Description
By the 1960s, Kenneth Patchen had carved a fiercely independent path through American poetry β equal parts pacifist, jazzman, mystic, and painter. Refusing the academic route, Patchen instead created picture-poems, fusions of hand-lettered verse and psychedelic imagery that prefigured the Beats and anticipated the punk-zine aesthetic by decades. From his wheelchair in Palo Alto, he turned suffering into technicolor empathy β a life spent putting soul to paper, no matter how strange the shape.
This is A Patchen Picture-Poem No. 31, titled βI Am the Ghost Ofβ¦β, published in 1966 by Leslie Tohn Imports with permission from New Directions. Originally appearing in Hallelujah Anyway (1966), this image and verse combo is classic Patchen: anarchic typography, cosmic humor, and a toothy cartoon creature trailing a winged cat and cryptic personal wisdom. βLucky you made no deposit on the countryβjust throw it away when youβre finished with it.β A chilling joke? A prophetic jab at consumer culture? Yes.
A very scarce, collector-grade piece for fans of Beat ephemera, outsider art, and poetic resistance.
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