Anarchy 66/Adrian Mitchell, poet 1966
Adrian Mitchell, poet 1966
Poets can be dangerous fellows, not washing, questioning the basic structure of our society, travelling on trains without paying their fares, refusing to conform and leading dubious sex lives. Lunatics, lovers and so forth. Plato was the first aspiring politician to suggest excluding such people from society.
are paying for the cold war
paying in every sense
while the cost of the cold war goes up and up.
We will pay for kicking Red China in the teeth
We will pay for arming the South African fascists
We’ll pay eventually
of our own lives and our children’s lives.
The mandarins of our culture may claim that this is not real poetry. Its tone is so different from The Wasteland. “I think we are in rats’ alley Where the dead men lost their bones.” They claim that all propaganda is bad art. Which is not to say the poems must not have a theme, or that poets must not try to change our way of seeing the world. It means only that poets must not write about politics or comment on the society around them.
But since Christopher Logue collected a £1 from each of his friends and published his first volume of poetry at their expense, establishing himself as a poet, the mandarins have been losing influence. In 1958 Logue published a broadsheet, “To My Fellow Artists” and went around selling it himself. Now his latest broadsheet “I am going to vote Labour because God votes Labour” has been sold in all the best bookshops and has received attention in the press.
Logue is well known throughout the country as a performer, because of his readings in canteens for Centre 42 and because of the Poetry and Jazz recitals. He and Yevtushenko and Allen Ginsberg found a new audience for poetry, leaving the way open for new poets. The finest of whom is Adrian Mitchell.
“It’s your standard of living
Mitchell’s shy, tense and mumbling performances are now familiar to a wide audience. His slight build is emphasised by the jeans and boiler jacket that he affects, making him look like the bewildered Johnnie Ray on a massive and alien stage. (He would no doubt prefer a comparison with Brecht’s proletarian gear.) A flatly regional accent is ideally suited for snarling out lines such as, “Tom Sawyer’s heart has cooled, his ingenuity flowers at Cape Canaveral.” Each time the audience laughs, or applauds the end of a poem, he seems to grow more bitter. Any recent sign of relaxation, the hint of a smile, do not alter his intensely savage persona.
A master of the Trafalgar Square rallies and the Beat barbecues at the Albert Hall, a pupular draw at the St. Pancras Town Hall—
because
most poetry ignores most people.
His prasing and his wit sometimes parody the adman, and sometimes have the slickness of an adman. “Snow white was in the News of the World—