We stopped at the "Historic Trolley Pizzeria" on our way into Lowell Friday afternoon and then drove straight to Jack's grave. We found it pretty easy it being our 3rd trip there.
Me bringing a rose for Jack's grave from a bouquet Rick had brought me last week. |
An assortment of offerings - the shots, harmonica, a couple of beers, my rose, Rick's book, and the single malt 16 year old whiskey we brought for our toast. |
I read the 242nd Chorus from Mexico City Blues.
After leaving the grave we checked into our hotel - not an easy feat. It was so absurd I seriously thought we could be on candid camera or something, but it gave us a chance to talk to the other people in line and met a couple in town for the festival from Bordeaux, France and a professor from Quebec with several students. We then walked over to Ricardo's, getting lost en route and finding the prof and his students wandering as well. We all found it a few minutes later and had a beer, talked with Mike, listened to a NY street poet named Steve Dalachinsky whom I really liked. Then this Jack impersonator told a little story about the first time he met Ken Kesey - not a pretty story. :-)
This is "Jack" hanging out at Ricardo's - the first pub on our tour. |
We stopped at Cappy's Copper Kettle second where we met a pretty interesting local dude playing pool. He told us he was a fighter - a kick boxer I think - and told Rick he looked like Kevin Nash who apparently is a wrestler. It's very ironic that Rick is probably the only person in the bar other than this guy who would have a clue as to who Kevin Nash was. After seeing a photo of Kevin Nash I must say I don't see the resemblance - 6 ft 7 - 300 pounds of solid muscle would be the first difference I notice.
Next we went on to Major's Pub. Rick had been posting on his Kerouac-obsessed blog all week that anyone who came up to him and said Rumplestiltskin would get a free book. While Rick was outside taking photos I grabbed a table and invited some other folks to sit with us. I got talking to Melissa, Todd and Nancy and then Rick came and joined us. As we talked, Melissa said - hey, are you that guy with the blog? I said, what's the magic word and she nailed it! Rick had been carrying a couple of books around so true to his pledge, gave her a signed copy. It turns out she'd come across his blog when googling a Kerouac quote and saw his posts. Her partner Todd was the Kerouac lecturer for Saturday which turned out to be very interesting.
The last pub was The Worthen House - the same place we ended last year with all the antique belt driven fans. As we were going in, the woman in front of us was telling the guy collecting $5 cover charge that she hadn't brought enough cash with her so I paid her way in. We hung out and listened to Reverend JJ - a pretty good solo guitar and harmonica player and then a rather loud and unique band afterwards. Walked back to our room about 11:30 I guess.
We had breakfast at the hotel and walked over to Kerouac Park for the bus tour just in time to hear more poetry by Dalachinsky and then a little talk and some flute tunes by Daivd Amram.
Here's a photo of Steve Dalachinsky from Saturday at Kerouac Park. |
David Amram |
People listening at Kerouac Park |
Rick reading at open mike upstairs at The Worthen House |
We had planned to go the the Centralville Social Club and listen to music at 8 but we were pretty beat (so to speak) at this point and decided to go grab some dinner at a cool pub we'd walked by earlier called The Old Court. After a nice dinner we knew the music was a no go and decided we'd be redeemed if we went back to the hotel and streamed Howl from Netflix. Loved the movie - great dialogue.
When we got up on Sunday we decided to go down to Concord, MA to Sleepy Hollow Cemetery where Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa May Alcott, and Ralph Waldo Emerson are all buried.
Entrance to Author's Ridge |
Me in front of Louisa May Alcott's grave. |
Here's Henry David Thoreau's tombstone - very simple, as it should be. There's a much larger family marker next to his stone. |
Rick at Thoreau's grave. He read an excerpt from Civil Disobedience. |
Here's me at Nathaniel Hawthorne's grave. |
And here's Rick at Ralph Waldo Emerson's grave. I read the poem, The Apology. |
The Apology
Think me not unkind and rude,
That I walk alone in grove and glen;
I go to the god of the wood
To fetch his word to men.
Tax not my sloth that I
Fold my arms beside the brook;
Each cloud that floated in the sky
Writes a letter in my book.
Chide me not, laborious band,
For the idle flowers I brought;
Every aster in my hand
Goes home loaded with a thought.
There was never mystery,
But 'tis figured in the flowers,
Was never secret history,
But birds tell it in the bowers.
One harvest from thy field
Homeward brought the oxen strong;
A second crop thine acres yield,
Which I gather in a song.
All in all, a fun and interesting weekend. We had a nice drive home during which I stopped at Starbucks for a caffeinated mocha frapacinno, so here it is 2:00 a.m. and I'm still wide awake and putting my blog together. I'll be glad tomorrow - and when I look back in 10 years - that I did.
1 comment:
thoughtful post.
welcome joining poets rally week 53 today, a free verse is accepted.
you get appreciated by your peers by making commitment, you may win official award if you stay in for 3 weeks in a row.
check us out today.
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