A succession of varied tangents arising from Whitman’s poetry, taking us to Godspell, dynamic education (which includes destroying your teacher), a Greek castration myth, and a Zen fable, which leads into songs by Dylan and Louis Barabas and the Bedlam Six. We bring in Ralph Waldo Emerson, the Book of Job, Jesus vs. the do-gooders, and the cowards rushing around the vestibule of Dante’s Inferno (see picture), who were, as Whitman says, “virtuous out of conformity or fear”. Randy Newman comments on following the flag, and Sly and the Family Stone share Whitman’s love for “everyday people”. You are invited to attend.