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Your favourite Protest song.

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Georgiansilver 04 Apr 23 - 12:41 PM
GUEST 04 Apr 23 - 04:36 PM
gillymor 04 Apr 23 - 05:53 PM
Steve Shaw 04 Apr 23 - 07:07 PM
Thomas Stern 04 Apr 23 - 10:21 PM
GUEST,D. Kingsley Hahn 05 Apr 23 - 12:24 AM
Vic Smith 05 Apr 23 - 12:19 PM
Vic Smith 05 Apr 23 - 12:21 PM
gillymor 05 Apr 23 - 02:21 PM
Steve Shaw 05 Apr 23 - 02:55 PM
gillymor 05 Apr 23 - 04:39 PM
Steve Shaw 05 Apr 23 - 07:31 PM
The Og 06 Apr 23 - 09:00 AM
Steve Shaw 06 Apr 23 - 03:04 PM
Big Al Whittle 07 Apr 23 - 07:01 AM
Big Al Whittle 07 Apr 23 - 07:02 AM
Steve Shaw 07 Apr 23 - 07:27 AM
Donuel 07 Apr 23 - 11:51 PM
GUEST 08 Apr 23 - 03:32 AM
GUEST 08 Apr 23 - 03:35 AM
Pete MacGregor 08 Apr 23 - 09:14 AM
Steve Shaw 08 Apr 23 - 09:45 AM
Stilly River Sage 08 Apr 23 - 11:34 AM
Steve Shaw 08 Apr 23 - 11:46 AM
Black belt caterpillar wrestler 08 Apr 23 - 12:03 PM
gillymor 08 Apr 23 - 12:04 PM
Mark Ross 08 Apr 23 - 01:18 PM
Big Al Whittle 08 Apr 23 - 02:15 PM
GUEST,Roger 08 Apr 23 - 02:52 PM
Steve Shaw 08 Apr 23 - 05:45 PM
Big Al Whittle 09 Apr 23 - 04:35 AM
Long Firm Freddie 09 Apr 23 - 05:59 AM
GUEST,Peter Laban 09 Apr 23 - 07:17 AM
GUEST,Jerry 10 Apr 23 - 07:45 AM
Susanne (skw) 11 Apr 23 - 06:35 AM
Neil D 14 Apr 23 - 05:02 PM
Steve Shaw 14 Apr 23 - 06:13 PM
Big Al Whittle 15 Apr 23 - 04:50 AM
Steve Shaw 15 Apr 23 - 05:56 AM
GUEST,RJM 15 Apr 23 - 06:35 AM
Steve Shaw 15 Apr 23 - 06:51 AM
GUEST,RJM 15 Apr 23 - 06:59 AM
Doug Chadwick 15 Apr 23 - 07:01 AM
Steve Shaw 15 Apr 23 - 07:27 AM
Big Al Whittle 15 Apr 23 - 09:29 AM
Halfmoon Charlie 15 Apr 23 - 10:03 AM
Halfmoon Charlie 15 Apr 23 - 10:07 AM
Big Al Whittle 15 Apr 23 - 12:01 PM
Halfmoon Charlie 15 Apr 23 - 01:14 PM
Big Al Whittle 16 Apr 23 - 04:58 AM
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Subject: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 04 Apr 23 - 12:41 PM

I have many Folk protest songs that I dearly love but this one....about the 'Troubles' that used to exist in Ireland is the most poignant. What is your favourite protest song? Would love to hear it. https://youtu.be/GH8fuEcNubs


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST
Date: 04 Apr 23 - 04:36 PM

Dick Gaughan : https://youtu.be/nYWezlZt1-g


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: gillymor
Date: 04 Apr 23 - 05:53 PM

Dick Gaughan's version of Leon Rossellson's "World Turned Upside Down" and, of course, Mojo Nixon's
"I Ain't Gonna Piss in No Jar".


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 04 Apr 23 - 07:07 PM

Country Joe and the Fish, Vietnam Song, live Woodstock version on YouTube. Joe wrote that song in 20 minutes!


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Thomas Stern
Date: 04 Apr 23 - 10:21 PM

In Contempt
Talking Un-American Blues
House Un-American Blues

Thomas.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,D. Kingsley Hahn
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 12:24 AM

I have played "Passing Through" by Dick Blakeslee quite regularly, since hearing it originally played in about 1963. Blakeslee wrote it in 1948, and, from what I've read, it was used quite often during Henry Wallace's presidential campaign that same year. Pete Seeger recorded it a couple times on different Folkways albums; and it still lends itself quite well as a great song about peace and brotherhood -- plus the chord structure is quite elemental!


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Vic Smith
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 12:19 PM

Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday
https://youtu.be/bckob0AyKCA


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Vic Smith
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 12:21 PM

Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday
Or Click here -
Strange Fruit


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: gillymor
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 02:21 PM

Woody's "Plane Wreck at Los Gatos (Deportees)".


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 02:55 PM

Lots by Woody spring to mind, such as going Down The Road (I Ain't Gonna Be Treated This Way). Unlike a lot of more modern protest singers, such as Dick Gaughan and Christy, both of whom I love and have seen many times, Woody didn't generally deal in polemics, never pushing the protest down your throat. You can put the message across just as well, if not better, by simply telling it like things are or by putting across a story, Pretty Boy Floyd or Tom Joad...

This Land Is Your Land is a good protest song because it tells you like it is and how it should be, rather than singling out people to call bastards.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: gillymor
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 04:39 PM

Woody's Pretty Boy Floyd is another favorite with those great final verses which still ring true -

Yes, as through this world I've wandered
I've seen lots of funny men;
Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen.

And as through your life you travel,
Yes, as through your life you roam,
You won't never see an outlaw
Drive a family from their home.

Richard Thompson wrote at least a couple of good ones in Time to Ring Some Changes and Mother Knows Best. Dylan's Masters of War still gets my blood boiling.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 05 Apr 23 - 07:31 PM

And what's even better is that many of Woody's lines are poetic too. The two verses quoted by gillymor are examples. There are many more.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: The Og
Date: 06 Apr 23 - 09:00 AM

Blowing in the Wind...


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 06 Apr 23 - 03:04 PM

Call me Mr Simpleton, but I think that Blowin' in the Wind is full of obscurantist lyrics. I challenge you to explain the first four lines.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 07 Apr 23 - 07:01 AM

Glad to be Gay by Tom Robinson
Common People -Pulp


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 07 Apr 23 - 07:02 AM

Mack the Knife


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 07 Apr 23 - 07:27 AM

Good picks, Al.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Donuel
Date: 07 Apr 23 - 11:51 PM

Imagine by John Lennon


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 03:32 AM

You're in good company Steve, Joan Baez said she had no idea what Blowin' in the Wind was about.

Dave H


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 03:35 AM

The last post was me, lost my cookie.

Dave H


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Pete MacGregor
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 09:14 AM

Bella Ciao. Many versions in many languages - the folk process at work.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 09:45 AM

When I'm Gone by Phil Ochs is, arguably, not primarily a protest song but I'm bagging it for this thread anyway. It's lovely poetry, and this verse is sublime for me:

Won't see the golden of the sun when I'm gone
And the evenings and the mornings will be one when I'm gone
Can't be singing louder than the guns when I'm gone
So I guess I'll have to do it while I'm here


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 11:34 AM

As a child I always liked the gentle Ed McCurdy song Last Night I had the Strangest Dream, it's one my father sang fairly often, and of course was a standard for many singers of the era, including Pete Seeger, Simon and Garfunkel, John Denver, etc.

As a teen at the end of the Vietnam era I responded strongly to Edwin Starr's overt and in your face song War. (There's a digitized version of a live TV performance but it's rather broken up.)


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 11:46 AM

Speaking of Phil, let's not forget There But For Fortune. Crazy, but I didn't know it was by him until I started googling about him this morning.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 12:03 PM

"Penny Evans".

Robin


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: gillymor
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 12:04 PM

This sad song, sung by Arlo Gutherie, of Victor Jara and Pinochet era Chile.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Mark Ross
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 01:18 PM

Praise Boss whose morning work bells chime,
Praise him for bits of overtime,
Praise him whose wars we love to fight,
Praise him fat leach and parasite,

Amen!


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 02:15 PM

Victor Jara by Adrian Henri of Liverpool poets fame.
Patio Doors and the Sunloungers and Moving Hearts used to do it.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,Roger
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 02:52 PM

Hattie Carroll


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 08 Apr 23 - 05:45 PM

I'll also take Joe Hill, as long as it's sung by Paul Robeson.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 09 Apr 23 - 04:35 AM

There are some people who can be quite transformative and brilliant with a genre. Its a question of vision.
The late Bill Caddick wrote a wonderful song about a pig being hanged as a criminal in   medievaltimes.

Such a song - it wouldn't get anyone marching down the road, but my god! as a howl of protest at man's inhumanity, it worked.

Strange how a song - well an evening of song in - The Fitters Arms, Walsall   Barrie Robert's folk club - performed to half a dozen people can live on in your mind.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Long Firm Freddie
Date: 09 Apr 23 - 05:59 AM

John Shuttleworth protesting about Mars removing the cardboard tray from the Bounty bar (Mounds bar in the US). Does the Mounds bar still have a cardboard tray?

Mutiny Over the Bounty

LFF


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,Peter Laban
Date: 09 Apr 23 - 07:17 AM

Last night I was in a small theatre on the West Coast of Clare, most of the audience singing along to Andy Irvine's singing of 'you fascists bound to loose'.

My favourite, I don't know. I am not even sure I'd call it a 'protest song' but it should rank somewhere.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,Jerry
Date: 10 Apr 23 - 07:45 AM

Does Don’t Step on My Blue Suede Shoes count? Seriously though, how about Billy Edd Wheeler’s Coal Tattoo and The Coming of the Roads?


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Susanne (skw)
Date: 11 Apr 23 - 06:35 AM

There are so many excellent, memorable and eminently singable protest songs that it's difficult to pick THE one. But I do love Eric Bogle's "Plastic Paddy" with its grand last line "Where are you when we need you Christy Moore"!


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Neil D
Date: 14 Apr 23 - 05:02 PM

Hard to pick just one:
"What is Truth" - Johnny Cash
"I'm Gonna Say it Now" - Phil Ochs (Should make a comeback in light of the current book banning trend)
"Paradise" - John Prine
"What's Going On" - Marvin Gaye
"Only Our Rivers Run Free" - Mickey MacConnell

As a 12 year old living 20 miles from Kent, Ohio in 1970, Neil Young's "Ohio" has always had a particular resonance with me.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 14 Apr 23 - 06:13 PM

Only Our Rivers is a great song, agreed on that.

Sometimes it's the rendering just as much as the actual song that does it for me. Thinking of Dunlavin Green on Christy's album The Iron Behind The Velvet. A superb rendition, enhanced even more by the concertina playing at the end of the song by Noel Hill. In fact, speaking of Noel, he made several other stunning contributions on that album, which I always thought was one of Christy's best.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 04:50 AM

I dunno about that. Rivers can't run where they want. Not much freedom as far as I can see.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 05:56 AM

Rivers can't "want," Al. Rivers running free are the ones that don't have dams, weirs or constraining walls. So that means not all of them. An egregious example of a river stopped from running free was the Tees in glorious Upper Teesdale, dammed when Cow Green reservoir was constructed in the sixties. Two of England's finest waterfalls, Caldron Snout and High Force, were never again to enjoy their fearsome unpredictability, and some of England's rarest upland flora was destroyed. All in the name of progress. There was much outrage at the time but I haven't heard that a protest song was written about it.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 06:35 AM

Only about one-third of the world’s longest rivers remain free-flowing, meaning they have not been dammed or disrupted in man-made ways, reports a new landmark study. While there are a few exceptions, like Asia’s 1,700-mile long Salween River, most of the remaining free-flowing rivers longer than about 600 miles are now restricted to remote regions of the Arctic and to the Amazon and Congo Basins.Two-thirds of the longest rivers no longer flow freely—and it's harming us

A new study warns that many of the benefits rivers provide, from water to food to flood control, are increasingly at risk thanks to dams and diversions.
By Stefan Lovgren National Geographic


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 06:51 AM

I'll buy that, as long as we agree that rivers must abide by the laws of gravity!

Other abuses of rivers are the dumping of chemical or agricultural pollutants into them, too much abstraction of water for irrigation and the use of river water for cooling in power stations, the resulting heated water released being deficient in oxygen.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 06:59 AM

Rivers find the least form of resistance so, Yes.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Doug Chadwick
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 07:01 AM

...... rivers must abide by the laws of gravity!

When the tide comes in, some parts of of a river can run uphill.

DC


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 07:27 AM

They are still abiding by the laws of gravity, Doug. It's just that there's a greater opposing force in play. Like when I chuck a ball into the air.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 09:29 AM

I seem to remember there was this study about - Can water think? I can't remember what they decided.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Halfmoon Charlie
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 10:03 AM

This was the 1st song I ever learned to play on the guitar, somewhere back around 1964. over 50 years later, I can almost remember the words.

I should not presume to apply a definition to Dylan's lyrics; he's a better writer than I'll ever be. That said, his lyric is meant to be sort of a run through of popular images. The application of seeing what's right in front of us and the fact that we misinterpret what we see, questioning why that is so. In all of the 6 examples Dylan uses in this song, he admits that he just doesn't know the answer.

The road. The judgement of men by others no matter what one might do or accomplish, possibly alluding to black and brown men always being considered less than men.

The white dove. Why the white dove "sails" the seas is a stretch of the image, I suppose, and I haven't thought it out too much beyond the similarities of that character in Gilgamesh that kept releasing the birds after the flood. The flood obviously used in quite a few mythologies, and the dove acquired the image of the calm after the storm. How many floods (of whatever type) will have to be endured before the image can be put to rest?

There might also be a correlation in the relationship of the images from verse to verse.

Was Dylan commenting on the overuse of all the images? He was always attempting to move into new territory using the popular forms.

The "wind" itself, was popular with him; Blowin In The Wind, Idiot Wind, and I can't leave out the line: You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. But maybe I'm the one that's reaching too far for the meanings.
-Charlie


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Halfmoon Charlie
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 10:07 AM

Another Ochs song that seems really pertinent to today's times is "Love Me I'm A Liberal"
The attitude of pretending to care about issues, but being a total hypocrite when the rubber meets the road. The reason I left Twitter.
-Charlie


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 12:01 PM

For all we know water could be having a furious debate with itself -

Shall we flow uphill?
Why do we want to go up the hill? Its easier if we go the other way?

Ah yes but then we'll never know what is on the other side of the hill?
What about the laws of gravity?
I refuse to be screwed about Gravity.... Why should we be constrained by the Gravity family. when you're lost in the rain in Juarez, negativity might pull us through...


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Halfmoon Charlie
Date: 15 Apr 23 - 01:14 PM

Yep; there are so many ways of complicating simple expressions, but that's the nature of poetry in general. The Man With The Blue Guitar by Wallace Stevens... a hero's head, large eye And bearded bronze, but not a man. The imagery has to be wide and vague enough to appeal to a varied audience, but specific enough so the audience can suspend disbelief. Gravity, however, will always drop the heavy object on my toe. But does that mean it made a "conscious" decision to drop it? Almost everything is open for debate in poetry.
Ok, now back to moving compost.


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Subject: RE: Your favourite Protest song.
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 16 Apr 23 - 04:58 AM

The Man With The Blue Guitar
by Wallace Stevens

The man bent over his guitar,
A shearsman of sorts. The day was green.

They said, 'You have a blue guitar,
You do not play things as they are.'

The man replied, 'Things as they are
Are changed upon the blue guitar.'

And they said then, 'But play, you must,
A tune beyond us, yet ourselves,

A tune upon the blue guitar
Of things exactly as they are.'

II
I cannot bring a world quite round,
Although I patch it as I can.

I sing a hero's head, large eye
And bearded bronze, but not a man,

Although I patch him as I can
And reach through him almost to man.

If to serenade almost to man
Is to miss, by that, things as they are,

Say it is the serenade
Of a man that plays a blue guitar.

III
Ah, but to play man number one,
To drive the dagger in his heart,

To lay his brain upon the board
And pick the acrid colors out,

To nail his thought across the door,
Its wings spread wide to rain and snow,

To strike his living hi and ho,
To tick it, tock it, turn it true,

To bang from it a savage blue,
Jangling the metal of the strings

IV
So that's life, then: things as they are?
It picks its way on the blue guitar.

A million people on one string?
And all their manner in the thing,

And all their manner, right and wrong,
And all their manner, weak and strong?

The feelings crazily, craftily call,
Like a buzzing of flies in autumn air,

And that's life, then: things as they are,
This buzzing of the blue guitar.

V
Do not speak to us of the greatness of poetry,
Of the torches wisping in the underground,

Of the structure of vaults upon a point of light.
There are no shadows in our sun,

Day is desire and night is sleep.
There are no shadows anywhere.

The earth, for us, is flat and bare.
There are no shadows. Poetry

Exceeding music must take the place
Of empty heaven and its hymns,

Ourselves in poetry must take their place,
Even in the chattering of your guitar.

VI
A tune beyond us as we are,
Yet nothing changed by the blue guitar;

Ourselves in the tune as if in space,
Yet nothing changed, except the place

Of things as they are and only the place
As you play them, on the blue guitar,

Placed, so, beyond the compass of change,
Perceived in a final atmosphere;

For a moment final, in the way
The thinking of art seems final when

The thinking of god is smoky dew.
The tune is space. The blue guitar

Becomes the place of things as they are,
A composing of senses of the guitar.

VII
It is the sun that shares our works.
The moon shares nothing. It is a sea.

When shall I come to say of the sun,
It is a sea; it shares nothing;

The sun no longer shares our works
And the earth is alive with creeping men,

Mechanical beetles never quite warm?
And shall I then stand in the sun, as now

I stand in the moon, and call it good,
The immaculate, the merciful good,

Detached from us, from things as they are?
Not to be part of the sun? To stand

Remote and call it merciful?
The strings are cold on the blue guitar.

VIII
The vivid, florid, turgid sky,
The drenching thunder rolling by,

The morning deluged still by night,
The clouds tumultuously bright

And the feeling heavy in cold chords
Struggling toward impassioned choirs,

Crying among the clouds, enraged
By gold antagonists in air-

I know my lazy, leaden twang
Is like the reason in a storm;

And yet it brings the storm to bear.
I twang it out and leave it there.

IX
And the color, the overcast blue
Of the air, in which the blue guitar

Is a form, described but difficult,
And I am merely a shadow hunched

Above the arrowy, still strings,
The maker of a thing yet to be made;

The color like a thought that grows
Out of a mood, the tragic robe

Of the actor, half his gesture, half
His speech, the dress of his meaning, silk

Sodden with his melancholy words,
The weather of his stage, himself.

X
Raise reddest columns. Toll a bell
And clap the hollows full of tin.

Throw papers in the streets, the wills
Of the dead, majestic in their seals.

And the beautiful trombones-behold
The approach of him whom none believes,

Whom all believe that all believe,
A pagan in a varnished care.

Roll a drum upon the blue guitar.
Lean from the steeple. Cry aloud,

'Here am I, my adversary, that
Confront you, hoo-ing the slick trombones,

Yet with a petty misery
At heart, a petty misery,

Ever the prelude to your end,
The touch that topples men and rock.'

XV
Is this picture of Picasso's, this 'hoard
Of destructions', a picture of ourselves,

Now, an image of our society?
Do I sit, deformed, a naked egg,

Catching at Good-bye, harvest moon,
Without seeing the harvest or the moon?

Things as they are have been destroyed.
Have I? Am I a man that is dead

At a table on which the food is cold?
Is my thought a memory, not alive?

Is the spot on the floor, there, wine or blood
And whichever it may be, is it mine?

XXIII
A few final solutions, like a duet
With the undertaker: a voice in the clouds,

Another on earth, the one a voice
Of ether, the other smelling of drink,

The voice of ether prevailing, the swell
Of the undertaker's song in the snow

Apostrophizing wreaths, the voice
In the clouds serene and final, next

The grunted breath scene and final,
The imagined and the real, thought

And the truth, Dichtung und Wahrheit, all
Confusion solved, as in a refrain

One keeps on playing year by year,
Concerning the nature of things as they are.

XXX
From this I shall evolve a man.
This is his essence: the old fantoche

Hanging his shawl upon the wind,
Like something on the stage, puffed out,

His strutting studied through centuries.
At last, in spite of his manner, his eye

A-cock at the cross-piece on a pole
Supporting heavy cables, slung

Through Oxidia, banal suburb,
One-half of all its installments paid.

Dew-dapper clapper-traps, blazing
From crusty stacks above machines.

Ecce, Oxidia is the seed
Dropped out of this amber-ember pod,

Oxidia is the soot of fire,
Oxidia is Olympia.

XXXI
How long and late the pheasant sleeps
The employer and employee contend,

Combat, compose their droll affair.
The bubbling sun will bubble up,

Spring sparkle and the cock-bird shriek.
The employer and employee will hear

And continue their affair. The shriek
Will rack the thickets. There is no place,

Here, for the lark fixed in the mind,
In the museum of the sky. The cock

Will claw sleep. Morning is not sun,
It is this posture of the nerves,

As if a blunted player clutched
The nuances of the blue guitar.

It must be this rhapsody or none,
The rhapsody of things as they are.

XXXII
Throw away the lights, the definitions,
And say of what you see in the dark

That it is this or that it is that,
But do not use the rotted names.

How should you walk in that space and know
Nothing of the madness of space,

Nothing of its jocular procreations?
Throw the lights away. Nothing must stand

Between you and the shapes you take
When the crust of shape has been destroyed.

You as you are? You are yourself.
The blue guitar surprises you.

XXXIII
That generation's dream, aviled
In the mud, in Monday's dirty light,

That's it, the only dream they knew,
Time in its final block, not time

To come, a wrangling of two dreams.
Here is the bread of time to come,

Here is its actual stone. The bread
Will be our bread, the stone will be

Our bed and we shall sleep by night.
We shall forget by day, except

The moments when we choose to play
The imagined pine, the imagined jay.


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Mudcat time: 30 April 1:23 PM EDT

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