Home > Author > Charles Olson >

" I come back to the geography of it,
the land falling off to the left
where my father shot his scabby golf
and the rest of us played baseball
into the summer darkness until no flies
could be seen and we came home
to our various piazzas where the women
buzzed


To the left the land fell to the city,
to the right, it fell to the sea


I was so young my first memory
is of a tent spread to feed lobsters
to Rexall conventioneers, and my father,
a man for kicks, came out of the tent roaring
with a bread-knife in his teeth to take care of
the druggist they’d told him had made a pass at
my mother, she laughing, so sure, as round
as her face, Hines pink and apple,
under one of those frame hats women then


This, is no bare incoming
of novel abstract form, this
is no welter or the forms
of those events, this,


Greeks, is the stopping
of the battle


It is the imposing
of all those antecedent predecessions, the precessions
of me, the generation of those facts
which are my words, it is coming


from all that I no longer am,
yet am, the slow westward motion of


more than I am


There is no strict personal order
for my inheritance.


No Greek will be able
to discriminate my body.


An American
is a complex of occasions,
themselves a geometry
of spatial nature.


I have this sense,
that I am one


with my skin


Plus this—plus this:

that forever the geography

which leans in

on me I compell

backwards I compell Gloucester

to yield, to

change

Polis

is this "

Charles Olson , The Maximus Poems


Image for Quotes

Charles Olson quote : I come back to the geography of it,<br />the land falling off to the left<br />where my father shot his scabby golf<br />and the rest of us played baseball<br />into the summer darkness until no flies<br />could be seen and we came home<br />to our various piazzas where the women<br />buzzed<br /><br /><br />To the left the land fell to the city,<br />to the right, it fell to the sea<br /><br /><br />I was so young my first memory<br />is of a tent spread to feed lobsters<br />to Rexall conventioneers, and my father,<br />a man for kicks, came out of the tent roaring<br />with a bread-knife in his teeth to take care of<br />the druggist they’d told him had made a pass at<br />my mother, she laughing, so sure, as round<br />as her face, Hines pink and apple,<br />under one of those frame hats women then<br /><br /><br />This, is no bare incoming<br />of novel abstract form, this<br />is no welter or the forms<br />of those events, this,<br /><br /><br />Greeks, is the stopping<br />of the battle<br /><br /><br /> It is the imposing<br />of all those antecedent predecessions, the precessions<br />of me, the generation of those facts<br />which are my words, it is coming<br /><br /><br />from all that I no longer am,<br />yet am, the slow westward motion of<br /><br /><br />more than I am<br /><br /><br />There is no strict personal order<br />for my inheritance.<br /><br /><br /> No Greek will be able<br />to discriminate my body.<br /><br /><br /> An American<br />is a complex of occasions,<br />themselves a geometry<br />of spatial nature.<br /><br /><br /> I have this sense,<br />that I am one<br /><br /><br />with my skin<br /><br /><br /> Plus this—plus this:<br /><br />that forever the geography<br /><br />which leans in<br /><br />on me I compell<br /><br />backwards I compell Gloucester<br /><br />to yield, to <br /><br />change<br /><br /> Polis<br /><br />is this