
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Monday, December 22, 2008
Poetry in Motion, poetry on the buses

It was April 2004 when Poetry in Motion was launched at Paragraphe Books, located on McGill College Avenue. Organized by several local poets, poems by Montreal poets were displayed on buses.


Here is Linda Leith, founder of Blue Metropolis, at the Poetry in Motion launch.



My poem, "because reality is too much", in the display bus.

A bus, parked outside of Paragraphe Books, in which the poems were displayed, with the Poetry in Motion advertisement displayed on the bus.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Friday, December 19, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Ten)
This has been given.
1.
The position… the continent
between the gulf of Mexico on
Mediterranean upon the other.
civilization are to be found.
of Atlantis occupied is
the one hand and the
Evidences of this lost
in the Pyrenees and
surface at the period of
projections.”
the first, or that known as
Casian and Carpathian, or
and which lies now much in
and much in the rolling
Northern portions were then
polar regions were then
more of a tropical and
would be hard to describe
into the Atlantic Ocean.
an inhabited land and very
portion of this country,
then all in the ocean; only
the regions that are now
and Arizona formed the
as the United States. That
formed the outer portion
, Yucatan and America.
portions. . . that must have
a portion of this great
Indies, or the Bahamas, are
be seen in the present. If the
made in some of these
mini and in the Gulf Stream
may be even yet determined.”
2.
This has been given.
the beginning, or in the
Garden of Eden, in that
the desert, yet much in
lands there. The extreme
the southern portions, or
turned to where they occupied
semi-tropical regions; hence
the change. The Nile entered
What is now the Sahara was
fertile. What is now the centre
of the Mississippi basin, was
the plateau was existent, or
portions of Nevada, Utah
greater part of what we know
along the Atlantic Seaboard
Morocco, British Honduras
There are some protruding
at one time or another
continent. The British West
a portion of same would
especially, or notably in
through this vicinity, these
____________________________________________
Cut-up of an original text on Atlantis, by Edgar Cayce
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Nine)
Cut up of an original text on Atlantis, by Edgar Cayce
Monday, December 15, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Eight)
___________________________________
Cut-up of an original text, Critias, by Plato
Friday, December 12, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Seven)
____________________________________
Cut-up of an original text, Critias, by Plato
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Six)
Cut up of an original text, Critias, by Plato
Saturday, December 6, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Five)
____________________________________
Cut up of an original text, Timaeus, by Plato
Friday, December 5, 2008
At Blue Bonnets Racetrack, Montreal (One)



Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Four)
Cut-up of an original text, Timaeus, by Plato
Monday, December 1, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Three)
Cut-up of an original text, Timaeus, by Plato.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Upstairs at the Atwater Library







Photos taken upstairs at the Atwater Library, located at Atwater near Ste. Catherine Street, Montreal. Their website reads:
The Atwater Library and Computer Centre (ALCC), located in a 1920s heritage building in western downtown Montreal, is a community-oriented facility with a library, a multi-faceted computer centre, and an auditorium seating 100.ALCC was founded in 1828 as the Mechanics’ Institute of Montreal, and it is the oldest lending library in Canada. The building is a National Historic Site. Officially known as the Atwater Library of the Mechanics’ Institute of Montreal, ALCC is an independent facility open to all residents of Canada. Funding is primarily by private donations and internally-generated activities. ALCC is a registered charity.
The Atwater Library and Computer Centre (ALCC), located in a 1920s heritage building in western downtown Montreal, is a community-oriented facility with a library, a multi-faceted computer centre, and an auditorium seating 100.ALCC was founded in 1828 as the Mechanics’ Institute of Montreal, and it is the oldest lending library in Canada. The building is a National Historic Site. Officially known as the Atwater Library of the Mechanics’ Institute of Montreal, ALCC is an independent facility open to all residents of Canada. Funding is primarily by private donations and internally-generated activities. ALCC is a registered charity.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (Two)
Cut-up of an original text by Louis Dudek,
Atlantis, Delta Canada, Montreal, 1967
Friday, November 28, 2008
Reading at Haven Art Gallery, NYC, September '08

Last September '08, CZ and I read at the Haven Art Gallery on Bruckner Boulevard in the South Bronx, NYC. It was 100 F in the shade... Above: Haven Art Gallery, .


CZ at the podium...
Here is Carol Novack who organized the reading. Carol is the publisher and editor of the widely read Mad Hatter's Review.
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis (One)
___________________________________
Cut-up of an original text by Louis Dudek,
Atlantis, Delta Canada, Montreal, 1967
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Stephen and Walt
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Cutting-up Atlantis
Cutting-up Atlantis uses excerpts from four texts that all deal, in one way or another, with the lost continent of Atlantis. Each of these texts has been cut-up and the cut-up texts from each of these are included in this new work.
The first text that was cut-up are pages from Atlantis, a book length poem by Louis Dudek, published by Delta Press, Montreal, in 1967. Dudek is an important Canadian poet whose vision extended beyond his native country to Europe, to Atlantis, and finally to the infinite.
Two important Socratic dialogues, Timaeus and Critias, written around 500 B.C. by Plato, are the oldest historical and literary references to Atlantis. Whether Plato meant these to be read as allegory or as historical fact is not known. Pages chosen randomly from these two dialogues by Plato have also been cut-up and reassembled.
The fourth text is taken from Edgar Cayce on Atlantis, written by Cayce’s son Edgar Evans Cayce, and published in 1968. This book offers an overview of Cayce’s psychic readings on Atlantis. From this text I have cut-up quotations by the “sleeping prophet,” Edgar Cayce, that are included in Edgar Evans Cayce’s book; nothing written by Edgar Evans Cayce has been used in Cutting-up Atlantis.
In Cutting-up Atlantis, derived from texts by Louis Dudek, Plato, and Edgar Cayce (a more disparate group is difficult to find!), I have created a new text that has something of the feeling of an ancient document that has survived from antiquity. Cut-ups remind me of skimming a text; reading only a fragment of the complete text discovers meaning. Cut-ups, the act of cutting-up and reassembling the text, are a kind of editing without an editor. Cut-ups are also “found texts,” the poetry in them is recreated and revisioned in the cut-up process. Reading the cut-ups, the mind looks for meaning—it looks for consistency, a coherent thesis, and connections between ideas and images—even though there may be, in fact little or no meaning in the cut-up text. Meaning—what is meaningful, what gives meaning and connection to life—can be found even in the randomness and apparent meaninglessness of a cut-up text.
Stephen Morrissey
Samhain; Guy Fawkes Day,
November 5, 2008
Sections One and Two:
Cut-up of an original text by Louis Dudek,
Atlantis, Delta Canada, Montreal, 1967
Cut up of an original text, Critias, by Plato
Sections Nine and Ten:
Cut up of an original text on Atlantis, by Edgar Cayce
Sections Three to Five:
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