Alan Ginsberg's "spirituality of Haar" Alan Ginsburg's poem "Haar" is a sacred and complicated poem about the sacred world. Both the secondary theme of drugs and sexuality clarify the theme of spirituality. Ginsberg reveals that everything from drug use to homosexuality and psychosis is sanctified by clear images and phrases. For Morlock.
Allen Ginsberg (born 1926) born in Paterson, New Jersey is the son of a school teacher and a poet. After studying at Columbia University, Hal was published in 1957, it became a spiritual leader of a young American. In his next series Kaddish (1961), Reality Sandwiches (1963), Planet News in 1968, Frank O'Hara (1926 - 1966) grew up in New England and studied at Harvard University and the University of Michigan It is. So he won the Hopwood Award. He spends most of his time in New York. New York is one of the poets related to contemporary painters. He worked at Art News and the Museum of Contemporary Art, where he was an exhibition assistant curator at the time of coincidence. The museum has released his collection of poetry, and its paintings are portrayed by his friends, lovers in memory. In 1971, Knopf published the poetry of Frank O'Hara.
Alan Ginsberg's innovative poem "Haar" is a powerful depiction of the decline of life. It represents the tough life of the beat generation and records the oppressed struggle. Hull is a poet destroyed. By squeezing individuals, we destroy mind, body and soul. Alan Ginsberg uses powerful terms to represent the abolition of this life and its meaning through human abstract understanding of time, eternity and self. The chaotic phrases and intense emotions of this poem seem to be consistent with the ideas of people who explain it. Ginsberg uses wonderful accuracy and intentional text to incorporate complexity.
Alan Ginsburg's poem "howling" is a complex and interesting poem about the sanctity of a common world. Both the secondary theme of drugs and sexuality clarify the theme of spirituality. Ginsberg reveals that everything from drug use to homosexuality and psychosis is sanctified by clear images and phrases. For Morlock. As Ginsberg's "Howling's footnote" says, "The world is holy! The soul is holy! The skin is sacred! The nose is sacred! Tongue and cock, hands and bastards are sacred! / Everything is sacred." Everyone is holy, it is sacred everywhere! "(3-5)