The Chameleon Poet: Bob Dylan’s Search For Self

Author: John Bauldie

The Chameleon Poet: Bob Dylan’s Search For Self

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On his untimely death at 47 years old in October 1996, not only did John Bauldie sit at the what could be called the high table of Dylan Studies, but from the early nineties, when he was invited by Dylan’s management to write the liner notes that accompanied the Bootleg Series Volume 1-3, many would attest that he was chairman of the board.

In his lifetime, John Bauldie was a giant amongst Bob Dylan fans and collectors. As the editor of The Telegraph, he was a voracious advocate for Dylan to be afforded the respect of a major artist and an early lobbyist for him to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Yet, despite creating the Wanted Man Study Series to encourage analysis of Dylan’s work, Bauldie never published his own full critical study, though regular subscribers to The Telegraph knew he had completed one. A few teasing extracts and a handful of mysterious mentions revealed the existence of this fabled manuscript, The Chameleon Poet, which has remained unpublished until now.

Covering the formative span of Dylan’s career from his emergence in the early sixties to his conversion to Christianity in the late seventies, The Chameleon Poet traces each step in the development of the artist and man from youth to maturity. With scholarly precision and vivid clarity, Bauldie’s analysis of Dylan’s work reveals a continuous journey.

Forty years on, as a Nobel Laureate, Bob Dylan’s position as one of the great artists of the age is secure, fulfilling Bauldie’s vision. Now it is time to read the only full-length critical study by the foremost champion of Dylan’s art. The Chameleon Poet is a book of its time, but such is its focus on the inner journey of everyman, it’s as relevant today as it was yesterday, and will be tomorrow.

Bill Allison’s introduction sketches a portrait of Bauldie’s life and his ascendancy in the world of Dylan Studies.

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Mojo

Bauldie’s rigour, lightly worn, shoots out of every line… identifying the ways the artist Robert Zimmerman and the personas of Bob Dylan diverge and intersect, while storms rage and spectres of Rimbaud, Brecht and King Lear circle. Bauldie’s take feels before its time, breaking down the walls between phases that even Dylan fans like to erect, and tracing Dylan’s consistent posing of a question anyone can relate to: who the hell am I, and why am I doing this?

Tim Cumming, The Arts Desk

A literary and Jungian take on all things Bob – or specifically, on the poetry in his work and sees Dylan’s development as a poet-man-singer as a unified journey towards self-awareness, and the individuation that Jung describes extensively in his work. Bauldie draws a great deal on Shakespeare – especially Lear – as well as Jung, and charts Dylan’s 'search for self' via key songs – from 'Talking World War 3 Blues' all the way down to 'Changing of the Guards', a brilliant song from underrated album Street Legal that’s drenched in Jungian mythological concepts.

Tom Willems

Bauldie proves to be one of the top Dylan writers. The nice thing is that Bauldie often knows how to surprise and comes up with insights, interpretations that I have not thought of or read about before. One of the most interesting books about Dylan the poet. The Chameleon Poet is a must read… a gem in the Dylan library.

Johnny Borgan

An important reminder of Bauldie’s astonishing effort to shed light on Dylan as a major poet worthy of a Nobel Prize, and, after more than four decades since it was written, it still speaks directly, fresh and enlightening to every one interested in the words and lyrics of Bob Dylan.

Clinton Heylin

I read The Chameleon Poet in 1981, and spent most of the rest of the decade trying to persuade John to publish it. Well, it only took forty years, but now you can read it, too.

The Chameleon Poet Manuscript History

The Chameleon Poet Manuscript History

John Bauldie’s lifelong friend, Bill Allison, tells the story of the manuscript of The Chameleon Poet and where it has resided for the last 40 years.

Tangled Up in Blue

An extract from John Bauldie's The Chameleon Poet: Bob Dylan's Search For Self. Here John looks at Bob Dylan's 'Tangled Up in Blue' from the album Blood on the Tracks, drawing comparisons with Hermann Hesse's novel Steppenwolf.

 

It strikes me funny that people actually have the gall to think that I have some kind of fantastic imagination. It gets very lonesome.

— Bob Dylan, Playboy, May 1966

Bob Dylan can scarcely have felt more alienated from himself than he did in late 1974. Having once again adopted the persona of the public performer with the US tour, he found himself facing separation and, ultimately, divorce from Sara. In order to achieve some kind of perspective on himself and on his situation, Dylan found it necessary to go outside of himself and become completely objective – to become, in fact, completely egoless and thus achieve the goal of self-assessment which had previously eluded him.

Such self-assessment requires total honesty, and only complete objectivity can aspire towards that. The songs written for Blood on the Tracks include naked self-portraits. Some contain assessments of Sara and the relationship, which is accepted as being at an end. Other songs separate, for the first time, Sara and the ‘other’ woman figure of whom Dylan has long been in search. Just as Renaldo and Clara attempts to separate Dylan the artist (Renaldo) from Dylan the public figure (Bob Dylan), so Blood on the Tracks attempts a similar separation of identity and thus aspires finally towards self-definition in such songs as ‘Tangled Up in Blue’ and ‘Simple Twist of Fate’.

‘Tangled Up in Blue’, the album’s opening song, presents a retrospective account and analysis of a relationship that is both autobiographical and mythical. Through his relationship with Sara, Dylan sees himself as being in communication with all women, or with the essence of femininity. Although Sara is – or has been – his alienated opposite, such a figure exists beyond her and can be found in other women, at other times and in other places. When he sings ‘I seen a lot of women but she never escaped my mind’, he admits this indirectly. The ‘she’ he cannot forget or escape from is his other half, who exists not as a separate entity from the many women he’s seen, but as a part of them. She was a part of Sara too, who is necessarily included in the song’s opening:

She was married when we first met
Soon to be divorced.

There are other directly autobiographical glimpses of Dylan’s past:

I lived with them on Montague Street
In a basement down the stairs
There was music in the cafés at night
And revolution in the air.

 
And of his present:

Me, I’m still on the road
Headin’ for another joint.

 
The song operates on the mythic level too, though. Dylan weaves into the song a fictitious past for himself, drifting from place to place, from job to job, and from time to time encountering the ‘she’ to whom it is his destiny to be forever linked. The central section of the song presents one such encounter in ‘a topless place’. Again Dylan perhaps owes more than a little to Hermann Hesse’s Steppenwolf as he presents himself stopping into the bar for a beer. In Steppenwolf, Harry Haller, suffering ‘nausea, agony and despair’ finds himself wandering from bar to bar, ending up at The Black Eagle, where he too has a ‘chance’ encounter with a woman: ‘She gave me a friendly and observant look as I came up and with a smile moved to one side to make room for me.’ The first thing she does is to wipe Harry’s dirty glasses before she turns her attention to his dirty shoes: ‘She took me under her wing just as I needed … she filled my glass.’ All the while Harry looks at her, ‘I could not tell of whom it was she reminded me’, whilst she correctly identifies him as an academic whose studies have meant that he never learned to enjoy himself. Eventually, Harry can contain his curiosity no longer:
 
‘But now, I really must know your name.’
She looked at me for a moment without speaking.
‘Perhaps you can guess it. I should be glad if you did. Pull yourself together and take a good look at me. Hasn’t it ever occurred to you that sometimes my face is just like a boy’s? Now, for instance.’
Yes, now that I looked at her face carefully, I had to admit she was right. It was a boy’s face. And after a moment I saw something in her face that reminded me of my boyhood and of my friend of those days. His name was Hermann. For a moment it seemed that she had turned into this Hermann.
‘If you were a boy,’ said I in amazement, ‘I should say your name was Hermann.’
‘Who knows, perhaps I am one and am simply in woman’s clothing,’ she said playfully.
‘Is your name Hermine?’
She nodded, beaming, delighted at my guess.

 
The parallels in the encounter in ‘Tangled Up in Blue’ should be clear enough. Dylan sings of his fascination with her face, which he ‘just kept lookin’ at’. She approaches him and asks ‘Don’t I know your name?’121 Her fascination with his face corresponds with his for hers, whilst his diffidence and uneasiness, and her care for him – ‘she bent down to tie the laces of my shoe’ – echo Steppenwolf exactly. Hermine plays records for Harry; the woman in Dylan’s song offers a book of poems by a thirteenth-century Italian poet – maybe Dante (whom Dylan speaks of having read in the 1968 Sing Out! interview) maybe Petrarch (whom Dylan is to confuse with Plutarch in the 1978 Jonathon Cott interview from Rolling Stone). In either case:

Everyone of them words rang true
And glowed like burning coal
Pourin’ off of every page
Like it was written in my soul.

 
It may be that Dylan had in mind Baudelaire’s ‘Le Balcon’ here, in which the poet recalls similar evenings spent with his own ‘mother of memories, mistress of mistresses … we often said things that never will perish, on these evenings illumined by the glowing coal’.

The association with Baudelaire is confirmed when in a 1978 concert, Dylan sings:

She opened up a book of poems
And shouted it to me
Written by Charles Baudelaire…

 
Harry Haller, in Steppenwolf, is an obvious persona of his creator, Hermann Hesse. The narrator of ‘Tangled Up in Blue’, in the officially released version of the song, speaks in the first person and thus can be confused with his creator. In the originally recorded version – one of five cuts not used on the album release – it is still ‘I’ who has the encounter in the topless place, but the rest of the song speaks of ‘he’; in live recordings of the song, Dylan seemingly alternates ‘I’ and ‘he’ at random. As I’ve already pointed out, the song combines both factual and fictitious autobiography and operates on real and mythic planes concurrently. Both Dylan and Hesse separate person and persona in their art. ‘Hermine’ is Harry’s ‘twin sister’, the feminine image of himself; she cares for him as a wife, sister and mother, and thus assumes symbolic proportions. As the novel progresses, Hermine’s identity melts from that of ‘a woman’ into ‘womankind’ until Harry finally consummates a symbolic marriage to her, which represents the complete welding of all aspects of his nature. The extracts from their meeting quoted above indicate that Hermine is not separate from, but part of Harry and, by implication, Hesse’s personas.

In ‘Tangled Up in Blue’, the meeting of the song’s narrator with the woman in the bar is an exact parallel. She approaches him, dominates him, mothers him, loves him. Because she is the feminine part of his own nature, her communication with him through the book of poems is directly with his soul. To realise himself fully, he must embrace her and absorb her. One of Jung’s symbols for the self is the hermaphrodite. In ‘Tangled Up in Blue’, Bob Dylan presents a mythologised version of his male role – working in the Great North Woods, or on a fishing boat, or, in the original version of the song, ‘loading cargo on to a truck’ at an ‘airplane plant’. He projects his femininity – his emotional poetic nature – on to the mythic ‘she’ who offers back to him a book of poems which seems as though ‘it was written in my soul from me to you’. She is, and always has been, and always will be, a part of him. She knows that any separation is temporary – ‘we’ll meet again someday’ – for she truly is his ‘other half’, the ‘missing piece’ of the total self, of which both ego and anima are merely parts.

 

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John Bauldie

John Bauldie was raised in the northern English town of Bolton. Throughout the seventies, alongside his work as a lecturer in English literature, he was an avid collector of rare and unreleased Bob Dylan recordings. In the eighties, he established The Telegraph, a popular quarterly journal of Dylan studies, which he edited from 1981 until his tragic death in 1996. He was a staff writer at Q magazine and Mojo, edited several books, and wrote the liner notes for Bob Dylan’s Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 box set, for which he received a Grammy nomination.

Book:
The Chameloen Poet: Bob Dylan’s Search For Self

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