1) wide crack in concrete 
mention the visual poetry of kenneth 
patchen and usually his picture poems are 
what come to mind or are discussed - the 
poems in the new directions books such as 
HURRAH FOR ANYTHING, HALLELUJAH ANYWAY, BUT 
EVEN SO, and WONDERINGS. how many people i 
wonder are aware of the earlier visual 
poems in his novels and an earlier volume 
of poems? of those aware, how many continue 
to ignore the strength of vision and 
importance of this work within the context 
of the world-wide revival of the visual 
poem? for how long are those within the 
so-called critical enclaves of concrete and 
visual poetry going to continue ignoring 
the fact that patchen composed texts and 
poems which broke the linear reading habit 
with typographical fragmentation issuing 
the unique and inherent communication of 
letters, phonic characters, graphic signs, 
words and word groupings? or that he 
expanded the non-linear further with list 
poems, pattern poems, diagram poems, number 
poems, repetition poems, visual poems, op 
poems, and picture poems? or that he 
composed series after series of kinetic 
poems and events to add multi-dimensional 
cross currents which dance thruout the work 
all the while focusing with his esthetic 
sensibility upon the creative arrangement 
by embracing the expanse offered by love? 
SLEEPERS AWAKE, 1946, and PANELS FOR THE 
WALLS OF HEAVEN, 1946. these are the two 
major works which are continually ignored 
along with even earlier works in THE 
JOURNAL OF ALBION MOONLIGHT and CLOTH OF 
THE TEMPEST.     
 SLEEPERS AWAKE and PANELS FOR THE WALLS 
OF HEAVEN were published 5 years before the 
founder of concrete poetry, eugene 
gomringer, wrote his first constellation, 
and 10 years before concrete poetry began 
flaking around the globe. SLEEPERS AWAKE 
was written in 1945; its visuals were 
either prepared in advance in the 
manuscript or type-composed alongside the 
press during the book's printing. padell 
book company of new york was the publisher. 
bern porter, a master of the found poem, 
published PANELS in berkley. porter wrote 
me that this first edition--reviewed by no 
one--now sells for $65 unless covered with 
patchen hand painting which boosts the 
collector's take to $250. naturally in the 
unnatural state neither the patchens or 
porters saw/see any of this coin other than 
in the listings. also, he says that it is 
his belief these 2 books are the world's 
greatest of their kind. i have seen nothing 
to contradict porter. both books mapped a 
vast territory using the above mentioned 
variety of forms later remapped by scores 
of concrete poets during the 50's, 60's and 
on into this nearly vanished decade. during 
the remapping, patchen, having already 
exhausted his creative fragmented 
typography by 1946, turned his attention 
and vision to painted books and picture 
poems extending the visual virtuosity of 
his written word. the PANELS were a 
continuation of his esthetic fragmentation 
from SLEEPERS AWAKE and the beginning of 
his picture poems.     
 these time spans between patchen and 
concrete poetry can easily be stretched 
further if the visual work in THE JOURNAL 
OF ALBION MOONLIGHT, its manuscript and 
CLOTH OF THE TEMPEST are considered. THE 
JOURNAL was written in 1939 and 40; self 
published in 41. CLOTH was written and 
composed in 41 and published by harper & 
bros in 43. of special interest to myself 
and others is one poem in CLOTH, "THE 
MURDER OF TWO MEN BY A YOUNG MAN WEARING 
LEMON-COLORED GLOVES," which can be found 
in the SELECTED and COLLECTED POEMS. there 
are those who have seen, read and bodily 
digested it and never forget it - 1941.    
 so it sums to this: patchen the trail 
blazer far ahead simultaneously working 
several paths with a tremendous energy 
burst; patchen as an instrument focused 
with creative arrangement rejecting the 
worship of chaos, an instrument thru which 
a new and powerful vision channeled onto 
the page freeing language from linear 
constraints. far behind are the concrete 
poets as a survey crew or crews plodding 
along, some toying with chaos; so far 
behind that patchen's work is both ignored 
and forgotten. the existence of this early 
work i'm sure has become an embarrassment to 
many and this may be why only the picture 
poems are discussed. another possibility 
for this neglect - which flows over from 
the omission of his linear work in numerous 
anthologies and college courses - is that 
his work is based upon love, as i said 
earlier, his embrace of the expanse of 
love, and as such, the work aimed not at 
the head but the total individual: as the 
body mind and spirit digest the work it 
becomes part of the reader/viewer. 
patchen's roots are those tapping the 
poetic tradition of seer, visionary, a 
tradition held suspect in this 
intellectualized and fad to fad 
hopscotching time wherein language, 
stripped of its emotional and spiritual 
vibrations, is looked upon as mere material 
to manipulate.    
 i believe no one is in a position to 
correctly chart the ripple effects of 
patchen's visual work throughout the 
concrete and visual poetry scene. i am not 
in such a seat. however, as far as i know, 
no u.s. published concrete anthology 
printed a patchen visual work or mentioned 
his early or contemporaneous works (except 
for one slite aside) even though the 
triangle from which he initially drew was 
identical to the one from which the 
concrete poets later drew: apollinaire, 
futurism and dada. european concrete 
anthologies and catalogs i'v studied also 
include the patchen blank. non-english 
speaking europe  can be excused up to the 
point where the new directions' reprints 
became/become available (new directions/333 
sixth ave/new york ny 10014). or can they? 
patchen visual work appeared in the early 
50's in VOU, Tokyo, and enlargements of  
several pages from CLOTH and THE JOURNAL 
appeared at shows in japan in the early 
50's. jean wahl reviewed patchen in a 
french publication around 1950; tho the 
review was general in scope THE JOURNAL was 
mentioned. but the english speaking sector, 
especially those whose attitudes body 
language a know-it-all pose, can not be 
excused.    
 no concrete, visual, language or 
experimental poet, artist, writer, editor 
or publisher wrote or visited patchen to 
discuss these exclusions. since his death, 
miriam patchen has had, until my letters 
and visit of last summer, no such 
inquiries. while talking with her i found 
myself shaking my head in disbelief that 
this situation exists. she lives a mere 30 
minutes by non-traffic jammed car from san 
francisco, home of several visual, language 
and experimental poets, etc. nope. no 
inquiries, yet these folks claim a global 
view. what good is such eyesight while 
unknowingly their own backyard is in 
disrepair?    
 wrote to u.s. the concrete anthology 
maker crew membership to hear their defense 
of the offense. ONCE AGAIN was entirely 
edited in paris by bory who, as james 
laughlin says, didnt know patchen. 
considering that the number of english 
language poets in this anthology ruffly 
adds to 1/3 or that 1/6 of the poets were 
from the u.s. and that laughlin of new 
directions is patchen's publisher, i wonder 
why he failed to introduce bory to 
patchen's work? chicago is silent. mary 
ellen solt also remains silent. on one hand 
she is commended here for injecting charles 
olson's poetic force field into visual 
poetics, nevertheless the missing hand 
cripples her anthology and more so in the 
lite of the published jonathan williams' 
letter which pointed to patchen and others. 
dick higgins, publisher of the now defunct 
something else press, writes he can't answer 
for his editor, emmett williams; he doesn't 
consider patchen a concrete poet; and, "His 
stuff just doesn't hold any strong or 
cohesive literary gestalt for me; I forget 
it sooo easily." i have heard much the same 
from others who share this obvious 
difference of opinion with me. tho patchen 
didnt carry a concrete poetry club 
membership card, just how do you who claim 
him not to be a concrete poet categorize 
this early work which smoothly glides into 
concrete poetry definitions?: 
"fragmentation", "tension of things-words 
in space-time" or "working with language 
material, creating structures with it, 
transmitting primarily esthetic 
information". emmmett williams, editor of 
AN ANTHOLOGY OF CONCRETE POETRY, probably 
the most important and influential 
anthology of its kind, claims that his 
purpose was exposing the u.s. poets to the 
concrete poetry from europe, south america 
and japan, particularly those poets he felt 
to be unknown in the u.s.. at least an 
admission of conscious exclusion by reason 
of specific focus. but he implied in his 
letter that had there been an historical 
section, then patchen would have been 
included--exactly where higgins relegates 
the man. in this anthology i see the 1943-
48 concrete poems by carlos belloli; 
patchen's poems of this same time period 
effortlessly eclipse them. and from the 
introduction, "Side by side are militant 
social reformers, religious mystics, 
lyricists of love, psychedelic visionaries, 
engaged philosophers, disinterested 
philologists and poetypographers. Such 
diversity, reflected in the pages of this 
anthology, may seem to rob the label 
'Concrete' of any concrete meaning 
whatsoever. On the other hand, it shows the 
extent to which the dynamic concepts of the 
new poetry have been accepted as a Poetics 
valid for our times." plenty of room 
existed to include the early patchen work. 
instead, a wide crack in the concrete.    
 two recent non-concrete anthologies 
subliminally recognized his work as well as 
a language art show. in the introduction to 
his BREAKTHROUGH FICTIONEERS, 1973, richard 
kostelanetz credited patchen as the 
american who pioneered "the mixing of 
physically separated words and images" 
period. in fact, this is only a phrase in a 
long colonned sentence, a rather limp 
finger pointing from an articulate and 
outspoken critic for visual poetry, 
language art and experimental writing. this 
phrase also indicates an unfamiliarity with 
patchen's early work by nodding towards the 
picture poems. as curator of LANGUAGE & 
STRUCTURE IN NORTH AMERICA, 1975, 
kostelanetz included SLEEPERS AWAKE in the 
book department and excluded the PANELS and 
a host of other patchen visual work. while 
printing 4 patchen visual poems, including 
"THE MURDER OF TWO MEN . . .", in SPEAKING 
PICTURES, milton klonsky failed in both the 
bio notes and the mishandled historical 
introduction to mention the bulk and wealth 
of the early work.    
 in response to my letter, jonathan 
williams wrote "Any ignoring came from the 
usual sin, abysmal ignorance."    
 myself, i'm still shaking my head in 
disbelief that such a powerful and 
encompassing vision went and remains 
ignored within the confines of concrete and 
visual poetry, language art and 
experimental writing criticism. but dont 
believe me; indeed compare these early 
works with concrete and visual poetry 
anthologies and with the growing number of 
experimental writing collections.