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Sunday, May 19, 2024

The poem tree


  

 "The Poem Tree was a beech tree with a poem carved into it by Joseph Tubb, located on Castle Hill at Wittenham Clumps in Oxfordshire, England. 

The tree was believed to be around 300 years old, with Tubb's poem being carved in the 1840s. 

The tree died in the 1990s and rotted completely while standing, before collapsing during a period of inclement weather in July 2012." 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Poem_Tree




 

"As up the hill with labr'ing steps we tread

Where the twin Clumps their sheltering branches spread

The summit gain'd at ease reclining lay

And all around the wide spread scene survey

Point out each object and instructive tell

The various changes that the land befell

Where the low bank the country wide surrounds

That ancient earthwork form'd old Mercia's bounds

In misty distance see the barrow heave

There lies forgotten lonely Cwichelm's grave. 

Around this hill the ruthless Danes intrenched

And these fair plains with gory slaughter drench'd

While at our feet where stands that stately tower

In days gone by up rose the Roman power

And yonder, there where Thames smooth waters glide

In later days appeared monastic pride.

Within that field where lies the grazing herd

Huge walls were found, some coffins disinter'd

Such is the course of time, the wreck which fate

And awful doom award the earthly great."

Fruit of Bigotree, USA

  

Their love story began in an age of fear; their legacy grows in a Hood River Valley orchard

https://www.hereisoregon.com/people/2024/05/their-love-story-began-in-an-age-of-fear-their-legacy-grows-in-a-hood-river-valley-orchard.html

"life for the Jinguji family and others of Japanese descent in the United States became a desperate struggle to prove their loyalty to a nation that looked upon them with suspicion and mistrust.


On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, forcing more than 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry on the West Coast, including nearly 4,000 Oregonians, to report to relocation centers 


More than two-thirds of them were U.S. citizens by birth, or Nisei. Their Japanese-born parents, or Issei, were not allowed under exclusion laws to apply for citizenship. That wouldn’t change until 1952. 


Not one of the detainees had been charged or convicted of any crimes related to espionage." 



Saturday, May 18, 2024

Visualize a 200 foot wide canopy

" A tree ring, also once popularly called a "folly", 

is a decorative feature of 18th and early 19th century planned landscapes in Britain and Ireland, 

 comprising a circular earthen enclosure 

 (a "tree ring enclosure") planted with trees. 

While several different species of tree were used, beech and Scots pine were especially popular for their tall, straight growth and landscape value. 

 Tree rings are a development of the naturalistic 18th century style of landscape architecture." 



"A 200 outer circle" from an apple tree "15 feet in circumference"    

So, were the branches about 80-90 feet extending out from the trunk? In all directions?

What is an "outer circle?" 200 feet is the size of a City Block, an Acre. 

Do a sketch for crying out loud . It sounds like an Apple-Banyan.

__ 

Example:

Pecan, 500 Traditions Boulevard


Circumference: 16 feet

Height: 107 feet

Crown: 100 feet  

https://www.bgdailynews.com/news/sierra-club-measures-bowling-greens-biggest-trees/article_9c8f83d7-6516-51a9-bf29-6f689f434cc0.html 


"Oakes' tree stands near the bank of the Ohio river, where it was planted in 1791 or '92. The circumference of the trunk at the smallest place is twelve feet two inches. 

 It has five principal branches, the largest of which has a circumference of seven feet, and the smallest three feet. This is probably the largest apple tree in the United States if not in the world" 


https://chestofbooks.com/gardening-horticulture/American/Apple-Trees-Of-Great-Size.html

______

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_ring_(landscape_feature) 

 

"Creation of a tree ring involved raising a circular hedge bank: this was planted with quickset to provide a fast-growing, thorny barrier to protect the young trees from livestock. 

 The term "tree ring enclosure" is generally used to describe the resulting bank,  

while "tree ring" is used to refer to the trees themselves;  

in some cases an existing manmade feature such as a barrow or motte was used. 

 While the outer ring of trees often featured beeches, in the 19th century the interior of tree rings was often planted with ornamental conifers" 


"In Ireland, tree rings were often planted as a landscape embellishment on top of drumlins, and occasionally made use of an existing rath or ringfort by creation of a small additional bank" 


____ 


"Consisting of a roughly circular low earthen rampart surrounded by a ditch, Chanctonbury Ring is thought to date to the late Bronze Age or early Iron Age. The purpose of the structure is unknown but it could have filled a variety of roles, including a defensive position, a cattle enclosure or even a religious shrine. After a few centuries of usage, it was abandoned for about five hundred years until it was reoccupied during the Roman period. Two Romano-British temples were built in the hill fort's interior, one of which may have been dedicated to a boar cult." 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chanctonbury_Ring

 

"Archaeological research at Lancing Ring has identified it as the likely site of an Iron Age shrine and Romano-Celtic temple. The Romano-Celtic temple site has been identified as the large sloping field above the recycling centre and children's play area at the top of Halewick Lane.  this land is now used for agricultural purposes. An Anglo-Saxon burial ground has also been identified to the east of Lancing Ring, towards Hoe Court. Iron Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon coins have been discovered at Lancing Ring." 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancing_Ring

 

The view from The Clumps was described by the artist Paul Nash, who first saw them in 1911, as "a beautiful legendary country haunted by old gods long forgotten". 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wittenham_Clumps 


"The Clumps are the most visited outdoor site in the administrative county of Oxfordshire, attracting over 200,000 visitors a year." 


"The eastern side of Castle Hill is the location of the Victorian 'Poem Tree' ,

 a beech tree which had a poem carved into it by Joseph Tubb of Warborough Green in 1844–45.   

The tree, which died in the 1990s, collapsed in 2012; there is now a stone commemorating the 150th anniversary of the carving."

___ 


(Our oaks in Swale Canyou were, are, several hundred years old. " The meadow" with an enormous dead oak on it's side, maybe was an acre in size. 

The "spaceship tree" my kids played on it plenty.

Maybe 10-20 visitors per year. Shhhh.)

Fortunate in Family

 https://forestbloodgood.blogspot.com/2020/06/graduation-letter-1985-rear-admiral-js.html 

 

(Linda Mesa Way, Napa, California) 


***

Dear Forest,


It May have been Mark Twain who said to a reporter

"I don't care what you say about me

but please spell my name right!"


You also got our zip code wrong

and can blame that on Sis Dorothy,

I'll bet. We forgive you.


Congratulations of finishing the first lap

of the big rat race. Good luck from here on!


JS Champlin


5-25-85



 



(Forest Youngblood!) 
At least spell my name right. I forgive Great Aunt, she paid my tuition at KU.)


His sister Ruth certainly was thinking of the Youngblood Hotel in Enid, not her great nephew


Forest L. Bloodgood  


____ 


Detached in October 1948, he assumed command of  

USS Mt. Olympus, 

 and continued in command of that Amphibious Force, Flagship, in the Atlantic, until December 1949.  



"USS Mount Olympus (AGC-8) was a Mount McKinley-class amphibious force command ship, named for the highest peak in the Olympic Mountains of the State of Washington. She was designed to be an amphibious forces flagship—

a floating command post

 with advanced communications equipment and extensive combat information spaces 

to be used by the amphibious forces commander 

and landing force commander 

 during large-scale operations. " 






"She arrived Leyte Gulf 20 October, there to serve as the floating headquarters for the huge U.S. Army invasion force. 

 The landing force was subjected to continual air attacks, but its survival was assured by the American naval victory in the  

Battle of Leyte Gulf,  

which destroyed the Japanese Navy as an effective combat force." 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Mount_Olympus 



The Battle of Leyte Gulf 

(Japanese: レイテ沖海戦, romanized: Reite oki Kaisen, lit. 'Leyte Open Sea Naval Battle', Filipino: Labanan sa Golpo ng Leyte) 

 was the largest naval battle of World War II 

 and by some criteria the largest naval battle in history, 

 with over 200,000 naval personnel involved"


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leyte_Gulf


Gently crushed atat

  

They've finally repainted some bike lane, whoopee do 

It's easy to be enraged 

Year by year they fade  

No help city bureau craplunch

Like tardigrade sleeping thru progress, 

The bike rider crushed they glance atat opera intermission.

 Memory fades as well 

Our biology so what pass the tofu spread, 

Our caregivers for formative years 

Just 24-7 stand-ins to get us prepped to babysit tycoons kids 

Or be line cooks for other

Essential workers. If they ride 

To jobs, there's always the sidewalk

Just plow over the tents, extended legs, 

Push the wheelchair aside full of clothes. God bless the stripes, 

They'll mark a lane until next winter gravel erase their purpose. 

Ride nude and bluetooth free, 

Drown out the traffic going to get gas to 

Full up the endless cycle grind. 





SE pdx



Ode on Solitude, Alexander Pope ,1717

  

Happy the man, whose wish and care

   A few paternal acres bound,

Content to breathe his native air,

                            In his own ground.


Whose herds with milk, whose fields with bread,

   Whose flocks supply him with attire,

Whose trees in summer yield him shade,

                            In winter fire.


Blest, who can unconcernedly find

   Hours, days, and years slide soft away,

In health of body, peace of mind,

                            Quiet by day,


Sound sleep by night; study and ease,

   Together mixed; sweet recreation;

And innocence, which most does please,

                            With meditation.


Thus let me live, unseen, unknown;

   Thus unlamented let me die;

Steal from the world, and not a stone

                            Tell where I lie. 





1717

Alexander Pope

Kiss Up (It's time the United States kissed and made up with Iran.(1987, Letter to the Editor)

  

It's time the United States kissed and made up with Iran.(1987, Letter to the Editor)


November 5, 1987  





 It's time the United States kissed and made up with Iran. Face it, we need their oil, and we need


translations for their torture manuals. The U.S. could learn a lot from Iran and their methods of


dealing with "deviants." Although the U.S. has been oozing down escalator of individual


freedom at a pretty decent rate for a capitalistic dictatorship, we'll need diesel-powered sneakers


to revert to the modern-day practices of Iran.


     I'm sure we can do it and you, the voter, are just the person to tie those red-white-n'blue laces.


Do it nice and tight like a noose or corset.


     A headline on October 13 read "Iranian executed by stoning." This immediately piqued my


hope for mankind. I mean, how often do you actually get to read about first-rate, modern-day


Salems? Top notch coverage, eh?


     The story reported that an Iranian clergyman was executed by stoning after being found guilty


of "gross immorality, drinking alcohol, possessing narcotics." Whew, and they say you can't have


a good time in Tehran!


     But think about how the United States could benefit in adopting such a policy.


     It's obvious that the first to go would have to be the door-to-door salesmen/evangelists such


as Jim Baker and ol' Oral. And if we took Reagan's Cabinet and staff members, we'd find ourselves


being ruled by the White House hairdresser------maybe we already are.


     McFarlane failed at overdosing on sleeping pills, and Reagan has to be shovel-fed uppers to


stay awake and man the Red Button. Poindexter reeled off close to 190 "I don't remembers"


during the Contra-expose, leaving him buried in a heavy heap of fraud. North and his cast of


millions, formerly lead by Bill Casey, or whomever of the Chronically Ignorant Agency, are still


thumbing through the land-mine section of a Sear's catalog, looking to lose some Swiss change.


     Taking this lot of losers and judging them as one big Incompetent, we find ourselves looking


for bricks and smiling. And we don't need to stop with the government and pulpit; we can just


go down the line and kill ourselves as well.


     Maybe the U.S. could open dialogue with the moderates of Iran if we sent them midnight


shipments of sandstone and granite. But then, we never know when we may need the stones


to build our own Berlinese Wall over the rights of the individual.


     Nancy must have gotten quite a shock when she read the aforementioned headlines about


executions by stoning: "Those drug-pushing fanatics, O heavens those barbarians!" She


undoubtedly fails to think of the way in which our country murders its own citizens. We stone


them to death using lethal intravenous---heinous injections-----everything is tidy and quiet.


     What an awesome head rush.


     It all boils down to something similar to this: Our governments are closet sado-masochists.


The U.S. hangs around the schoolyard after dark, knowing well the fanatical bully is walking


toward visionary Mecca at all times. Then we find Iran dropping firecrackers at our nuclear


tugboats and planting whoopie-cushion mines before our microscopic omnipotent eyes.


     We just need to form a corporate merger and be friends again. They need McDonalds like


the plague, and we could learn the mechanics of happy genocide.










F. Bloodgood, Stillwater, Okla. Junior


(University of Kansas, The Kansan "Mailbox" Nov. 5, 1987 


_____ 


"Swedish Coconut Oil Massage" 


...Four nights later...





 


 



Divested (Californy stop)

" Iran has never responded with such force to previous attacks, including many covert Israeli operations on its soil, or 

 the US assassination of the powerful Quds Force leader Qassem Soleimani in Iraq in 2020." 


____ 


silence after a jubilant sunset from mount tabor

Deep silence of the woods carless, peopleless, and windless still 

Has something happened I ask myself, not looking at the news 

Glad for respite from the day

Sick from people in general

And our stupid, incompetent ways 

OJ----never watched his murder saga, neither 

It wants to captivate attention

To rent cars or to juice racism 

I. Don't. Care. 

I'm divested, I can write from my 

Solitude surrounded by a shield of Douglas fir allies 

I can smile at photos or humorous things I wrote stoned thirty years ago 

Or be pleased critical with minor successes in the arts over the years 

We're still nobodies on a drowning inundated map 

I got hit by a car as it rolled thru a stoplight this afternoon

I had the crosswalk light to proceed, the car having just come off highway 205 acted like it was stopping 

It was an act, the California stop they call it

A nice car with a upper middle class Asian lady about 70 years old 

She had a passenger too what the fuck lady

I pounded my left fist on her hood as she kept moving forward 

I felt I was going to dent the steel I pounded so hard, pointing 

To the crosswalk signal with 4 seconds still counting down 

There was error and confusion at all my shopping experiences, too 

Now some idiot shushes his dog on the tennis court it's one am 

A stick dropped on the asphalt 

Bad fido 

The breeze hasn't caught its wind yet, sneaky midnight tromp

I'm the fly on the wall literally 

My BB pun close by but in a zipped bag, a sock puppet napping 

I went to a thrift store today jean shopping 

Nothing my size of interest I bought some sporty slacks but after trying them on in my storage I decided to return them 

Skintight and wrong, wrong, wrong 

The very small store had a smattering of browsers, the radio ran an ad for California psychics, 

When You Need Certainty was its pitch, California Psychics

A man made a joke about it to the room, I joined in it's redundant, right 

Looking at overpriced worn boots for $99, surely they jest 

Danners or not too'spensive and scuff city 

More bonk bonk from the not silent one dog night show 

I hear you creep 

I've had it with yesterday now gotta stop vexing 

Let the holy land sort out their own rodeo no harm no foul my bike uncrushed, my dignity burnished 

I just rode away 

Turned the cheek 

Climbed the hill 

Ate my grub went bed before ten 

Two months and not a drop of beer 

Not a puff of weed 

Taking things in stride 

Even the teenagers on repeat I got a mosquito in my ass 

As dusk marbles the sky crimson magenta pink, 


You get what you pay for kids. 














Friday, May 17, 2024

Soule, Flatt fair haired rare


  

Great Grandpa Wallace Flatt, Wife Hannah Priscilla Soule (holding my dad's aunt Bess, the towhead Blondie) 


Grandma Lilly Flatt not born yet.


Always interesting to find fair haired ancestors, they're few and far between.


https://www.geni.com/people/Wallace-Flatt/6000000008908001425 



___  


A well known Soule red hair, related 10 generation back, as cousins I think: 




 Silas Soule  

Silas Stillman Soule 

 (/ˈsoʊl/ [sole]) (July 26, 1838 – April 23, 1865)  

 was an American abolitionist, military officer and 'conductor' on the Underground Railroad.  

 As a Kansas Jayhawker, he supported and was a proponent of John Brown's movement in the time of strife leading up to the American Civil War.

 _____ 




Resolved White

Also Known As: "Mayflower Passenger" 

Birthdate: circa September 09, 1615

Birthplace: Leiden, Zuid-Holland, Nederland (Netherlands)

Death: September 19, 1687 (68-76)

Salem, Essex, Massachusetts 

Place of Burial: GPS (lat/lon): 42.08565, -70.68166, Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States

Immediate Family:


Son of  

William White, "Mayflower" Passenger 

 and Susanna (Jackson) Winslow

 "Mayflower" Passenger 


Husband of Judith White and Abigail White 

___ 

William White, "Mayflower" Passenger

Also Known As: "Pilgrim William White", "William", "Mayflower Compact", "White"

Birthdate: before circa January 25, 1587

Birthplace: Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England

Death: February 21, 1621

Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts (Died soon after arrival in Plymouth) 

Place of Burial: Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States


Immediate Family:

Son of Edward White and Thomasine White

Husband of Susanna (Jackson) Winslow, "Mayflower" Passenger

Father of Resolved White, "Mayflower" Passenger and Peregrine White, "Mayflower" Passenger

Brother of Robert White; Thomasine White and Martha White

Half brother of 

Henry May, of Wisbech; 

 Jacomine May;  

Barbara May;  

John May, Il, of Wisbech;  

Mary May and 1 other 



Peregrine White 

 (c. 20 November 1620 – 20 July 1704) 

 "was the first baby boy born on the Pilgrim ship the Mayflower in the harbour of Massachusetts, 

 the second baby born on the Mayflower's historic voyage, 

 and the first known English child  

born to the Pilgrims in America


 His parents, William White and his pregnant wife Susanna, with their son Resolved White and two servants, came on the Mayflower in 1620. 

 Peregrine White was born while the Mayflower lay at anchor in the harbor at Cape Cod.  

In later life he became a person of note in Plymouth Colony, active in both military and government affairs. "


That's Far Out.


(But this is even further out) 


Judith White (Vassall) 

Also Known As: "Vestal", "Judith Vestal", "Judith Vassall"
Birthdate: 1619
Birthplace: Stepney, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom) 

Death: April 03, 1670 (50-51)
Marshfield, Plymouth, Massachusetts, Colonial America  



William Vassall, Pilgrim of the "Blessing" 


"Stepney, Middlesex (London), England. He was a highly educated gentleman who was far ahead of his time 


(Other than owning thousands of slaves )


and publicly supported freedom of religion. In March 1629 he was recorded in the Charter for the Massachusetts Bay Company as a patentee, along with his brother Samuel. The Charter founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony, bringing over 20,000 English immigrants to New England in the 1630s.


Dug deep enough..... 





 


 


 

Old friends

 



 



 

 




My only Poetry Teacher, OSU 1985-86

 Nuala Archer (born 1955)  


is an American poet of Irish descent, author of five books, most recently, Inch Aeons (Les Figues Press, 2006). 

 Her first book, Whale on the Line, won the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award in 1980.  

She has published poems in literary journals and magazines including The American Poetry Review, Mid-American Review and Seneca Review. 

 Until 2011, she was an associate professor in the English Department at Cleveland State University. During the 1990s, she briefly served as the director of Cleveland State University Poetry Center. She has taught literature and edited the Midland Review at Oklahoma State University. 

 She has also taught at Yale University and Albertus Magnus College. She was educated at Wheaton College in Illinois (see List of Wheaton College (Illinois) alumni), Trinity College Dublin and the University of Wisconsin.[clarification needed] 

 Born in Rochester, New York to Irish parents, her family moved to Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Panama. "



 

One is not to develop a crush on 


A. A teacher 

B. A gay woman, 12 years older


But I was 18, and had just lost my mom to divorce. She moved away to Louisiana with my younger brother. 


It wasn't a serious crush. I admired her. I never took another poetry Writing class, and was accepted to graduate school Columbia, and Brown 


Nuala wrote one of my recommendation letters. I couldn't have asked for a better guide and example in college.  


Thanks, thousands of poems, later.




Love, your Dad

 

 

My incredible beautiful children! 



Happy Birthday, Isis. 

 


 
After Richard III performance, Isis and their sister. Winningstad Theater, Portland. 



Rhododendron Garden, crystal springs, Eastmoreland. We had many nice times there enjoying birds, the lake, and plants in serenity. With Mesa and mom. 



Holding Isis, Surreal, Natalie holding baby Mesa. At our home in the woods, Swale Creek, 2002. Big sister and middle sister, both.  



I love you two beyond everything in Life . Here's a hug and memory hug I'm happy to share on the Innrnet😍 happy birthday! Love, your Dad. 

Perpetual Trust

  

"Maintaining a positive, nourishing vibe at the store,”  

the unassuming longtime leader of the organic grocery store said, “is central to taking care of our staff and our customers.” 


https://www.opb.org/article/2024/05/16/perpetual-purpose-business-trust-oregon-companies/ 


"For more than 30 years, McComas was the owner, until October 2023 when Sundance became owned by its purpose.  

That’s right, its purpose.


"That’s when McComas joined a small but growing number of U.S. business owners choosing to sell or gift their company to a trust, instead of selling to a person or another company, so they can protect its values even when the owners are gone. 

 The model is called a “perpetual purpose trust” and offers independent business owners a new way to preserve their companies." 


"Employees at Sundance receive health care benefits, profit-sharing checks, and discounts on food and supplements. " 



Thursday, May 16, 2024

Safety Wrap

" thoughts are given for action’s government;


Where action ceases, thought’s impertinent: 


Our sphere of action is life’s happiness,


And he that thinks beyond, thinks like an ass." 



____ 


His deeds bubble crap, incumbent sacrament 

Popped by the finger in nervous parliament 

A zoom call be none, neither was quick nor safe 

Our fingertip a tip for owner haste. 


Carrot or stick, it's myth by now 

Eat one or neither, sacred cow 

Coax don't parent succeeding blame 

Coach ain't boss, quit the game 

 

Reins in hand, the future unsure 

Our grip unnerved no less impure 

Free reigns allow unbridled charge 

How many bridge undid by barge 


Studied your life long, language and mind 

Master today, fingerprints blind 





SE pdx 

For Isis 





Beautiful kids


 
 




 


 



Home in the woods, Swale Canyon 2001


  



What's in a name

  

Just half a block ahead, the house

Where surreal was named, 

Only blocks from where she was born 30 years ago.

The sun sets, brilliant may evening, 

Over West hills, I imagine Maui 

2500 miles away, isis born 24 years ago.

Daisies in the lawn this time of year 

Beautify the lush spring grass around me. 

To my right only half a mile, 

Our Mesa was born almost 22 years ago. The house repainted looks the same.  

Sun sets, the air warm and golden.

I stand and stuff my picnic away for a short bike to a tavern. It's just a hop away, if my age will comply I'd be delighted. 

Born at homes all three, one 

Rented we lived in; the next, owned by our wealthy midwife; the last, the midwife's rental she'd moved from the island to be 

On mainland. The daisies partly in twilight thrive.  

Mothers comfortable with nature 

And skill, and health, and fortune 

Forsook a hospital in their unsick delivery, landlord's surprise.

One died of asthma in his driveway, literally, only a couple months later

One both landlady and midwife 

Gave the shirt from her back to clad us in clapboards victorian.

It's not the sun that reaches Maui,

Rather the ocean 

time beams to us in shelter. 




 

May 16

SE Portland 


(All three girls were named in their birth homes....only Surreal's name occured to me prior to birth) 











Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Rocky Road punk squirt.

 "Jeffrey Sutton Frederick (1950–1997) was a songwriter, guitarist and performer specializing in good-time Americana music—an idiosyncratic blend of folk, country and rock and roll.   




He was a largely uncredited predecessor of today's alternative country music genre. Also notorious for his pranks, he was a prodigious songwriter, specializing in sly, hilarious and soulful pieces. 

 Frederick's tightly crafted songs and intricate guitar work were praised by the likes of Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton, and Dan Hicks" 



I played once with Jeffery, around 1996,  at the Belmont Inn. Jim Boyer invited me, we picked Jeffery up at his house. He rode in the back of my Toyota truck


"Frederick moved to Portland, Oregon, in 1975 at the urging of the Holy Modal Rounders' Robin Remaily. His singing partner, Jill Gross, joined him later that year, and together they started the Clamtones on the West Coast. In an unusual arrangement, the band performed as the Clamtones when Frederick was the frontman and as the Holy Modal Rounders when Steve Weber was frontman.  

These "two bands in one" often shared the same stage, with the Clamtones typically playing the opening and closing sets, as documented in Jeffrey Frederick and the Clamtones, B.C. and Steve Weber and the Holy Modal Rounders, B.C. (Frederick Productions) 

 In addition to Frederick and Jill, the band consisted of Dave Reisch (bass and vocals), Robin Remaily (guitar and mandolin), Teddy Deane (horns and woodwinds), Richard Tyler (piano), and R. "Willy" North (drums). 

 They soon gained the reputation of "the greatest... f---ing bar band in America". 

"In 1976 the bands took off on a 9,000-mile Bicentennial tour of the perimeter of the United States. 

 During this tour, Frederick was arrested in Texas for performing in a dress, and the band was escorted out of Alabama by the state police, for singing the irreligious gospel tune, "Let Me Down" 

 ("Take these nails right out of my hands/And I swear you will get to the promised land/All your sins are forgiven/now let me down..."). 

 During the tour, Frederick recorded Have Moicy! ("best album of the year," Village Voice, "the top folk album of the rock era," Rolling Stone Magazine) 

 with Jill, Michael Hurley, Peter Stampfel, Paul Presti, Dave Reisch, Robin Remaily, Wax Iwaskiewicz and Robert Nickson. 

 His contribution to this groundbreaking record is widely recognized. For example, rock critic Robert Christgau has described Frederick as "the secret hero of my beloved Have Moicy"   


____ 



"The Bad Livers were an American band from Austin, Texas, United States, whose inventive musical style defied attempts to categorize them according to existing genres.

 Their influences included bluegrass, folk, punk, and other musical styles. The original lineup, formed in 1990, included Danny Barnes on banjo, guitar and resonator guitar, Mark Rubin on upright bass and tuba, and Ralph White III on fiddle and accordion. Barnes composed the majority of the group's original songs. When White left the group at the end of 1996, he was briefly replaced by Bob Grant on mandolin and guitar. Barnes and Rubin then continued to perform and record as a duo until unofficially dissolving the band in 2000. 


Barnes insisted that the Bad Livers were not a bluegrass band, but had created an original sound:  

"This isn't bluegrass and it isn't this or that. 

 It's Bad Liver music. We end up making our own thing."Barnes' original compositions were featured on their first album, Delusions of Banjer, released in 1992 on Quarterstick Records and produced by Paul Leary of the Butthole Surfers.  

The album was praised for "Barnes's strong material, as well as the group's tight musical interaction".Barnes credited the latter with improving the former:  

"The musical telepathy is really good. I can sort of tailor-make a song to the guys' playing, make the song fit what they're doing, since I write most of the material " 

"Rubin claimed that they had decided to incorporate the accordion and tuba into the band to counteract their growing popularity, but to no avail: their audience continued to widen and more critics saw beyond the gimmicky descriptions to the band's innovation and skill. 

 The Washington Post described them as "truly great", The Times-Picayune praised their "serious musicianship" and Barnes' "soulful, urgent lead vocals", while Rolling Stone admired their "striking blend of virtuoso flash and poignant simplicity".

Don McLeese of the Austin American-Statesman twice described the Bad Livers as "Austin's best band" and raved of one live show: "The uncommon telepathy enjoyed by Danny Barnes, Mark Rubin and Ralph White makes the band's frenetic acoustic interplay sound like the work of a six-armed, multistringed monster " 


Bad Livers played Belmont Inn, Portland Oregon. That musta been 1996. Jim Boyer Band opened for them at Berbatis. I played that show. 

(The seating capacity was approximately 500 people in 2009. The nightclub closed down shortly after the death of the owner Ted Papaioannou on November 8, 2010)

____ 


I'm recalling this as I sit in the Belmont Inn, looking out at a couple guys busking by the coffee shop across the street. The guitar player was a total jerk to me last week. Now, he's got a stand up bass player, a pile of empty cans around his set up, playing to an empty sidewalk.  


" All you play is classical. Nobody likes you. You sound like the ice cream man with your amp. Play acoustic, like a pro. I ought to punch you out."



A woman put $70 in my case this morning. 

Rocky Road, punk squirt.



A Satyr Against Reason and Mankind" 1679, John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester.

  

Were I (who to my cost already am

One of those strange, prodigious  creatures, man)

A spirit free to choose, for my own share

What case of flesh and blood I pleased to wear,

I’d be a dog, a monkey, or a bear, 

Or anything but that vain animal,

Who is so proud of being rational.


   The senses are too gross,  and he’ll contrive

A sixth, to contradict the other five,

And before certain instinct, will prefer 

Reason, which fifty times for one does err;

Reason, an ignis fatuus  of the mind,

Which, leaving light of nature, sense, behind,

Pathless and dangerous wand’ring ways it takes

Through error’s fenny bogs and thorny brakes; 

Whilst the misguided follower climbs with pain

Mountains of whimseys, heaped in his own brain;

Stumbling from thought to thought, falls headlong down

Into doubt’s boundless sea where, like to drown,

Books bear him up awhile, and make him try

To swim with bladders  of philosophy;

In hopes still to o’ertake th’ escaping light;

The vapour dances in his dazzling  sight

Till, spent, it leaves him to eternal night.

Then old age and experience, hand in hand, 

Lead him to death, and make him understand,

After a search so painful and so long,

That all his life he has been in the wrong.

Huddled in dirt the reasoning engine lies,

Who was so proud, so witty, and so wise. 


   Pride drew him in, as cheats their bubbles   catch,

And made him venture to be made a wretch.

His wisdom did his happiness destroy,

Aiming to know that world he should enjoy.

And wit was his vain, frivolous pretense 

Of pleasing others at his own expense.

For wits are treated just like common whores:

First they’re enjoyed, and then kicked out of doors.

The pleasure past, a threatening doubt remains

That frights th’ enjoyer with succeeding pains. 

Women and men of wit are dangerous tools,

And ever fatal to admiring fools:

Pleasure allures, and when the fops escape,

’Tis not that they’re beloved, but fortunate,

And therefore what they fear, at heart they hate.


   But now, methinks, some formal band and beard

Takes me to task. Come on, sir; I’m prepared.


   “Then, by your favor, anything that’s writ

Against this gibing, jingling knack called wit

Likes me  abundantly; but you take care 

Upon this point, not to be too severe.

Perhaps my muse were fitter for this part,

For I profess I can be very smart

On wit, which I abhor with all my heart.

I long to lash it in some sharp essay, 

But your grand indiscretion bids me stay

And turns my tide of ink another way.


   “What rage ferments in your degenerate mind

To make you rail at reason and mankind?

Blest, glorious man! to whom alone kind heaven 

An everlasting soul has freely given,

Whom his great Maker took such care to make

That from himself he did the image take

And this fair frame in shining reason dressed

To dignify his nature above beast; 

Reason, by whose aspiring influence

We take a flight beyond material sense,

Dive into mysteries, then soaring pierce

The flaming limits of the universe,

Search heaven and hell, Find out what’s acted there, 

And give the world true grounds of hope and fear.”


   Hold, mighty man, I cry, all this we know

From the pathetic pen of Ingelo;

From Patrick’s Pilgrim, Sibbes’ soliloquies, 

And ’tis this very reason I despise:

This supernatural gift, that makes a mite

Think he’s an image of the infinite,

Comparing his short life, void of all rest,

To the eternal and the ever blest;

This busy, puzzling stirrer-up of doubt 

That frames deep mysteries, then finds ’em out,

Filling with frantic crowds of thinking fools

Those reverend bedlams, colleges and schools;

Borne on whose wings, each heavy sot can pierce

The limits of the boundless universe; 

So charming ointments make an old witch fly 

And bear a crippled carcass through the sky.

’Tis this exalted power, whose business lies

In nonsense and impossibilities,

This made a whimsical philosopher [90]

Before the spacious world, his tub prefer,

And we have modern cloistered coxcombs who

Retire to think ’cause they have nought to do.


   But thoughts are given for action’s government;

Where action ceases, thought’s impertinent: 

Our sphere of action is life’s happiness,

And he that thinks beyond, thinks like an ass.

Thus, whilst against false reasoning I inveigh,

I own  right reason, which I would obey:

That reason which distinguishes by sense 

And gives us rules of good and ill from thence,

That bounds desires, with a reforming will

To keep ’em more in vigour, not to kill.

Your reason hinders, mine helps to enjoy,

Renewing appetites yours would destroy. 

My reason is my friend, yours is a cheat;

Hunger calls out, my reason bids me eat;

Perversely, yours your appetite does mock:

This asks for food, that answers, “What’s o’clock?”

This plain distinction, sir, your doubt secures: 

’Tis not true reason I despise, but yours.


   Thus I think reason righted, but for man,

I’ll ne’er recant; defend him if you can.

For all his pride and his philosophy,

’Tis evident beasts are, in their own degree, 

As wise at least, and better far than he.

Those creatures are the wisest who attain,

By surest means, the ends at which they aim.

If therefore Jowler finds and kills the hares

Better than Meres   supplies committee chairs, 

Though one’s a statesman, th’ other but a hound,

Jowler, in justice, would be wiser found.


   You see how far man’s wisdom here extends;

Look next if human nature makes amends:

Whose principles most generous are, and just, 

And to whose morals you would sooner trust.

Be judge yourself, I’ll bring it to the test:

Which is the basest creature, man or beast?

Birds feed on birds, beasts on each other prey,

But savage man alone does man betray. 

Pressed by necessity, they kill for food;

Man undoes man to do himself no good.

With teeth and claws by nature armed, they hunt

Nature’s allowance, to supply their want.

But man, with smiles, embraces, friendship, praise, 

Inhumanly his fellow’s life betrays;

With voluntary pains works his distress,

Not through necessity, but wantonness.


   For hunger or for love they fight and tear,

Whilst wretched man is still in arms for fear. 

For fear he arms, and is of arms afraid,

From fear, to fear successively betrayed;

Base fear, the source whence his best passions came:

His boasted honor, and his dear-bought fame;

The lust of power, to which he’s such a slave, 

And for the which alone he dares be brave;

To which his various projects are designed;

Which makes him generous, affable, and kind;

For which he takes such pains to be thought wise,

And screws his actions in a forced disguise, 

Leading a tedious life in misery

Under laborious, mean hypocrisy.

Look to the bottom of his vast design,

Wherein man’s wisdom, power, and glory join:

The good he acts, the ill he does endure, 

’Tis all from fear, to make himself secure.

Merely for safety, after fame we thirst,

For all men would be cowards if they durst.


   And honesty’s against all common sense:

Men must be knaves, ’tis in their own defence. 

Mankind’s dishonest; if you think it fair

Among known cheats to play upon the square,

You’ll be undone.

Nor can weak truth your reputation save:

The knaves will all agree to call you knave. 

Wronged shall he live, insulted o’er, oppressed,

Who dares be less a villain than the rest.


   Thus sir, you see what human nature craves:

Most men are cowards, all men should be knaves.

The difference lies, as far as I can see, 

Not in the thing itself, but the degree,

And all the subject matter of debate

Is only: Who’s a knave of the first rate?


   All this with indignation have I hurled

At the pretending part of the proud world, 

Who, swollen with selfish vanity, devise

False freedoms, holy cheats, and formal lies

Over their fellow slaves to tyrannize.


   But if in Court so just a man there be

(In Court, a just man, yet unknown to me) 

Who does his needful flattery direct,

Not to oppress and ruin, but protect

(Since flattery, which way soever laid,

Is still a tax on that unhappy trade);

If so upright a statesman you can find, 

Whose passions bend to his unbiased mind,

Who does his arts and policies apply

To raise his country, not his family,

Nor, whilst his pride owned avarice withstands, 

Receives close bribes through friends’ corrupted hands— 


   Is there a churchman who on God relies;

Whose life, his faith and doctrine justifies?

Not one blown up with vain prelatic pride,

Who, for reproof of sins, does man deride;

Whose envious heart makes preaching a pretense, 

With his obstreperous, saucy eloquence,

To chide at kings, and rail at men of sense;

None of that sensual tribe whose talents lie

In avarice, pride, sloth, and gluttony;

Who hunt good livings, but abhor good lives; 

Whose lust exalted to that height arrives

They act adultery with their own wives,

And ere a score of years completed be,

Can from the lofty pulpit proudly see

Half a large parish their own progeny; 

Nor doting bishop, who would be adored

For domineering at the council board,

A greater fop in business at fourscore,

Fonder of serious toys, affected more,

Than the gay, glittering fool at twenty proves 

With all his noise, his tawdry clothes, and loves;


   But a meek, humble man, of honest sense,

Who preaching peace, does practice continence;

Whose pious life’s a proof he does believe

Mysterious truths, which no man can conceive. 

If upon earth there dwell such God-like men,

I’ll here recant my paradox to them,

Adore those shrines of virtue, homage pay,

And, with the rabble world, their laws obey.


   If such there be, yet grant me this at least: 

Man differs more from man, than man from beast.

 



1679



Notes

1. Prodigious, “monstrous” or “unnatural.”


2. A common definition going back to Aristotle insisted that homo est animal rationalis, “Man is the reasoning animal.”


3. Gross, “imprecise.”


4. Ignis fatuus, “Will with the wisp; Jack with the lanthorn” (Johnson). A “false fire,” known to lead travelers astray.


5. Bladders, “floats” or “water-wings.”


6. Dazzling, “dazzled.”


7. Engine, “Any mechanical complication, in which various movements and parts concur to one effect” (Johnson).


8. Bubbles, “dupes.”


9. Formal band, a “Geneva band,” worn by many clergymen.


10. Likes me, “I like” (like meant “please”; compare Spanish me gusta).


11. Nathaniel Ingelo, author of Bentivolio and Urania; Simon Patrick, author of The Parable of the Pilgrim; and Richard Sibbes. All were authors of popular religious works.


12. Witches were supposed to anoint themselves in order to be able to fly. Charming here means “magical.”


13. Diogenes the Cynic, an ancient Greek philosopher who argued that virtue consisted in avoiding pleasure. He spent much of his life in a bathtub.


14. Own, “admit” or “acknowledge.”


15. Sir Thomas Meres, a politician.


16. Durst, “dare.”


17. “Nor, while his pride withstands admitted avarice 


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wilmot,_2nd_Earl_of_Rochester