De Amerikaanse dichter Peter Orlovsky werd geboren in New York op 8 juli 1933. Orlovsky was de zoon van een Russische immigrant. Nadat hij de middelbare school afbrak, was hij werkzaam als verpleger. Via de kunstschilder Robert LaVigne, waarvoor hij model was, leerde hij in 1954 Allen Ginsberg kennen. Dit was de start van een langdurige liefdesrelatie, die zou duren tot het overlijden van Ginsberg in 1997. Door Ginsberg werd Orlovsky geïntroduceerd onder de leden van de Beat Generation. Hij was bevriend met onder andere Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs en Gregory Corso. Onder de naam George komt Orlovsky voor in Kerouac’s roman The Dharma Bums en onder de naam Simon Darlovksy in de boeken Book of Dreams en Desolation Angels. Onder invloed van Ginsberg begon Orlovsky rond 1957 met het schrijven van gedichten. Het stel woonde destijds in Parijs. Hij reisde later naar en door Europa, Afrika en India en woonde in de jaren 60 in de New Yorkse kunstenaarswijk Lower East Side. In de jaren 70 betrok hij een boerderij in de staat New York. Vanaf 1974 was hij als docent poëzie verbonden aan de Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics in Boulder (Colorado). Orlovsky was verder actief in de antikernenergiebeweging en ondersteunde acties voor seksuele vrijheid, acceptatie van homoseksualiteit en legalisering van marihuana. Orlovsky was te zien in de films Couch (1965) van Andy Warhol en Me and My Brother (1969) en One Hour (C’est Vrai) (1992) van Robert Frank. Hij overleed in mei 2010 aan longkanker.
Second Poem
Morning again, nothing has to be done,
maybe buy a piano or make fudge.
At least clean the room up for sure like my farther I’ve done flick
the ashes & butts over the bed side on the floor.
But frist of all wipe my glasses and drink the water
to clean the smelly mouth.
A nock on the door, a cat walks in, behind her the Zoo’s baby
elephant demanding fresh pancakes-I cant stand these
hallucinations aney more.
Time for another cigerette and then let the curtains rise, then I
knowtice the dirt makes a road to the garbage pan
No ice box so a dried up grapefruit.
Is there any one saintly thing I can do to my room, paint it pink
maybe or instal an elevator from the bed to the floor,
maybe take a bath on the bed?
Whats the use of liveing if I cant make paradise in my own
room-land?
For this drop of time upon my eyes
like the endurance of a red star on a cigerate
makes me feel life splits faster than sissors.
I know if I could shave myself the bugs around my face would
disappear forever.
The holes in my shues are only temporary, I understand that.
My rug is dirty but whose that isent?
There comes a time in life when everybody must take a piss in
the sink -here let me paint the window black for a minute.
Thro a plate & brake it out of naughtiness-or maybe just
innocently accidentally drop it wile walking around the
tabol.
Before the mirror I look like a sahara desert gost,
or on the bed I resemble a crying mummey hollaring for air,
or on the tabol I feel like Napoleon.
But now for the main task of the day – wash my underwear –
two months abused – what would the ants say about that?
How can I wash my clothes – why I’d, I’d, I’d be a woman if I did
that.
No, I’d rather polish my sneakers than that and as for the floor
its more creative to paint it then clean it up.
As for the dishes I can do that for I am thinking of getting a job in
a lunchenette.
My life and my room are like two huge bugs following me
around the globe.
Thank god I have an innocent eye for nature.
I was born to remember a song about love – on a hill a butterfly
makes a cup that I drink from, walking over a bridge of
flowers.
Peter Orlovsky (8 juli 1933 – 30 mei 2010)