Foreword 
RAY BREMSER (1934–98)
From Poems of Madness (“City Madness”)
GREGORY CORSO (1930–2001)
Hello
From Ode to Coit Tower 
From Transformation & Escape
I Am 25
Poets Hitchhiking on the Highway
Away One Year 
After Reading “In the Clearing” 
Writ on the Eve of My 32nd Birthday
Second Night in N.Y.C. After 3 Years 
ELISE COWEN (1933–62)
“Trust yourself—but not too far” 
ROBERT CREELEY (1926– )
Chasing the Bird
The Dishonest Mailmen
I Know a Man 
The End 
The Hill 
The Rain
For Love
DIANE di PRIMA (1934– )
Revolutionary Letter #1
Poem in Praise of My Husband (Taos)
The Quarrel 
April Fool Birthday Poem for Grandpa 
Poetics 
LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI (1919– )
#9 (“Truth is not the secret of a few”)
#13 (“It was a face which darkness could kill”) 
#22 (“crazy to be alive in such a strange world”) 
#39 (“A blockage in the bowel”’) 
ALLEN GINSBERG (1926–97)
From Howl 
“Back on Times Square, Dreaming of Times Square” 
My Alba 
Song 
Malest Cornifici Tuo Catullo 
Tears
From Kaddish 
A Supermarket in California 
Sunflower Sutra 
From America 
BARBARA GUEST (1923– )
Parachutes, My Love, Could Carry Us Higher 
Sunday Evening
 
LEROI JONES (Amiri Baraka) (1934– )
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note
Sex, like desire 
War Poem 
Political Poem 
LENORE KANDEL (1932– )
Enlightenment Poem 
Blues for Sister Sally 
Junk/Angel 
BOB KAUFMAN (1925–86)
Benediction 
West Coast Sounds—1956 
Fragment
Ginsberg (for Allen)
Abomunist Manifesto 
JACK KEROUAC (1922–69)
Mexican Loneliness
How to Meditate
A Sudden Sketch Poem 
 116
Hymn
From Mexico City Blues
TULI KUPFERBERG (1923– )
“I dreamed of a bum seven foot tall” 
“My muse goosed me” 
JOANNE KYGER (1934– )
“It is lonely”
“My father died this spring” 
May 29 
“It’s a great day”
PHILIP LAMANTIA (1927– )
From Hypodermic Light
High 
“Man is in pain”
DENISE LEVERTOV (1923–97)
The Gypsy’s Window 
The Flight 
The Marriage 
The Marriage (II) 
Poem from Manhattan 
JOANNA McCLURE (1930– )
A Vacancy 
MICHAEL McCLURE (1932– )
The Flowers of Politics (I) 
The Flowers of Politics (II)
Mad Sonnet 13 
DAVID MELTZER (1937– )
From the Untitled Epic Poem 
6th Raga: For Bob Alexander 
15th Raga: For Bela Lugosi
HAROLD NORSE (1916– )
Picasso Visits Braque 
I Would Not Recommend Love
“I Have Always Liked George Gershwin More than Ernest Hemingway” 
I Have Seen the Light and It Is My Mind
Hotel Nirvana 
FRANK O’HARA (1926–66)
Personal Poem 
Autobiographia Literaria 
Today
My Heart 
Avenue A
Now That I Am in Madrid and Can Think 
Having a Coke With You 
PETER ORLOVSKY (1933– )
Peter’s Jealous of Allen 
“Writing poems is a Saintly thing”
Some One Liked Me When I Was Twelve
Collaboration: Letter to Charlie Chaplin 
MARIE PONSOT (1921– )
Take My Disproportionate Desire 
Matins & Lauds 
Communion of Saints: The Poor Bastard Under the Bridge 
Easter Saturday, NY, NY 
Rockefeller the Center 
GARY SNYDER (1930– )
Migration of Birds 
A Sinecure for P. Whalen 
Under the Skin of It
August on Sourdough, a Visit from Dick Brewer 
ANNE WALDMAN (1945– )
How the Sestina (Yawn) Works
Revolution 
Diaries 
The Blue That Reminds Me of the Boat When She Left
LEW WELCH (1926–72)
“Whenever I make a new poem” 
“I know a man’s supposed to have his hair cut short” 
PHILIP WHALEN (1923– )
For C. 
20:vii:58, On Which I Renounce the Notion of Social Responsibility 
Prose Take-Out, Portland, 13:ix:58
Something Nice About Myself 
True Confessions 
JOHN WIENERS (1934– )
A Poem for Tea Heads 
From A Poem for Painters 
A Poem for the Insane 
LETTERS, ENCOUNTERS, & STATEMENTS
ON POETICS
Donald Allen (1912– ) 
William Burroughs (1914–97) 
Gregory Corso 
Lawrence Ferlinghetti 
Allen Ginsberg 
Jack Kerouac
Frank O’Hara 
Peter Orlovsky 
Acknowledgments 
Index of First Lines