Refugee, Tsazac, Guatemala, 83: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 6 September 2014
Refugees, Ixil Triangle, Guatemala, 82: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 8 February 2005
Dance of Conquest, Chichicastenango, Guatemala: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 30 January 2005
Scavenging at the Dump, Guatemala, 1985: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 14 November 2014
Scavenging, Guatemala: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 18 February 2005
Peasants hunting peasants, Guatemala, 1983: photo by Marcelo Montecino, 19 July 2017
What happens when a great civilization that uses money meets one that does not? They smash each other to smithereens. The horror of [Columbus'] lettera rarissima is fully retained in events. Having sucked the gold out of the Caribbean, Columbus and his successors extinguished almost all the human life. The labour forced on the natives shattered not only their customary subsistence but also their morale, and many simply suicided. By the 1520s, when the Spanish turned their attention to Mexico, the islands of Cuba, Española, Puerto Rico and Jamaica were, according to Las Casas, depopulated. On the mainland Bernal Díaz, an old soldier who had served with Cortés in the conquest of Mexico, would not sleep on a bed in his farm in Guatemala (unless there happened to be gentlemen staying); but paced with his wounds under the wet stars; and each time he closed his eyes he saw his companions dragged up the pyramids, and then their quaking hearts in the pyre-light; and men and horses crashing off the causeway. The disciples of Bartolomé de Las Casas were in despair at the condition of the Indians, which seemed a poor exchange even for the introduction of God's incomparable grace to a hemisphere.
James Buchan: from A Disease of the Heart, in Frozen Desire: the Meaning of Money, 1997
Isidra Larena Calderon hugs her son Jonathan Leonardo after they were reunited in Guatemala City on Tuesday, August 7: photo by @jbmoorephoto via CNN Photos @CNNPhotos, 8 August 2018
Emotional photos show kids reuniting with their deported parents: photos by John Moore/Getty Images, CNN, 8 August 2018
Nine Guatemalan children were reunited with their parents Tuesday, months after they had been separated at the US border as part of the Trump administration’s “zero-tolerance” immigration policy.
The
parents were among hundreds of migrants who had been deported without
their children. Getty Images photographer John Moore was there to
capture the emotional scenes.
“I was concentrating on taking photos, in a
really cramped space, so I couldn’t listen in on much of their
conversations,” Moore said. “At one point I heard a father say
‘Perdoname’ (‘Forgive me’) to his son when they were reunited. He, like
most parents, didn’t know they might be separated from their children
after crossing the border into the US.”
The children flew to Guatemala City from New York, where some of them had been held since being separated from their parents. After being processed at the airport, they were taken to a local shelter where their parents were waiting. Moore called the reunions “bittersweet, at best.”
“There were tears of joy and relief, but also of anguish and regret,” he said.
These are the first nine children to be returned to their deported parents in Guatemala, according to the country’s social welfare ministry. In June, a federal judge ordered the US government to reunite all parents and children it had separated at the border.
The émigré spiders would have been something to see. Your archaeological work here feels necessary. There's an abrasive veracity to the picture.
ReplyDeleteThe US has no proper sense of how that other continent has shaped its psyche; poor Guatemala, the mid-section of the umbilicus.
The thought of that inner life/ Lebensraum is terrifying.
Tom, in loving memory. Don from Lilliput Review.
ReplyDeleteGoodbye Tom Clark. Travel well. We will miss your poems, these photos, your spirit, the gifts you gave us for seeing the world.
ReplyDeleteGary Lawless
RIP, Mr. Clark. You are one of the folks who helped to keep me informed on what was happening around our lonely planet, and - most importantly - you strived to put our fellow human's lives into the picture, something the MSM newz rarely, if ever, does. You shall be gravely missed.
ReplyDeleteI will miss you each day and each night.
ReplyDeleteFirst thing I remember is hearing is that Ted Berrigan poem about Tom. One of the lines went, "Give him a mask and he'll show you the truth." It's an important poem I think. At least it was to me. It cut through the flack. Cut some slack. And then I met Tom, at his house with Noel Black, Ed Berrigan, Micah Ballard and maybe Cedar Sigo? We used to do that kind of thing often, drop in on The Poets. Anyway he was a great host. I remember he was excited to play an old Donovan track for us. And of course there was poetry talk all night. I remember when we left, he held my hand for the longest time, in both of his, and looked me deep in the eyes. For an uncomfortably long time. It felt, even then, as if he was looking into the future, seeing me here now, looking back at him, beyond the mask.
ReplyDeleteI hope this blog will edify and enlighten for a few millennia or more. It's a treasure. I'll come back and visit soon.
Many, many thanks, Tom. A bow in sorrow and in homage. Blessings for the journey into the stars. You shall forever be missed.
ReplyDeleteFrom the time some time ago that I happened upon your blog, I have drawn inspiration from your commentary, poetry, and images and shared some of my own poems in the comments. Your sense of justice and devotion to truth were untarnished and profound. May you always be remembered for the extraordinary poet and person you were. The world is the sorrier for your absence. May peace be with you.
ReplyDeleteDear Tom,
ReplyDeleteThanks for this and for everything else, always there and always arriving here and now still always here. Love to you in the big wild blue up there yonder.
Steve
“Time’s winged chariot,” he once wrote, “is double parked near the eternity frontier.”
ReplyDeleteI will miss you...
What a beautiful last blog. How you continued to burn with that energy and passion that lived in everything you did. Where does one go now for the tears and laughter? Happy you didn't have to witness Fulham's 3-1 loss to Tottenham.
ReplyDeleteLove you Tom
Such sudden grief. Dear Tom, it's a shock and I'm in disbelief that your work has come to stop. This blog has been one of the great works of the era, combining images and text and, often, music. I can't imagine that it, like you, is gone. I hope to find out about memorial and attend. Condolences to Angelica. Hilton
ReplyDeleteSuch sudden grief. Condolences to Angelica and to all the many who have read this blog and Tom's books.
ReplyDeleteHilton
And what is now missing, Tom, are your replies to these our comments.
ReplyDeleteSo much gratitude for reading / hearing your voice over the decades. At one time I was a young man in need of inspiration from another, still young but older, wiser man: "Because life is a family. / Did I drive right?" Blessings to you, Tom Clark, and to your family and friends.
ReplyDeleteOff Ache News
ReplyDeleteTom (Poet) Clark
Funny as all get out
Finally got out of Dodge
Everything is upside down.
ReplyDeleteThat title is supposed to be Eff as in Fucking (effing auto correct), but without editor TC I can't get out of my own effing way. Guess we'll all have to find our own way. Thank you, Angelica, for being his and our shining light. k
ReplyDeleteStones (1969) was the first single individual's collection of poems I think I ever owned; I would have been 17 at the time. Be at peace, Tom Clark, and thank you for your torrent of words across our shared lifetime.
ReplyDeleteOh, this sudden grief.
ReplyDeleteThank you Tom & Angelica for the blog & the works . . .
Emptiness Is Our Lot In Life
ReplyDeleteRest in peace, friend--
For where you were only
A minute ago, the vacant
Space is now full
Of longing.
The price of admission was putting up with his difficult moods....but it was well worth it. In the early 90s, I studied Wyatt, Herrick, Marvell, Keats Pound and Berrigan at his feet. (I missed Olson.)
ReplyDeleteTom Clark was a great and loving mentor who combined scholarship and artistic creation and Keats and Kerouac in one one radiant package. I feel very fortunate to have spent time in his dining room with his riffs and rambles.
Met Tom recently just as a neighbor. I really looked forward to talking more with him. Two weeks before he was killed he warned me about the dangers of walking near Marin Avenue in Berkeley. I met him while he was crossing Marin and I noticed he was very careful. He told me he had been hit before by a car on Marin and that there had been seven fatalities on this street since the 1980's. Marin Avenue in Berkeley is a wide dark street with round street corners that allow drivers to take right turns without slowing down. Unfortunately this street is a very unsafe for pedestrians and more people will be killed crossing Marin Avenue in the future.
ReplyDeleteThe NYT obit made me smile. TC with the really good hair. k
ReplyDeleteI started everyday looking at Doonesbury and Tom's blog. Tom's was the harder work but I can't think of anybody who has made poetry and art that look so straight into the evil and beauty of our time.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe that I just found Tom Clark - returned to him today and found him gone. I give thanks that so much of him is still here. And I envy all those who knew him longer.
ReplyDeleteThis last chapter of "Beyond the Pale" is resonant, prophetic, and still. The way it lays down visual planks of suffering face to face with the reader, taking us there, with long unbroken stretches of no commentary at all...
ReplyDeleteA silence broken in this last foray just a few times: the longish monologue evoking all of South America; the terrific small satire of a Twitter "machine" in the small fat fingers of Guess Who; the sudden shift from South America to Mecca and the Muslim pilgrimage, with its powerful image of life as a Journey; and finally the inclusion of Cesar Vallejo's haunting elegy for himself-- of all the poems to select from, it's uncanny that it should be this one, on 8/17/18, in light of Tom's passing and the closing of the Blog on 8/18/18. The link made between the poem "Piedra negra sobre una piedra blanca" and the images of the Kabah is striking and Otherworldly.
The Clark blog is, to me, what someone once said of prayer: that it's a stream running by your house into which you may take a cleansing dip when you want.
These years of blog pieces feel like a joint project between Tom and Angelica. I hope it's never taken down. Requiescat in Pacem, Michael Wolfe
Farewell Tom Clark, thank you for the many years your blog has been a vital and portentous force for creativity and sagacity in my life.
ReplyDelete“Upon a high star our course is set, our end is life, put out to sea.”
"Witnesses are: the Thursdays,
ReplyDeleteThe shoulder bones, the loneliness, the rain, and the roads..."
Thank you for this blog, Tom Clark and Angelica Clark. It's the most beautifully assembled and presented piece of internet work I've ever seen. There are people all over the world who are thinking of you, your lives in Berkeley and your work. We love you both. x
ReplyDelete- Jeremy Hawker aka Artur Crown
So sorry to hear he's gone. Really loved this blog and his work. He will be missed. My condolences.
ReplyDeleteI will miss Tom and his blog. Tom was a light in this world.
ReplyDeleteI'm really missing Tom's content, being able to pop in to see what he's written and reported, the photography from around the world and through time. So, I'm wondering if it is at all possible that some of his friends and followers here might have some suggestions for other blogs that follow in the style of Mr. Clark? I know those are big shoes to fill. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry to find out you're gone Tom, your blog was a huge centring for me...
ReplyDeletePariah,
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing like this blog and nobody out there even remotely resembling Tom Clark. You could look at a stone or a feather or the sky and get some sort of feeling from these of the magnitude of what Tom and Angelica have accomplished. You could buy his books and encourage others to do so, give them as gifts and such and study them. This blog could be seen as a companion to his books. You could search and search the comments left and the posts (as I do) and listen to clips and music to get a feel for what happened because this is an archive, an encyclopedia of what is possible in poetry and in art and writing. Still, this blog was and is a process and generously vulnerable to a great extent in that it shows Heart and Mind working on Poetry and poetry on a daily basis with much humor and anger. Also with many expressions of humility, futility, and love. You need a lot of water to swallow this bitter Tom Clark pill. The water joins the river inside your body and takes you to regions known and unknown.
Where else can this be found? Traces, tracks, and trails are in the writers, artists, and musicians found here. Paths and inroads are seen in the current events, and documentation of war, devastation, and also images of beauty and hope. You can find something like this blog by experiencing our world and life, but it takes a great artist to wrestle with the vast and show us the slice.
I have lived my life alongside this blog and it has been a lot less lonely because of the work here. This is a unique artwork as a whole and each post unlike anything else existing.
Thinking of everything today. Missing.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeletedeath
is the unheard
voice of life
when our eyes are washed
open into a new understanding
and our steps are dragged
astray into a new path
simorgh of truth dwells
on top of the ghaaf of our hardships
© nooshin Azadi
(feburary 17, 2017)
tom, you will live forever... with and without us... always in the consciousness of our cosmos... creating, guiding, building new moments which will expand into new levels of awareness...
Beautiful memorial reading for TC last Sunday. I was glad to be there and the sun was out afterwards, in the street; an endless, golden California light. Too good to be true but it was.
ReplyDeleteOne year ago today Mr. Clark made his last post here. Being a creature of habit I still pop in on occasion to check for new posts, even though I know there won't be. I miss you, Mr. Clark, and hope that wherever you are you found peace. Much metta to all who followed Tom, knew him personally, and his family. Especially to his family.
ReplyDeleteWe are all Tom Clark.
Actually, Pariah, we aren't. Not at all. Not all him. He was unique, as you are. I know he liked the idea of One Mind and all. Is this what you mean? Probably! We are wannabes at best. I speak for myself.
DeleteTom,
ReplyDeleteI am being called into a disciplinary meeting for using Brawny cloths to clean the chalkboards at work. I wish you were here to have a laugh at my expense.