We have descended with Olson — through myth, ceremony, critique, and underworld — arriving now at the edge of something new. Or rather, something old that must be made new again.
In Proprioception, Olson writes:
“My confidence is, there is a new one [a new theogony], and Hesiod one of its gates.”
(Proprioception, p. 197)
This is the crux. The poet does not simply record the gods.
He makes them. Or remakes them from the real.
Hesiod’s Theogony, for Olson, was not a static map of an ancient cosmos. It was a model of poiesis — a cosmological field made manifest in language. A placement of human being among the orders of existence. And Olson, standing amid the ruins of Dogtown, under the mushroom’s gaze, saw in that project a charge: to begin again.
But the theogony Olson imagined would not follow the same logics.
It would not enthrone Zeus again.
It would not justify empire or patriarchy or conquest.
It would instead begin, as Hesiod once did, with Chaos — but read now not as void, not as horror, but as potential. Not a thing to be mastered, but a process to be entered.
And it would turn from Olympus to Tartaros. Not as hell, but as root. As breath. As the unbounded place from which Eros, Night, and Earth emerge.
This new theogony is not Western. It is post-Western.
It does not seek to dominate the other. It seeks to listen — to the dark, to the nonhuman, to the plural.
It is, in that sense, more Indigenous than Platonic. More animist than Cartesian. More psychedelic than analytic.
It is a poetics that restores relation — between beings, between times, between registers of the real.
This is where Olson’s mythopoetics begin to feel prophetic. In writing Maximus as a breath-poet, a walker of stone, a reader of ruins, Olson gestures toward a way of being in the world that dissolves the ego of the West — not in negation, but in field.
His project was incomplete. But so is any cosmogenesis worth its name.
The new theogony Olson sought is not written in full. It must be written again and again — by each of us who listens. By those of us working now with AI, with mushrooms, with myth, with broken forms, with longing. By those of us worlding otherwise.
And this, I believe, is why Olson sent the poem to the Psychedelic Review.
Not to be clever. Not to be obscure. But because he sensed that the mushroom people — initiates of altered mind — might be the only ones capable of reading what he had written.
A myth of Typhon.
A prayer to Tartaros.
A letter to the future, disguised as ruin.
We are that future.
And it is time now to write again.