LifeLine

Allen Ginsberg is born

June 3rd, 1926

Newark, New Jersey residents Louis and Naomi Ginsberg give birth to their second son, Irwin Allen Ginsberg. (Brother, Eugene, is 5 years his senior.) Louis Ginsberg is a modestly successful published poet and high school teacher and Jewish democratic Socialist; Naomi is a Communist and irrepressible nudist who becomes tragically insane in early adulthood.

The Ginsberg children are exposed to poetry

1920s

Father Louis routinely recites Dickinson, Shelley, Keats, Poe and Milton to his children during their early childhood at 163 Quitman Street in Newark, New Jersey.

Mother Naomi begins mental decline

1932

Naomi Ginsberg is hospitalized for the first time, leaving father Louis to care for the Ginsberg children alone.

Mother Naomi's mental condition deteriorates

1935

Naomi Ginsberg suffers a series of mental breakdowns, suggesting her illness may be lifelong. Sadly, and with few alternatives, Louis is forced to commit his wife to New Jersey's Greystone State Mental Hospital. Naomi returns home after a year away but continues to suffer bouts of paranoia, believing doctors have put wires in her head and sticks in her back.

A young Ginsberg begins to write

June 1937

Eleven-year-old Allen Ginsberg starts capturing his thoughts in his first personal journal.

Mother Naomi attempts suicide

June 24th, 1937

Naomi Ginsberg is found bleeding after father Louis breaks down the bathroom door and interupts her suicide attempt. Naomi is returned to Greystone State Mental Hospital for a two-year absence from the family.
(See early journals excerpt pg 1.)

A precociously early interest in world politics is revealed

March 1938

A journal entry from eleven-year-old Allen shows his railing against the Nazi movement.
(See early journals excerpt pg 2 and following)

Young Ginsberg begins to come of age

June 27, 1939

Allen graduates from grammar school and begins attending Paterson's Central High where he joins numerous clubs, later becoming the president of the Debating Society.

Mother Naomi returns from Greystone State Mental Hospital shortly thereafter and leads a near-normal life for a brief time.

Ginsberg discovers Walt Whitman

September 1941

Ginsberg is inspired by his first exposure to Walt Whitman through his teacher, Francis Durbin, after a switch to Paterson's East Side High from Central.

Young Allen is further exposed to mother Naomi's mental illness

December 1941

During a particularly disturbing event for the family, 15-year-old Allen is pulled into his mother's mental illness as she convinces him to drag her by bus throughout rural New Jersey in search of a rest home for her, only to be retrieved the next day by father Louis.

Allen's early entrée into politics

October 1942

Brother Eugene's military post in Great Britain leaves Allen with more time to himself, which he decides to spend enlisting as an errand-boy for the popular local labor leader and congressional candidate, Irving Abramson.

High school graduation

June 23, 1943

Allen graduates from Paterson's East Side High School.

Allen Ginsberg enters college

September 1943

Allen begins his education at Columbia University in New York City, originally aiming to become a labor lawyer.

Allen meets the first of his lifelong Beat friends

December 1943

Allen meets Lucien Carr, who soon introduces him to his St. Louis friends, David Kammerer and William S. Burroughs.

Lucien chides Allen on his career choice; since he had never worked a day in his life, how could he know what "labor" was.

Allen Ginsberg meets Jack Kerouac

June 1944

Lucien Carr (seeking occasional escape from the unwanted advances of his close friend, David Kammerer) joins his girlfriend, Celeine Young, as she spends time with her friends Edie Parker and her (Edie’s) roommate Joan Vollmer. Through Lucien, Allen finally meets Edie's boyfriend, Jack Kerouac, of whom he's been hearing so much.

The Kammerer fiasco

August 14, 1944

Lucien Carr stabs his close friend, David Kammerer, to death. Kerouac and Burroughs are arrested as materiel witnesses. Carr is sentenced to 1-20 years at Elmira Reformatory and released in 1946. The New York Times headline reads: Columbia Student Kills Friend and Sinks Body in Hudson.

William Burroughs meets Herbert Huncke

January 1945

While looking to dispose of some morphine syrettes and a submachine gun, William Burroughs stumbles onto Herbert Huncke, a then-New York street character, petty thief and junkie and later moderately successful internationally known author. Burroughs tries morphine for his first time at this same meeting.

Allen begins his first serious writing

February 1945

An examination of Allen's journal entries from this period reveals his first strong poetic ability.

Allen is suspended from Columbia

March 16, 1945

While in the midst of a row with the housekeeper of his dormitory, Allen scrawls epithets in the dust of his dorm windowsill. His comments “Fuck the Jews” and “Butler (the university president) has no balls” leave him suspended from school and he moves into Joan Vollmer's apartment on West 115th Street.

Allen joins the Merchant Marines

August 1, 1945

Temporarily barred from school, seeking funds and inspired by Jack Kerouac, Allen joins the Military Sea Transportation Service (the Merchant Marine). He graduates from training in November and soon sets off on his first voyage during which he experiments with marijuana for the first time with some Puerto Rican sailors.

Allen returns to Columbia

September 1946

With his suspension completed Allen Ginsberg resumes his education at Columbia University.

Allen and Kerouac meet Neal Cassady

December 1946

Hal Chase (a classmate of Allen and Jack Kerouac’s) introduces to the group his friend, Neal Cassady and his wife, LuAnne Henderson upon their arrival from Denver, Colorado. They were originally scheduled to arrive months before for Neal’s entrance exam at Columbia.

William Burroughs and wife Joan move to Texas

January 1947

Intending to grow marijuana, William Burroughs and wife Joan (formerly Ms. Vollmer) move to a farm near New Waverly, Texas and are later joined by Herbert Huncke.

Neal Cassady leaves New York

March 1947

Neal Cassady moves to Denver, Colorado.

Allen takes his famous trip to Denver and New Waverly, Texas

July 1947

Grasping at Neal Cassady, Allen visits the object of his unrequited affection in Denver only to find Neal preoccupied with his girlfriend, Caroline Robinson. In his ongoing attempt to hold on to him, Ginsberg invites Cassady to accompany him on a journey to Texas to visit William and Joan Burroughs.

Allen ships out with the Merchant Marines

September 1947

Allen departs the U.S. on the SS John Blair destined for Dakar from a port in Galveston, Texas. The trip terminates in New York in October of the same year.

Mother Naomi has a lobotomy

November 1947

Allen receives a letter from Doctors at Pilgrim State Hospital, where Naomi had been residing, recommending his mother receive a frontal lobotomy. Since Louis had divorced her, the legal responsibility fell to her sons; Allen signs the papers.

The “William Blake Vision” experience

July 1948

Allen experiences Blake vision from his Spanish Harlem apartment. In his words “Blake’s voice simultaneous with Eternity-vision.” The event influences Allen for the next 15 years.

Herbert Huncke moves into Allen's apartment

February 1949

Despite his repeated refusals, Allen acquiesces and allows Herbert Huncke to move in with him. Huncke is soon joined by Vicki Russell, and Little Jack Melody (an ex-con on parole) who quickly begin stocking the apartment with stolen goods. Ginsberg is unwittingly involved in a burglary ring.

Jack Kerouac’s writing career begins

February 1949

Jack Kerouac’s Novel The Town and the City is accepted by publisher Harcourt Brace.

Allen Ginsberg is arrested and institutionalized; meets Carl Solomon

April 21, 1949

Fearing their discovery by the law (due to his roommates' criminal deeds), Allen decides to relocate his private papers and journals to his brother's home. While traveling in a stolen car full of hot goods, he, Vicki Russell and Little Jack Melody are assailed by the police, the car overturns and Allen is caught and arrested. As a condition of his release Allen agrees to enter Columbia Psychiatric Institute, where he meets Carl Solomon the first day of his stay.

Father Lois remarries

1949

Father Louis take's Edith as his wife.

William Burroughs moves to Mexico

September 1949

Joan Vollmer and William Burroughs move to Mexico City.

The word "Beat" enters the lexicon

September 1949

Jack Kerouac uses the term "beat generation" (earlier tossed about by Herbert Huncke) in a conversation with John Clellon Holmes.

Allen's institutionalization ends

February 27, 1950

Allen Ginsberg’s agreed-to hospitalization (resulting from his arrest) ends and he is discharged from Columbia Psychiatric Institute. Allen declares to several close friends his new-found — albeit clearly temporary — heterosexuality.

Kerouac work is published

March 1950

Kerouac’s first novel The Town and the City is released and is poorly received by critics.

William Burroughs begins to write

March 1950

William Burroughs begins an autobiographical narrative that is later published as Junky.

Enter William Carlos Williams

March 30, 1950

On March 28th Allen hears renowned poet William Carlos Williams speak at New York's Guggenheim Museum. Moved and motivated to meet him, Ginsberg nevertheless scurries away, preferring to introduce himself two days later in a letter that would prove to change his life.

Allen meets Gregory Corso

March 1950

Allen meets Gregory Corso at the Pony Stable, a lesbian bar in New York's West Village. The two quickly become close friends.

Allen visits William Burroughs in Mexico

August 1951

Allen and Lucien Carr visit Joan Burroughs in Mexico City, just missing William, who had left for Ecuador with a young friend in search of Yage, a powerful psychedelic drug.

William & Joan Burroughs' deadly William Tell skit

September 6, 1951

William Burroughs fatally shoots his wife, Joan, in the forehead during a drunken "William Tell" routine.

Kerouac gets advance for On The Road

December 1951

Jack Kerouac receives a $250 advance for his novel On The Road with Allen's urging to his friend, Carl Solomon, who was then working at Ace books.

Junkie published

May 1953

William Burroughs’ Junkie is first published as a 35-cent paperback by Ace books.

Burroughs in love

September 1953

William Burroughs moves to New York from Mexico and falls in love with Allen. They have an intense affair, which Allen eventually ends. During this period they work on assembling their correspondence, later published as Yage Letters.

Burroughs moves to Tangier

December 1953

After Allen abruptly ends their affair, William Burroughs moves to Tangier and does not to return to the U.S. for 15 years.

Allen in Mexico

December 1953

Allen travels to Mexico for six months, returning to the U.S. that spring. During this period Allen begins writing "Siesta in Xbalba" and "Green Automobile."

Kerouac explores Buddhism

January 1954

Jack Kerouac begins serious study of Buddhism at the San Jose, California Library while staying with Neal Cassady and his new wife, Carolyn.

Allen in San Francisco

June 1954

Upon his return from Mexico Allen moves in with Neal and Carolyn Cassady in San Jose, California. Allen finds himself less welcome after Carolyn walks in on him and Neal in bed together; he moves to San Francisco that August and proceeds to write his poem "Song."

Allen meets Peter Orlovsky

December 1954

Allen Ginsberg meets and immediately falls in love with Peter Orlovsky at painter, Robert LaVigne’s apartment in San Francisco, California.

"Howl for Carl Solomon"

August 1955

Allen writes first and last sections of "Howl for Carl Solomon."

City Lights’ first book

August 10,1955

City Lights Books publishes its first book: Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s Pictures of the Gone World, which is the first in the Pocket Poet series.

Allen meets Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen

September 1955

Kenneth Rexroth introduces Allen to Gary Snyder, who in turn introduces Allen to Philip Whalen — all while Allen is planning a poetry reading at San Francisco’s Six Gallery at the request of friend Michael McClure’s (whom Allen met while teaching at San Francisco State University and who shares an interest in William Blake).

Allen in Berkeley, California

September 1955

Allen moves to a cottage behind 1624 Milvia Street in Berkeley, California. During this time he writes "Strange New Cottage in Berkeley," "A supermarket in California," and "Sunflower Sutra" and holds several odd jobs, including teaching one night a week at San Francisco State University and as a baggage handler at a Greyhound bus station.

“Howl” reading at Six Gallery

October 7, 1955

At a poetry reading at San Francisco's Six Gallery, (arranged by Allen and moderated by Kenneth Rexroth), Allen reads parts of "Howl" for the first time. Philip Lamantia, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen also read. Lawrence Ferlinghetti telegrams Allen: “I greet you at the beginning of a great career. When do I get the Manuscript?”

"Howl" reading in Berkeley

March 18, 1956

Allen reads "Howl" in its entirety at a poetry reading in Berkeley similar to a recent event at the Six Gallery.

Allen's mother dies

June 9, 1956

Naomi Ginsberg dies of a brain hemorrhage while at Greystone State Mental Hospital. Allen receives a letter from her the following day, apparently written just prior to her death.

Howl and Other Poems is published

October 1956

City Lights Books publishes Howl and Other Poems as part of the Pocket Poet series.

The Mexico road trip

November 1956

After living in San Francisco, California for almost two years Allen begins planning his first trip to Europe. On their way back home Allen, Gregory Corso, and Peter and Lafcadio Orlovsky visit Jack Kerouac in Mexico.

Allen and Peter in Morocco

March 1957

Allen and Peter Orlovsky head for Morocco to meet up with William Burroughs and help edit William's "Naked lunch." They travel on to Europe later that year.

Howl and Other Poems prompts arrests at City Lights Books

May 21, 1957

Two plain-clothed police officers enter City Lights Books, buy copies “Howl and Other Poems” and leave. They return to arrest the clerk, Shigeyoshi Murao while an absent Lawrence Ferlinghetti is later served a warrant stating he sought to “willfully and lewdly print, publish and sell obscene and indecent writings, papers, and books, to wit: Howl and Other Poems.” An August trial is set. The incident bolsters sales of the book.

Allen and others at the “Beat Hotel” in Paris

June 10, 1957

Tensions rise between Allen and William Burroughs over Peter Orlovsky so Allen and Peter decide to head for Europe. They journey from Spain to Paris in September and land at 9, rue git le Coeur, Paris, later to be known as the “Beat Hotel”. They are soon joined by Gregory Corso who’d been living in Amsterdam. Allen remains for 10 months.

“Howl” trial verdict

October 3, 1957

“Howl” is deemed “not obscene” by Judge Clayton Horn.

Allen begins writing “Kaddish”

November 1957

While at a café in Paris Allen starts “Kaddish”.

William Burroughs moves to Paris

January 1958

William Burroughs joins Allen and the others at the Beat Hotel in Paris, just missing Peter Orlovsky, who had returned to New York. During their stay Allen, Burroughs and Corso meet Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, Benjamin Peret, Tristan Tzara and Louise Ferdinand Celine, among many others.

“Beatnik” enters the lexicon

April 2, 1958

San Francisco Chronicle journalist Herb Caen adds “nik” (a la Sputnik, etc.) to “Beat” in an attempt to taint the group with a communist-like moniker.

Cassady arrested

April 8, 1958

Neal Cassady is arrested for possession of 2 marijuana cigarettes and later sentenced to 5 years to life in San Quentin Prison. He serves just over two years and is released on July 4, 1960.

Allen returns to New York

July 17, 1958

After an extended stay in the Beat Hotel in Paris, Allen sails for New York.

Allen comes home...

February 5, 1959

In something of a homecoming, Allen, Peter Orlovsky and Gregory Corso read to a sell-out crowd at Columbia University's McMillan Theater. Allen’s father is present when Allen reads “Kaddish” for the first time.

LSD

May 1959

Invited by Gregory Bateson, Allen signs on as a test subject for an LSD-25 study at Stanford University’s Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, California.

Naked Lunch published

1959

Olympia Press publishes William Burroughs’ Naked Lunch.

Big Table magazine triumphs

June 1959

The government loses its obscenity trial against Big Table magazine for publishing excerpts of Naked Lunch, in part due to Allen's impassioned defense.

Allen in South America

April 1960

Allen travels to Chile with Lawrence Ferlinghetti for a literary conference organized by local communists just as Castro is taking control Cuba. Allen is exposed to anti-American rhetoric in South and Central America. He travels on to Bolivia and Peru where he samples yage for the first time in his Lima hotel room (on May 23).

The New American Poetry is published

1960

Donald Allen’s anthology The New American Poetry: 1945-1960 is published representing the Beats and San Francisco poets for the first time in the mainstream.

Allen completes “Kaddish”

September 15, 1960

Nearly three years after starting, Allen Ginsberg completes “Kaddish” and sends it to Lawrence Ferlinghetti for inclusion in a forthcoming City Lights Book.

Allen meets Timothy Leary and experiments with “magic mushrooms”

November 26, 1960

Allen attends a psychiatry conference at which the Beats are the subject. Psychiatrist Sir Humphry Osmond, an associate of psychedelic researcher and novelist Aldous Huxley (The Doors of Perception), urges Ginsberg to meet Harvard psychiatrist Timothy Leary. Leary visits Ginsberg and invites him to Boston where Allen tries magic mushrooms (psilocybin) for the first time with Leary’s guidance.

Allen begins significant early 1960s travels
Paris

March 23, 1961

Allen and Peter Orlovsky sail for Europe on the SS America, stopping first in Paris to look for William Burroughs.

Kaddish and Other Poems is published

April 29, 1961

City Lights Books releases Kaddish and Other poems as number fourteen of the Pocket Poet series.

Allen’s early 60s travels continue
Tangier

July 15, 1961

Realizing William is no longer in Paris, they continue on to Tangier, where they finally find him. William Burroughs is not fond of Peter Orlovsky and makes this so clear that Peter becomes uncomfortable and departs for Istanbul. Timothy Leary appears in this scene.

Allen’s early 60s travels continue
Greece

August 24, 1961

Allen sails to Greece and remains there through the middle of October.

Allen’s early 60s travels continue
Israel

October, 1961

Allen departs Greece for Israel and links up once again with Peter Orlovsky.

Allen’s early 60s travels continue
East Africa

January 21, 1962

Allen and Peter Orlovsky leave Israel and journey to East Africa where they attend a rally in Nairobi.

Allen’s early 60s travels culminate
India

February 15, 1962

Allen and Peter Orlovsky travel from Africa to India, arriving in Bombay. They move on to Delhi and meet up with Gary Snyder and his wife, Joanne Kyger, who were living in Japan during the previous 5 years. For the next 15 months Peter joins Allen on a relentless journey through India in search of spiritual guidance. Allen meets with as many holy men as possible.

Allen’s early 60s travels end in the Far East; he writes “The Change”

May 15, 1963

Allen leaves Peter (who chooses to remain in India for a while longer) and journeys through Bangkok, Saigon and Cambodia, finally spending 5 weeks with JoAnne Kyger and Gary Snyder in Japan. Allen then leaves for North America and on the train from Kyoto to Tokyo, writes “The Change”.

Allen back in North America

C. July 26, 1963

Allen arrives in Vancouver, British Columbia from his lengthy travels in South and East Asia to participate in a poetry conference on July 17th. He then moves to San Francisco until the end of November, when he returns to New York.

“Back to the Wall”

July 4, 1964

It’s a U.S. presidential election year and Allen writes his essay “Back to the Wall”, lamenting the direction of American politics and the choice of candidates.

Enter Ken Kesey and Merry Pranksters

October 1964

Ken Kesey arrives in New York with Neal Cassady at the helm of his bus. Jack Kerouac is fetched from his home on Long Island for a gathering in the city but is more offended than excited by their wildness.

Allen on tour in New England with Corso and Orlovsky

November 1964

Allen, Peter Orlovsky and Gregory Corso conduct a series of readings at Brandeis and Harvard Universities. The Brandeis reading of "Kaddish" is recorded and later released on record.

The Naked Lunch Trial

January 11, 1965

In a Boston, Massachusetts courtroom, Allen defends Naked Lunch. Judge Eugene A. Hudson nevertheless rules the book obscene but is overturned by the State Supreme Court on July 7, 1966.

Allen makes waves in Cuba

January 15, 1965

Allen attends a literary conference in Cuba. Castro's régime is not recognized by the U.S. government so he is forced to travel through Mexico City (and exit via Czechoslovakia). Tension develops when Allen is rumored to have said Fidel's brother Raul is gay and that he (Ginsberg) thinks Che Guevara is cute. Numerous young poets are arrested and questioned after spending time with Ginsberg. Allen is escorted from his room and put on a flight to Prague on the 18th of February.

The Fall of America and “These States” poems

January-March 1966

Allen buys a state-of-the-art tape recorder with $600 he receives from Bob Dylan and records spontaneously composed poetry. He adds these to a theme he started in Seattle the previous September, at first titled “These States,” that trace his travels from Los Angeles to Kansas and back east. The works are later assembled into “The Fall of America” collection with “Wichita Vortex Sutra” proclaiming an to end the Vietnam war.

Allen in Moscow

March 18, 1965

While in Prague Allen jaunts to Moscow seeking a sense of ancestry and meets with Naomi's cousin, Joe Levy. He also spends some time with Russian poets Yevgeny Yevtuchenko and Andrei Voznesenski. On his way back to Czechoslovakia, Allen stops in Warsaw and Auschwitz.

Allen is crowned King of May

May 1, 1965

Allen returns to Prague just in time for the first May Day celebration since Soviet control began. Poet Joseph Skvorecky, the intended “King of May” is ill and asks Allen to take his place. Allen is shuttled through the crowds on a flatbed truck donning a paper crown. The high visibility draws attention from the authorities who confiscate Allen’s journal and cite it as “evidence” of unwanted activity; Allen is expelled from the country.

Allen writes "Kral Majales"

May7, 1965

Expelled from Czechoslovakia and on a flight to London, Allen writes his poem "Kral Majales," recounting his Prague experiences.

Allen with Bob Dylan in London

May 9, 1965

Bob Dylan invites Allen to his performance at London’s Albert Hall and to a party with the Beatles thereafter. Noticing a very tense gathering, Allen nestles up to Dylan only to have John Lennon chide, “why don’t you get closer!” Not missing a beat, Allen falls into Lennon’s lap with “have you read William Blake?”

Allen at London’s Royal Albert Hall

June 11, 1965

Aware London is teaming with poets, Allen organizes a reading similar to the 1956 affair he arranged in Berkeley, California. He writes “Who Be Kind To” especially for the occasion — with just three days to go. The international event draws 7,000 spectators and 19 poets, including Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Andrei Voznesenski, Harry Fainlight, Ernst Jandl and even William Burroughs.

Allen returns to the U.S. with a reactivated FBI file

June 29, 1965

Upon returning from his Cuba-Prague-Russia-London excursion, Allen is stopped by U.S. Customs and strip-searched. Stealing a glance at the customs papers Allen notes his previously deactivated FBI file is once again active and that “these persons are reported to be engaged in smuggling narcotics.”

The Berkeley Poetry Conference and a reunion with Gary Snyder

July 1965

Allen returns to California for the Berkeley Poetry Conference with colleagues Amiri Baraka, Robert Duncan, John Wieners.

He is reunited with Gary Snyder, who has recently returned from Japan, and the two travel to Oregon and Washington for a backpacking trip and shared Buddhist studies.

Peace Protests and the Hells Angels

October 1965

During a peace protest, “patriotic” Hells Angels harass demonstrators while the police stand by and do nothing. Worried about safety during an upcoming event, Allen composes a 21-point plan on “How to make a March/Spectacle,” with instructions for peaceful demonstration and avoiding confrontation. The leaflet proves futile but Allen’s chanting OM with his Harmonium sways the Angels, who reverse course and join in.

The Committee on Poetry

March 26, 1966

Appalled that his tax dollars play a role, however small, in America’s war in Vietnam, Allen forms the Committee on Poetry to decrease his income tax by donating it instead to artists.

Allen, LSD, and the U.S. Senate

June 14, 1966

Allen testifies before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency and argues against making LSD possession illegal.

The “Human Be-In”

January 14, 1967

Allen helps plan the “Human Be-In” a speaking-musical-poetry-performance “...gathering of younger people aware of the planet’s fate — desiring a new kind of society involving prayer, music and spiritual life.” Timothy Leary and Jerry Rubin speak; Allen, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Gary Snyder read poetry; and the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane perform.

The Spoleto Festival

July 5, 1967

Allen travels to Italy for the Spoleto Festival, where he reads “Who Be Kind To.” He is later arrested and detained by the Italian police for “use of certain words.” An argument ensues over Allen’s refusal to sign a statement the police prepared for him.

Dialectics of Liberation conference

July 20, 1967

Allen travels from Italy to London to attend the Dialects of Liberation conference, organized by radical Psychologist R.D. Laing, who is seeking to “demystify human violence in all its forms.” Allen gives his address: “Consciousness and Practical Action.”

Notably, Allen is rather effected by Gregory Bateson’s introduction to the Greenhouse effect theory.

LSD and “Wales Visitation”

July 29, 1967

From London and the “Dialectics” conference, Allen Travels to Llanthony Valley in Wales where, feeling rather safe, he partakes of LSD. With the drugs and Gregory Bateson’s Greenhouse effect theory swimming in his mind, Allen writes the poem “Wales Visitation.”

Pentagon Exorcism

October 21, 1967

Tens of thousands attend a march on Washington, DC — the largest anti-war rally yet — to protest America’s actions in Vietnam. The highlight of the event is the “Pentagon Exorcism” delivered by Ed Sanders and Tuli Kupferberg of the Fugs, the text of which was written by Allen (who is in Italy) and titled “No Taxation Without Representation.”

Allen meets with Ezra Pound

October 28, 1967

Allen returns to Italy from his U.K. jaunts and finally meets with Ezra Pound, with whom he had sought an audience for quite some time. Pound agrees to answer some questions from Allen about his (Ezra’s) poetry.

Allen’s first arrest for anti-war activities

December 5, 1967

Allen is arrested along with pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock and 264 others at an anti-draft demonstration in New York City.

Neal Cassady dies

February 3, 1968

Neal Cassady is found dead near the railroad tracks between San Miguel Allende and Celaya, Mexico. Cassady set out on a 15-mile walk wearing shorts and a t-shirt and became sidetracked at a local wedding. After combining a Mexican agave-based alcohol called pulque with the barbiturate, Seconal he apparently continued on at sundown and died of exposure during the night.

“Festival of Life”

Mar 17, 1968

Allen, after being asked to participate, expresses safety concerns about the “Festival of Life” planned for the upcoming Democratic National convention. He nevertheless attends the convention along with friend and fellow peace protestor Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman (the organizer, and whom Allen meets at the affair), Phil Ochs and Arlo Guthrie.

The organizers also create their own party, The Youth International Party, whose members are known as “Yippies.”

Allen’s upstate retreat and Peter Orlovsky

July 1968

Allen purchases an 80-acre farm as a retreat and work place and to insulate Peter Orlovsky from drugs. Allen’s friend, the filmmaker Barbara Rubin (who is familiar with the area) helps Allen select the property, which is 60 minutes west of Albany, near the small town of Cherry Valley.

Democratic National Convention, Chicago

August 24-30, 1968

Allen arrives in Chicago for the Democratic National Convention to find that Mayor Daley has refused to issue a permit for the “Festival of Life” and has armed the city to its teeth. As thousands stream into town, Allen feels responsible for preventing violence. At one point police attack the crowd and Allen begins a 7-hour chant of “Om.” Outbreaks continue through the week as the police brutalize TV reporters, news journalists and bystanders. Many are hospitalized.

Allen notes:
“Tear gassed chanting OM at Lincoln park Yippie Life-Festival Chicago 1968 Presidential convention, then accompanied Jean Genet & William Burroughs on front line Peace “Conspiracy” march led by Dave Dellinger.”

Allen retreats to his Cherry Valley, NY farm for the 1968-69 winter

September 1968

Drained by the events at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Allen repairs to his property in Cherry Valley, New York for the winter. He hires young filmmaker Gordon Ball to manage the farm with Peter Orlovsky and begins setting some of William Blake’s work to music for release on the Beatles’ Apple Records label.

Planet News published

November 1968

Allen’s Planet News: Poems 1961-1967 is published by City Lights Books as part of the Pocket Poet series.

Allen records Blake’s Songs

June 1969

Allen begins recording the Blake songs he set to music, mostly from Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. Barry Miles manages the project, which includes musicians Don cherry, Elvin Jones and Jon Scholle. After some troubles with Apple Records, the material is released by MGM records in 1970.

Jack Kerouac Dies

October 21, 1969

Jack Kerouac dies in St. Petersburg, Florida of cirrhosis of the liver. After he serves as a pal bearer at the funeral in Lowell, MA, Allen begins writing the long elegy, “Memory Gardens.”

Allen testifies at the “Chicago Seven” conspiracy Trial

December 1969

Allen testifies on behalf of the so-called Chicago Seven — the “Festival of Life” organizers who were tried for inciting a riot at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Five of the defendants — Rubin, Hoffman, Hayden, Dellinger and Davis — are convicted but the ruling is later reversed.

Allen’s Indian Journals published

May 1970

City Lights Books publishes Allen’s Indian Journals, covering his travels in India from March 1962 through May 1963.

Allen meets Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche

August 1970

Swami Muktananda invites Allen to join him in Dallas, Texas to practice his (Muktananda’s) style of chanting. Allen practices chanting “Guru Om” in his hotel room for a week and adopts the style for a short period.

Later that same year, however, while hailing a cab on a New York City street to take his father to the hospital, Allen meets the Tibetan Lama, Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche. The purely chance acquaintance proves to be the longer relationship.

Spontaneous poetry?

May 1971

Allen meets with Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche at a San Francisco hotel just before a public talk. Allen complains of fatigue and Trungpa replies “that’s because you don’t like your poetry. Make up your poems on the spot.” Allen takes the advice to heart, though with only slight success, but finds himself fully intrigued by the man, nevertheless.

India, Bengal, floods and famine

September 1971

Using an anonymously donated ticket, Allen visits India and West Bengal, and in the latter, tours refugee camps at Jessore road after floods and famine have left some 7 million people homeless. In response, he writes the lengthy poem “September on Jessore Road.”

Allen with Bob Dylan and First Blues

November 9 & 17, 1971

Bob Dylan observes Allen reading poetry at New York University. Dylan is impressed with Allen’s improvisation and they continue that night with an impromptu jam session at Allen’s apartment. The encounter is so successful that Dylan asks Allen to join him in the studio.

The collaboration includes musicians Happy Traum and David Amram and the resulting work is released as First Blues, albeit much later in 1983.

“Kaddish” makes the stage

January 1972

After years of preparation Allen’s stage adaptation of “Kaddish” is mounted at the Chelsea Theater in Brooklyn, New York. Directed by Robert Kalfin, the production is a critical success, running for nearly a month.

The Republican National Convention and our government in action?

August 1972

With the Republican National Convention coming up, Allen organizes a peace protest, which — documents later obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request would prove — was infiltrated by the FBI. The agents posed as demonstrators and deliberately generated a disruption to instigate arrests, including those of Allen and a several other participants. Though later released, the otherwise peaceful demonstrators are depicted as violent.

Fall of America published &mdsh; and hailed

December 1972

City Lights Books publishes Fall of America to wide acclaim. Assembled from his recorded poems in early 1966, the book is faithful to Allen’s chronicle of his travels and serves as a travelogue, capturing a sense of a country at war. The work receives the National Book Award for Poetry.

National Institute of Arts and Letters

February 1973

Allen — along with Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. — is elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters.

Meditation retreat with Trungpa, Rinpoche

September-December 1973

Allen retreats to the Vajrayana Seminary hosted by Trungpa Rinpoche at Teton Village near Jackson Hole, Wyoming for meditation and advanced Buddhist training. He writes prodigiously during his stay and produces one long work in particular, “Mindbreaths”, capturing his thoughts and meditations.

“Jaweh & Allah Battle”

January 13, 1974

Allen laments the Yom Kippur war in the Middle East, writing “Jaweh & Allah Battle” in his frustration.

The Jack Kerouac School of Poetics

1974

Allen responds to a request from Trungpa, Rinpoche and with Anne Waldman, co-founds the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa in Boulder, Colorado.

Allen and Bob Dylan on tour

October 27, 1975

After working to establish Naropa University, Allen joins Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Review tour late in 1975 and through parts of 1976.

Allen’s father dies

July 7, 1976

Louis Ginsberg dies at the age of 80. Allen writes “Father Death Blues” while flying from Colorado to New York for the funeral.

The Merwin incident

October 31, 1976

During Trungpa, Rinpoche’s 1976 seminary near Snowmass, Colorado, poet W.S. Merwin and companion Dana Naone are noted absent from a naked Halloween party. When located they refuse to join in, at which time Trungpa directs several people to break into their barricaded room and drag the reluctant pair to the gathering. An argument follows and they are forcibly stripped of their clothing.

The incident — which Trungpa characterizes as merely another teaching — becomes public three years later when Allen’s interview with Tom Clark is published in the Boulder Monthly. The fiasco haunts Naropa for several years, setting off the “poetry wars,” severing numerous friendships and drawing public criticism.

Mind Breaths

January 1, 1978

Allen’s Mind Breaths is published by City Lights Books in yet another of the Pocket Poet series.

Allen Ginsberg’s FBI, CIA and DEA files and our government in action again?

January 1978

Allen, using the Freedom of Information Act, obtains copies of his FBI, CIA and files, which prove more extensive — and petty — than he’d imagined. The first entry describes a 1960 television show during which Allen advocated the legalization of Marijuana.

Allen notes there is also a great deal of focus on his sexual behavior, which, strangely, the government characterizes as dangerous.

“Plutonian Ode”

July 1978

Allen, Peter Orlovsky, Daniel Ellsberg and others protest nuclear proliferation by practicing sitting meditation on railroad tracks, blocking trains that are bearing Plutonium and fissile materials. During the summer, Allen is arrested twice at Rocky Flats, Colorado nuclear facility during the summer and composes “Plutonian Ode” in the wake of these events.

Allen tours Europe

1979

Allen tours Europe several times, accompanying Gregory Corso, Peter Orlovsky and the Living Theater with musician, Steven Taylor. He also visits Blake's Cottage in Felpham, England, reads and sings in Oxford, England and in Heidelberg and Tübingen Germany and at international poetry readings in Cambridge, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Paris, Genoa and Rome.

The Merwin incident dogs Allen and Naropa

Late 1979

Allen and Naropa both continue to strain under the ongoing weight of the Merwin incident with the 1979 publication of Ed Sanders “The Party: A Chronological Perspective on a Confrontation at a Buddhist Seminary” and Tom Clark’s “The Great Naropa Poetry Wars.”

While Sanders’ book reflects a measure of fairness, Clark’s work clearly reveals a bias against Trungpa and is in part viewed by critics and readers alike as inaccurate and malicious. With Naropa’s existence hanging in the balance, Allen is consumed for some time with defending Trungpa.

Allen and The Clash

June 10, 1981

Allen performs his poem/song “Capitol Air” on stage with the Clash at Bond’s in New York City and later records a track called “Ghetto Defendant” with them for their album “Combat Rock.”

Allen moves to Boulder, Colorado

October 1981

Allen relocates to Boulder, Colorado for several years to be more active in Naropa’s poetics department.

Plutonian Ode is published

January 1, 1982

City Lights Books releases Plutonian Ode: Poems 1977-1982, Allen’s last contribution to the publisher, as part of their Pocket Poets series.

Allen in Nicaragua

1982

Allen travels to Nicaragua to read at the Poetry Festival in Managua. He composes "Declaration of 3" with Ernesto Cardenal and Yevgeny Yevtuchenko, proposing non-interference in Nicaraguan evolution by the United States.

Un-American Activities

1982

Allen co-authors a P.E.N. Club report titled Un-American Activities, about the FBI’s harassment of the underground press in America during 1960’s and 1970’s. City Lights Books publishes the book.

25th Anniversary of “On the Road”

July 1982

Allen hosts the 25th Anniversary National Celebration of On The Road at Naropa. He is joined by William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Peter Orlovsky, Robert Creeley, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Michael McClure, Diane Di Prima, Ken Kesey, Ted Berrigan, Carl Solomon, Ray Bremser, Jack Micheline, Robert Frank, Herbert Huncke, Dave Amram, Anne Waldman, Abbie Hoffman, Timothy Leary, Jan Kerouac, and others.

Allen’s First Blues released

1983

Allen’s double album First Blues: 1971 - 1981 is released, due in part to efforts by John Hammond, who formed his own label after problems with Columbia Records. The materials represent the best from three recordings, including the Bob Dylan collaboration.

Good Morning Mr. Orwell

January 1, 1984

New Year's Day sang Do the Meditation Rock with Peter Orlovsky & Steven Taylor in Nam June Paik's Good Morning Mr. Orwell Satellite TV performance with John Cage, Merce Cunningham & Laurie Anderson. [more...]

Allen in China

October 1984

Allen travels to Beijing with Gary Snyder, Toni Morrison, Francine du Plessix Grey, William Gass and Harrison Salisbury as part of an American Academy of Arts & Letters delegation for a 4-day writers conference. He remains in China for an additional 8 weeks.

Collected Poems

January 1985

Allen’s new literary agent and friend, Andrew Wylie, arranges a 6-book, 6-figure deal with Harper & Row. Collected Poems 1947-1980 is the first effort, gathering the previous City Lights Books into one volume. (City Lights maintains the right to continue publishing the individual works.) Detractors scream “sell out” and accuse Allen of abandoning the small press world.

Allen’s new career?

January 1985

Allen reconnects with his love for taking pictures after a photo exhibition at Holly Solomon Gallery in New York. The show, “Hideous Human Angles” has Allen rediscovering old snapshots from throughout his lifetime. What amounts to something of a new career for Allen also brings a measure of international attention, with numerous photo exhibitions in Europe and the U.S.

Harry Smith moves in

February 1985

Harry Smith, in Allen's words "painter, film-maker, universal folklore archaeologist, Bibliographer, American Folkways anthologist, archivist, Hermetic philosopher & Alchemist" moves in to Allen's 12th Street apartment after leaving the Hotel Breslin in January. He stays for the bulk of 1985. "He spent months recording ambient sounds of the Lower East Side come in thru my Manhattan windows from miles around."[more...]

Month long travels in USSR

November 17, 1985

Travels with delegation of U.S.-Soviet Writers, meeting in Vilnius, Minsk, Leningrad & Moscow with William Gass, Bill Gaddis, Arthur Miller, Norman Cousins & Louis Auchincloss; visits with Bela Achmadulina. At first Allen's Visa is denied then granted for solitary visit Tibilisi encounter with filmmaker Sergei Parajanov; In he Moscow performs at A. Kozloff's birthday jazz concert & poetry reading at Lomonosov University with Yvgeny Yevtuchenko & Andrei Sergiev as translators.

Protesting US Nicaraguan intervention

January 1986

In January Allen drafted a controversial widely-endorsed delegates' statement against American intervention in Nicaragua with Arthur Miller & Gunther Grass for P.E.N. International Conference NYC of which Allen was a Vice President, American chapter. [more...]

Allen begins teaching at Brooklyn College

1986

Allen is appointed Distinguished Professor of English at Brooklyn College. While teaching responsibilities at Naropa could be considered somewhat “regular,” this is Allen’s first paid professorial job.

Nicaragua & Ruben Dario Poetry Festival

January 21, 1986

Allen makes his second visit to Ruben Dario Poetry Festival in Nicaragua (the first visit was in 1982) with friend Patrick Warner, for eight days & meets with poets Jose Coronel Urtecho, Pablo A. Cuadra, Ernesto Cardenal, Carlos Martinez Rivas.

White Shroud and more “Howl”

1986

Harper & Row publishes White Shroud: Poems 1980-1985 and also an annotated version of “Howl” that includes a photocopy of Allen’s original manuscript.

Middle-Europe Travels, Struga Festival, Macedonia

August 11-Sept 12, 1986

Arriving first in Budapest, Allen records with the Hobo Blues Band, and continues with a tour of readings stretching from Warsaw (Solidarity readings) through Belgrade, and Skopje, Macedonia, where he receives the prestigious, Golden Wreath prize for that year. [more...]

Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche dies

April 4, 1987

Allen’s longtime friend and Buddhist mentor Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche dies at the age of 47 of a heart attack in Halifax, Nova Scotia after an extended illness.

The Lion for Real

August, 1987

Allen records material for his spoken word music album The Lion for Real, which was the brainchild of producer Hal Willner. Allen speaks, rather than singing, taking advice from Marianne Faithful who commented, “maybe you shouldn’t sing.” Musicians include Marc Ribot, Garo Yellin and Michael Blair and the album is released two years later.

Israel with, Steven Taylor, Robert Frank & Natan Zach

January 5-28, 1988

Allen travels to Israel and gives readings with Natan Zach at Tel Aviv & Haifa Universities & Jerusalem Cinemathique. He meets with Palestinian moderates Mubarak Awad & Hanna Senoria, addresses 60,000 at the Peace Now Rally. Also lectures at Camera Obscura School "Photographic Poetics" with Robert Frank. Organizes P.E.N. American Center protest of Israeli censorship of minority Palestinian literature & media.

Wichita Vortex Sutra & Kaddish on Stage

February 1988

The Eye and Ear Theater in New York City revives a stage presentation of Kaddish with music by Steven Taylor & sets by Eric Fischl. That same month Allen's collaboration opera with Philip Glass “Wichita Vortex Sutra” premiers at New York's Schubert Theater.

“This collaboration came about because Veteran’s Theater Company asked Philip Glass to do a benefit performance with me at New York’s Schubert Theater, 1988. We crossed paths at St. Mark’s Bookshop, I showed him this passage I thought short & exciting, appropriate for the Vietnam Vets theater group,” says Allen.

From this seed another Ginsberg-Glass collaboration, Hydrogen Jukebox grew.

Japan Tour

October 18-November 4, 1988

Allen Reads in Tokyo with Kazuko Shiraishi at the American Literature Society of Japan, and has a photography exhibition at Tokyo Watari Gallery. He participates in the Osaka Anti-Nuke Rally, and gives benefit readings at Seika & Kyoto Universities with Nanao Sakaki to protect the Okinawan Shiraho Blue Coral Reef from construction of a new airport. [more...]

Ginsberg: A Biography

1989

Allen's first biography, written by friend & associate Barry Miles is published this year.

Ma Rainey to Gwendolyn Brooks

Spring 1989

For the spring semester at Brooklyn College Allen, along with Professor Marie Buncomb teach Brooklyn College course "African American Poetic Genius Ma Rainey to Gwendolyn Brooks." They host teacher/poets Quincey Troupe, David Henderson, Jayne Cortez, Lorenzo Thomas, June Jordan, Audrey Lorde, Alice Childress, Sonia Sanchez, Michael Harper and Gwendolyn Brooks.

Allen meets Ngawang Gelek, Rinpoche

1989

Through Philip Glass, Allen meets Tibetan Lama, Gelek, Rinpoche and the two quickly become friends. Allen and Philip jointly stage benefits for Gelek’s Jewel Heart organization, and the two go on to enjoy summer and winter retreats together for the rest of Allen’s life.

Allen’s photography published

1990

A collection of Allen’s photographs is elegantly published by TwelveTrees press and marks Allen’s first such release in the U.S. Hitherto he'd had photography collections published only in Denmark and Germany.

Return of Kral Majales

April 24-May 5, 1990

Allen's first return to Prague since his notorius 1965 visit, May King crowning & subsequent expulsion. He is received by Mayor Koran & President Havel and recrowned King of May after 25 years.

Korea

August 20 - September 2, 1990

Allen is the American delegate to the 12th World Congress of Poets, Seoul, South Korea

FNAC Photography Exhibition

November 5-15, 1990

Allen travels to France for the launch of his travelling photography exhibition at the French supermarket chain, FNAC. Each FNAC store in France & Italy has photography exhibitions of photographers ranging from Henri Cartier-Bresson, Berenice Abbot, Many Ray to David Wojnarowicz. This helps secure his reputation as a photographer as well as a poet.[more...]

Lectures at Virginia Military Institute

February 19-23, 1991

At the invitation of Gordon Ball, Allen spends a week as resident lecturer at Virginia Military Institute, lecturing on poetry.[more...]

Chevalier de l'Ordre des Artes et des Lettres

1992

Allen receives the French high literary award "Chevalier de l'Ordre des Artes et des Lettres" presented by Jacques Lang, French Minister of Culture, Paris. The Chevailler (Knight) is the third of three ranks in the the Order of Arts and Letters.[more...]

Life & Times of Allen Ginsberg

January 1993

After ten years of editing, filming & interviewing, Jerry Aronson's film "The Life & Times of Allen Ginsberg" has it's premiere at Sundance Film Festival.[more...]

Europe! Europe!

September-December 1993

During his Brooklyn College Sabbatical, Allen takes a four month European tour. He spends ten days teaching with Anne Waldman at the Vienna Poetry School, travels to Budapest & Belgrade then to Bydgoszcz, Krakow, Lodz, & Warsaw in Poland. Performs at the Cheltenham Festival England. His first vistit to Ireland brings him to readings in Dublin & Belfast, and a TV collaboration with Bono at the U-2 studio. Readings in Norway, Munich, Berlin, Prague, Barcelona, Madrid, Cordoba, Athens. He visits with Alan Ansen in Greece, and makes a final stop in Tangiers visiting with Paul Bowles and revisits the old hotel room he, Peter O. & Jack Kerouac stayed in on their previous trips in 1957 & 1961.

Howl & Kronos Quartet

January 20, 1994

Allen performs Howl with the Kronos Quartet, music composed by Lee Hyla, premiering at Carnegie Hall. [more...]

Allen sells archive to Stanford University; purchases NY loft

1994

Allen transfers a trove of life’s work, photos, artifacts, manuscripts, etc. — the result of ten years of archiving efforts — to Stanford University in California for $1 million and buys a modest but comfortable loft space in New York’s East Village to serve as his home and office.

The net proceeds are less than expected — Allen quips: “The Federal Government, 38 percent. The state 12 percent, the city 6. My agent took 5, the archivist who worked on the project for 10 years, 10. I was left with a third. I bought the loft. Now I’m back to square one.”

Cosmopolitan Greetings

1994

HarperCollins publishes Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems 1986-1992, which is the last collection released while Allen is alive.

Holy Soul Jelly Roll

October 1994

After years of scouring for and listening to archival recordings, Allen & producer Hal Willner compile a 4 CD set of earliest exisiting recordings of each poem and song featured. Rhino Records release it as Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Poems & Songs 1949-1993.

The Vortex

October 29, 1994

To celebrate the release of Holy Soul Jelly Roll, Allen & producer Hal Willner organise a large ensemble performance of Allen's "Whichita Vortext Sutra" poem with musicians Philip Glass, Art Baron, Stephan Smith, David Mansfield, Arto Lindsay, Marc Ribot, Michael Blair, Elliot Sharp, Lenny Kaye, Lee Ranaldo, Steve Shelley, Lenny Pickett & Christian Marclay. The event was a success, and was relasesed in CD format, October 2004, exactly 10 years later

Allen dies

April 5, 1997

Irwin Allen Ginsberg, surrounded by family and friends in his East Village loft in New York City, succumbs to liver cancer — complications of Hepatitis — and dies. He was 70.