Allen Ginsberg — "I'm a dreamer, but I'm not a fantasist."
I'm a dreamer, but I'm not a fantasist.
I'm a dreamer, but I'm not a fantasist.
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"The world is a nightmare of police states and corporate control."
"The only way to change the world is to change yourself."
"No more to say, and nothing to weep for but the Beings in the Dream, trapped in its disappearance, sighing, screaming with it, buying and selling pieces of phantom, worshipping each other, worshipping…"
"Democracy! Bah! When I hear that I reach for my feather boa!"
"The CIA should be abolished."
American Beat poet whose Howl (1956) faced an obscenity trial and became a counterculture manifesto. Closely associated with Jack Kerouac (Beat novelist, On the Road) and William S. Burroughs (fellow Beat, Naked Lunch). For an intellectual contrast, see T.S. Eliot, high-modernist poet of The Waste Land — Ginsberg's open-line confessional Beat verse was a deliberate rejection of Eliot's allusive academic formalism — the two halves of mid-century American poetry.
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