Alan DeNiro's Taverner's Koans, "a one-room schoolhouse of experimental poetics," has a Gallery of Underrated Poets that's well worth exploring (as I could tell instantly from the fact that it included Lorine Niedecker). I'm not sure John Clare and Stephen Crane can be considered underrated, but I'm not going to quibble, since I've already discovered the wonderful Melvin Tolson and I've barely begun digging. Here's a snippet from Tolson's The Harlem Gallery (1965):
Sometimes a Roscius as tragedian,
sometimes a Kean as clown,
without Sir Henry's flap to shield my neck,
I travel, from oasis to oasis, man's Saharic up-and-down.
Melvin B. Tolson was a big favorite of my mentor in poetry (himself an unknown, Jack McManis), so I have fond memories of reading Tolson at an early age and feeling my mind wonderfully expanded as a result.
Posted by: Dave at September 14, 2004 03:43 PMLH--you're right about Lorine Niedecker: I'm currently of the opinion that when you've said every good thing you can say about her, you haven't yet said too much. I spent two weeks going through her library, recording her marginalia, and felt she was looking over my shoulder the whole time, shaking her head at me....
Posted by: Tom Montag at September 14, 2004 04:22 PMOh--she was shaking her head at me because she was VERY private; I'm not sure she'd approve of me going through her books that way.
I envy you the chance to go through her marginalia -- what a fragrant garden that must be!
Posted by: language hat at September 14, 2004 06:43 PMMy presentation of the results of my persual was made to the Wisconsin Writers Conference this past June, and - if you're interested - I posted the text of my remarks at: http://middlewesterner.blogspot.com/2004_06_07_middlewesterner_archive.html
Posted by: Tom Montag at September 14, 2004 06:52 PMUnderrated? Experimental? Have at the Electronic Poetry Center where you'll find literally 100s of contemporary writers by that description.
http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/
As for underrated experimental dead poets my favorite since I was a kid is Abraham Lincoln Gillespie. His work is collected in "The Syntactic Revolution" (New York: Out of London Press, 1980)
Posted by: mIEKAL aND at September 18, 2004 12:55 AMAt your EPC link I find Zukofsky/100, The Louis Zukofsky Centennial Conference at Columbia University & Barnard College, this very weekend (Friday, Sept. 17 to Sunday, Sept. 19, 2004). Damn, I wish the timing were better; I'd like to have checked it out.
Posted by: language hat at September 18, 2004 01:25 AMBelatedly--just to let you know, I've overhauled the site:
http://www.taverners-koans.com
With some new essays as well. Hope you enjoy.
Alan
Posted by: Alan at November 30, 2004 01:35 PM