Thank you, Barry, for such a careful Jack Spicer search, seizure and recovery. I hope you noticed the Jaguar in the northwest corner of the lot?? I left my door open so that you could hear Spicer's play coming thru on that incredible Radio. Not only the light shines 24 hours a day on the Parking Lot! But gracious, I hope you did not take advanage and steal my car. No offense but Poets you know!
Stephen V
http://stephenvincent.net/blog/
--- On Wed, 11/18/09, Barry Alpert <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
From: Barry Alpert <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: GeoPoemCaching
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Wednesday, November 18, 2009, 8:59 PM
On Sun, 15 Nov 2009 between 4:30 & 6:00 PM I discovered that unknown performance by
Spicer you secretly embedded at 38.89147N77.02001W. My transcription from the
Catholic dictation forthcoming next Wednesday. God bless the parking between the East
& West buildings, and the rock Keston Sutherland rediscovered in Brighton.
Barry
On Mon, 16 Nov 2009 13:35:33 -0600, Halvard Johnson <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>Not to worry, Stephen. Those coordinates should steer them way
>south of Brooklyn, at least as far as Washington, DC, where
>our works should be found--at least some of them.
>> On 15-Nov-09, at 2:37 PM, Stephen Vincent wrote:
>>
>>> "Geocaching, an online game in which players use global positioning
>>> devices to track down hidden containers at coordinates posted on a Web
>>> site, is soaring in popularity"
>>>
>>> Has anybody or group been doing with poems? I think it would be an interesting
challenge/adventure to "cache" poems in tins or boxes - either new or classic ones - in
environments that relate to the poem's contents. Say, different Wordsworth poems at
various, appropriate GPS sites through the Lake District. Frank O'Hara poems on x GPS
Manhattan sites. A particular parking plot for Spicer's poem in relationship to Robinson
Jeffers. New poems written on and in response to particular sites.
>>>
>>> I do wonder if anybody is doing this already????
>>>
>>> Stephen Vincent
|