised by a postcard proclaiming: â Remarkable collection of angels all gathered at once in the same spot. Wine, music, dancing girls, serious poetry, free satori.â The exuberant audience included Neal Cassady, who passed around the wine jug and a collection plate and a drunken Jack Kerouac, who refused to read his own work but cheered the other poets on, and later wrote an account in his novel The Dharma Bums. He fictionalized the event with a description of circulating gallon jugs of California burgundy among the increasingly raucous crowd, â getting them all piffed so that by eleven o'clock when Alvah Goldbrook (Ginsberg's stand-in in the novel) was reading his wailing poem â Wailâ ('Howl') drunk with arms outspread everybody was yelling â Go! Go! Go!â â Also in attendance was Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who telegrammed Ginsberg the following day offering to publish his work,Âsaying " I greet you at the beginning of a great career. When do I get the manuscript?" He published in 1956 through his City Lights Press, but customs agents seized Howl and Other Poems when it arrived from its London-based printer on grounds that it was indecent and obscene. FerlinghettiÂand his store manager ShigeyoshiÂMurao were acquitted of the obscenity charges in October 1957. The title page is signed by Allen Ginsberg, with the signature and a note by Marthe Rexroth, which reads, "I cranked the ditto master at S F State the first time around -and! was at the reading." On the verso of the title, McClure has written the lengthy note, "This first long poem of Allen's was read at the Six Gallery in San Francisco in October 1955. I was 22 years old and gave my first reading also that night. I read a poem titled FOR THE DEATHS OF 100 WHALES and other poems of nature and new consciousness. Our co-readers that night were Whalen, Snyder, & Lamantia. Kenneth Rexroth was M.C. I met Jack Kerouac that night. The group of us - minus Lamantia - read again in Berkeley, March 1956, on a rainy evening. It was a fine evening for poetry and I remember my pleasure in Allen's comic 'America'. I read mostly from a huge notebook of experimental poems of consciousness. Michael McClure." On the dedication page are the signatures of Philip Lamantia, Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and an inscription by David Meltzer: " When Allen first read Kaddish in SF, I read too. I was 22."ÂDouble matted and framed, the entire piece measures 20 inches by 26 inches, with an opening in the back of the frame to viewÂMcClure's statement. Only one other similar printing of this edition has surfaced, which fetched $118,750 at auction in 2013, although this copy did include all of the pages. An exceptionally rare item of this important work and cornerstone to American thought and culture. Howl is considered to be one of the principal works of the Beat Generation. His influences included William Carlos Williams and Jack Kerouac and he attempted to speak in a spontaneous voice. The poem relates many of the stories and experiences of Ginsberg's friends and c. Seller Inventory # 40140
Bibliographic Details
Title: Howl, for Carl Solomon. Mimeographed for the...
Signed: Signed by Author(s)
Edition: 1st Edition
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