Its one of those Internet moments: Ive come across a chapbook by Joe Gould and Id love to fill in the story for all those who want to dig behind the wonderful movie about his Secret and get the poem itself. The chapbook in the Fales Collection at NYU isnt copyrighted. What to do?...
I go to the terrific Joseph Mitchell essay collection, Up In the Old Hotel (Vintage, 1993 compare prices to buy the book), which tells the story of this legendary proto-Beat Village boho and is the only source for Goulds poetry in print. Mitchell is the other central character in the film Joe Goulds Secret (Ian Holm plays Gould and Stanley Tucci, Mitchell). He wrote two profiles of Gould for The New Yorker, and the movie is a gentle evocation of their relationship, and of those bygone Village days. I loved it.
Three of the Gould poems in Mitchells book make it to the screen. In a scene reminiscent of The Congo cave hazing in another poetry film, Dead Poets Society, Gould leads a boho Village party conga line to the chant:
There are flies on meAnother poem occurs when Joe crashes a society poetry gathering, where he reads:
There are flies on you
But there are no flies on Jesus
My Religion
In the winter Im a Buddhist
And in summer Im a nudist
One of Joes performances revolved around his ability to speak seagull he could translate any poem into seagull, flapping his wings and skreeking. He confided in Mitchell that the reason he was blackballed from the 50s lefty art world was a proletarian poem he recited called The Barricades, that closed in a satirical yuk:
This prissy hedge in front of the BrevoortThe final poem of Goulds in Mitchells writings is to the most renowned literary zine of the era, The Dial, which actually published Goulds essay, Civilization. Heres Joes last word on the publication that gave him his brush with credibility:
Is but a symbol of the coming revolution.
These are the barricades,
The barricades,
The barricades.
And behind these barricades,
Behind these barricades,
Behind these barricades,
The Comrades die!
The Comrades die!
The Comrades die!
And behind these barricades,
The Comrades die
Of overeating.
Who killed the Dial?It was Joe Goulds Oral History of the World, the longest book never written, that brought him fame, and was his secret, and makes him a hero in the US Oral History/Performance Poetry world. Its time that his poems see print.
Who killed the Dial?
I, said Joe Gould,
With my inimitable style,
I killed the Dial.
(The chapbook in the Fales Collection is called VI by Joseph Ferdinand Gould/Privately Printed for John S. Mayfield/Jacksonville-on-the-Saint Johns/1943. You can also find Mitchells Joe Gould writings in a beautiful slender volume called Joe Gould's Secret (Random House, 1999 compare prices to buy the book).
~Bob Holman

