The Wild Party (poem)
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The Wild Party is a book-length narrative poem, written by Joseph Moncure March, who also wrote The Set-Up.
Published in 1926[1] by Pascal Covici, Inc., the poem was widely banned, first in Boston,[2] for having content viewed as lewd. The poem was a success notwithstanding, and perhaps in part due to, the controversy surrounding the work. March's subsequent projects were more mainstream.
The poem tells the story of show people Queenie and her lover Burrs, who live in a decadent style that March depicts as unique to Hollywood. They decide to have one of their parties, complete with illegal bathtub gin and the couple's colorful, eccentric and egocentric friends, but the party unfolds with more tumultuous goings-on than planned.
Some love is fire: some love is rust:
But the fiercest, cleanest love is lust.
And their lust was tremendous. It had the feel
Of hammers clanging; and stone; and steel:
And torches of the savage, roaring kind
That rip through iron, and strike men blind:
Of long trains crashing through caverns under
Grey trembling streets, like angry thunder:
Of engines throbbing; and hoarse steam spouting;
And feet tramping; and great crowds shouting.
A lust so savage, they could have wrenched
The flesh from bone, and not have blenched.
[3]
A new hardcover edition was released in 1994 with the subtitle The Lost Classic. It featured about fifty black-and-white illustrations by
The Wild Party was adapted into a
An altered quote from the first two lines of "Part II, ch. 9" was used in the 1959 Ian Fleming novel Goldfinger, although Fleming did not credit March. He also changed the word "fiercest" to "finest".[5]
References
- ^ Joseph Moncure March, A Certain Wildness (Maine, United States of America : World Publishing Company, 1968).
- ISBN 9781912740086.
- ^ March, Joseph Moncure (1949). "Part II, ch. 9". The Wild Party. New York: The Citadel Press. p. 109.
- ISBN 0-679-42450-4.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ISBN 978-1425931001.
External links
- Complete text of The Wild Party at Internet Archive