back toJacket2

February 2004  |  Jacket 25  Contents  |  Homepage  |  Catalog  |  Search  |


Photo of Carl Rakosi

Carl Rakosi, 1903–2004

in conversation with Tom Devaney, with Olivier Brossard

Tom Devaney writes with this sad news:
      Poet Carl Rakosi died on Friday afternoon 25 June, 2004 at the age of 100, after a series of strokes, in his home in San Francisco. He was with his family and they were reading Mark Twain and listening to music when he died.
      Jen Hofer writes that Carl's last words, or nearly-last words were these: ‘A hospice worker had come by in the morning to set things up with them and she was asking Carl if he knew what day it was (he didn’t); or what month (he thought it was September); or what year (he didn’t know); and then she asked him who the president is. He hesitated and Barbara (his daughter) was thinking that maybe he didn’t know that either, but after a pause he said “Bush — that bastard!”’
      You can read a poem by Carl in the very first issue of Jacket, from 1997. Below, a conversation between Carl and Tom Devaney, recorded on March 30, 2001. The interview first appeared in American Poetry Review.



Introduction (written in late 2003)

(The interview follows.)

The first day I met the now 100-year-old Carl Rakosi, his companion Marilyn Kane came home from the nearby school were she was working as a nurse to join us for lunch. The dining room table was set with simple linens and a basket of fresh bread. We enjoyed a lunch of a potato leek soup topped off with grated Parmesan cheese. After lunch, I spent nearly seven hours that day talking with Carl at his home in San Francisco.
      I never planned to interview Mr. Rakosi and I did not interview him that day. But my friend Olivier Brossard, a translator and French Fulbright scholar, had just arrived in town from New York, and after I told him story after story from my auspicious day with Carl, he insisted that we record an interview with Mr. Rakosi. Since I had just spent a whole day with Carl I was very hesitant to ask to come again so soon, but (with Olivier’s urging, for which I am grateful) I called to ask if we could a record an interview, which I would conduct and Olivier would translate into French. Two days later I returned with Olivier and spent another several hours talking with Carl.
      To explain my interest in Carl Rakosi’s life and work, it would be enough to say that Mr. Rakosi’s life has encompassed the history of twentieth-century America. It would be enough that throughout the Great Depression he was involved with the Communist party, writing for The Nation and The New Masses and other progressive journals. It would be enough that he was published by and corresponded with Ezra Pound and was good friends with, among others, the young Louis Zukofsky. It would be enough that for over 35 years he had a career in social work, eventually directing the Jewish Family and Children’s Service of Minneapolis. Any one of these reasons would be enough, yet all these are true. Poet, father, grandfather, social worker, psychotherapist, socialist, democrat, humorist, and music enthusiast, at ninety-nine Mr. Rakosi is the last of a quartet of second generation American Modernist poets known as the Objectivists. This group also included Charles Reznikoff, George Oppen and Louis Zukofsky. All contributed to the February 1931 issue of Poetry magazine edited by Zukofsky and sponsored by Ezra Pound, now referred to as the “objectivists” issue, and all are included in George and Mary Oppen’s An “Objectivists” Anthology (1932), published in France by To, Publishers.
      Rakosi has written numerous books: New Directions published his first book and also Amulet (New Directions, 1968). New and collected earlier works have also been published by the National Poetry Foundation, Black Sparrow, and Sun & Moon. Poet and scholar Michael Heller’s work on Rakosi, as well as the book Carl Rakosi: Man and Poet (N.P.F., 1993) which he edited, are essential resources. Mr. Rakosi has had two books published in England by Etruscan books: The Earth Suite (1997) and The Old Poet’s Tale (1999). Talking to Carl on the phone recently, I asked if he had been working — he told me yes — “I’m on a writing binge right now.”
      What most strikes you in Mr. Rakosi’s living room, where we recorded the interview and listened to music at length on both days, is a large three-paneled front window, which fills the room with a clean, generous light (in the aptly named Inner Sunset district). The front window faces west toward the Pacific ocean, which can be felt more than seen. The window looks out upon the sloping 17th Avenue, where telephone wires criss-cross with a uniform sag between the area’s signature staggered and stacked duplexes. In the living room, you also cannot miss the impressive twin four-feet-tall black Polk audio speakers and high-end stereo system. Carl is well known to sit for hours enjoying his extensive collection of classical and modern CDs and records.

Carl Rakosi, listening to music










Carl Rakosi,
in his home in the Sunset District, San Francisco,
absorbed in his great love, music.

Photo Olivier Brossard.


On both days I visited we concluded our time by listening to music. The first day Carl asked me to pick a CD from the hundreds in his collection. It was not easy. I choose three: one by Aaron Copland, another by Vladimir Horowitz, and the last by the Mendelssohn String Quartet of “Alan Rawsthorne: Chamber Music 1905-1971.” We listened to the CD of the Mendesson Quartet, which ran seventy minutes long. On the second visit Olivier choose a CD by César Franck, his “Symphony in D Minor” and “Symphonic Variations,” which ran fifty minutes long. In both cases we listened to the CDs in their entirety without talking. On the first day, after we finished listening to the CD Carl remarked that it takes a “power of will to force yourself into the piece.” Given our concentration on the music I was also surprised at the time by his comment that “I notice that when I’m listening, I’m not listening enough.”
      Mr. Rakosi is a sturdy man. The top of his head is clean and bald, but what catches the eye, is his fine head of soft white hair on the sides and a slightly wavy in the back. He wears black wire-rimmed bifocals on his blue eyes, which are watchful and sincere. He remains sharp and lucid. One might say that he still has the “eye of a clinician,” which is a hallmark of much of his poetry, his lines, “I mean to penetrate the particular/ the way an owl waits / for a kangaroo rat,” ran through my head more than once as we spoke, or sat there in silence. Rakosi wears hearing aids in both ears, which work well. He will answer a specific question, but he will not go on past the specific answer. Like his poetry, when he spoke, he was precise and clear.
      One of my favorite Rakosi stories concerns Carl as a young poet — in his twenties during the twenties — going unannounced into the offices of The Little Review to meet the editor Jean Heap. A trusted friend named Margery Latimer from Wisconsin told Carl that she had “heard” that Ms. Heap, “liked to meet young, unknown writers and just talk with them, really.” Carl has said that it was the “really” in his friend’s story is what had convinced him. To put this story into its crucial context, it’s important to remember that at the time Ms. Heap was then publishing Joyce’s Ulysses serially along with new work by Yeats, Pound, Eliot, among others. Carl writes in his Collected Prose:

But how do you do this sort of thing? I didn’t know anyone who knew her. Do you call in advance? No, I didn’t have enough confidence for that. Margery kept reassuring me with an impish smile that all you had to do was walk in on her, that other young poets had done it, and that I was exactly the kind of person Jane Heap had in mind...
      Apprehensive, I climbed the circular staircase one afternoon to The Little Review office, which as then in the Village. It was dark in the hallway. At one end on the first landing was a small white name-card. The Little Review, and a push button under it. I rang the bell, there was silence for a moment, then the door opened and a pudgy figure appeared in a red velvet smoking jacket, smoking a small cigar, the face very round, the hair bobbed to look mannish. For a moment there was an astonishing resemblance to Oscar Wilde. It was Jean Heap.
      This startling appearance, for some reason, at once put me at ease. I simply gave her my name and she invited me in. It was not an office at all but an apartment she shared with Margaret Anderson. She was pleasant, served tea, and we talked, she as to a fellow writer. I found myself stimulated and was not lacking for words. I remember our conversation as lively and straightforward. At the end, she said, “I suppose you brought something with you,” and I said, “Yes,” and pulled out a batch of poems from my coat pocket. She read them closely, thought for a few moments and then said, “We’ll take these.”

In many ways, Carl Rakosi had arrived. He began to write poetry number of years earlier first influenced by Wallace Stevens and later by William Carlos Williams and now he was doing his own work. But for various reasons, which included his career as a social worker, his young family, and mixed feelings about the relevance of poetry, Rakosi stopped writing for nearly thirty years, between the years 1941 and 1967. Critic Robert Buckeye has aptly described this period saying that, “To be the poet we know, [Rakosi] had to give up poetry.”
      I owe my knowledge of Rakosi to Allen Ginsberg, who suggested I read some of Rakosi’s poems. I confess, I did not begin to truly appreciate Carl’s work until a few years later when I discovered his “Americana” series. The poems have a variety of voices and characters, which give them their great colloquial bite.
      Though his reputation is largely based on his association with the Objectivists, (and my own interests lie mostly with his “Americana” poems and what Robert Creeley calls Rakosi’s “ungainsayable plainsong), in is noteworthy that Rakosi says that his favorite of his own works are his “meditative poems,” which open his Collected Poems with the title (borrowed from Psalms) “Lord, What Is Man?”
      Of all Rakosi’s various modes of his work the most singular characteristic remains its authenticity. In his Collected Prose he writes, “It is a long time since it could be said of an American poet that he touched the heart. The odd and terrifying thing is that this is not noticed. Must we settle for poetry as the cold art or but a figuration of the mind? Why should it be less than man himself?”
      The interview was recorded on March 30, 2001.


Carl Rakosi

in conversation with Tom Devaney, with Olivier Brossard

This piece is 6,500 words or about fifteen printed pages long. It first appeared in American Poetry Review, volume 32, number 4, July-August 2003, in Carl Rakosi’s one hundredth year.

TD: When did you first start to write?

CR: The idea for it originated in high school when I was a senior. I had submitted a book report on George Meredith, who, for a high school student, was a very complex poet. I was only sixteen at the time. My teacher, who was a very sexy looking young woman, (she didn’t try to conceal that) wrote back a long analytical comment on what I had written in such a straightforward serious tone, it gave me for the first time, the idea that maybe I had it in me to be a writer too. My next experience was in a freshman English class at the University of Chicago. I somehow gravitated towards two of the students. One was a black student who was turning out poems that sounded like Kipling, very robust and vigorous. I admired that and I think he had a bit of an influence on me, although not immediately. I don’t remember his name, but he later became a well-known journalist on an Afro-American paper in Pittsburgh. The other student that I gravitated towards was Japanese, much older than I. What he was turning out were very short haiku-like poems, very beautiful. They made an unforgettable impression on me. The next thing I knew, I knew I was going to become a writer.

TD: Can you talk about your lifelong interest in music?

CR: There’s not much to say. My interest started when I was a small boy. I remember saving my pennies month after month until I had enough to buy my first mandolin, the only instrument I could afford, and learning how to play it from instruction books. My older brother, Lester, also had one. We used to play duets — easy, short, semi-classical pieces like the Blue Danube Waltz. Had their been money in the family for music lessons, I think I would have become a composer, not a poet, because I loved music more than poetry. I may still.

OB: Once you started writing, what effect did music have upon the composition of the poems and what composers might have influenced your work?

CR: I’m not aware that any composer actually influenced my work. Offhand, I could say that there are some similarities between my poetry and some composers, for example, Satie. Satie, I feel is a little like me — a bit of a humorist, satirist, playful, at the same time very cool.

TD: Speaking of other early influences I wanted to ask about the effect Stevens had upon your writing. In your poem “Homage to Wallace Stevens” (later renamed in the Collected as the “Domination of Wallace Stevens”), there is both a music of the language and direct use of musical terms and language. You write:

     These are privacies behind the mask
     but they are not the manners of a boy
     who blows his French horn, smiles at twelve o’clock
     and sips the old port from the hostess’s shoe.

CR: (Laughing) You know, there I almost translated Stevens, it’s so close. Well, it was a catastrophe when I started to read Stevens because he just enveloped me, he was a seducer. I didn’t at first object to that, but then I thought it was going to put an end to me. So it took me a long time to finally shake him off. He greatly influenced my early work, but then my own poem is also a bit of a parody of Stevens. You notice the character in the poem is Levy, not an Anglo-Saxon.

TD: Your work is characterized as Objectivist. What’s the origin of the term?

CR: The origin goes like this. Pound had been after Harriet Monroe, the editor of Poetry to get off her butt and get some new, fresh material into the magazine because it had become stale and phoney. He recommended that she ask Zuzkofsy to edit an issue. Zukofsky’s original idea was simply to collect the best poetry he could find, including the old masters, Pound, Eliot, and the others, but Pound vetoed that. The old timers didn’t need exposure, he wrote to Zukofsky, it was the young talents in America who needed to become known. Living in London, Pound didn’t know who they might be, but he thought Zukofsky would know. So Zukofsky went about soliciting poems from young poets for whose poetry he had a high regard. What he collected was the best he could find. Harriet Monroe, the editor, stung by Pound’s characterization of the magazine, insisted on a name for the collection. It seems to me now, that she must have felt that a name would show that the magazine was open to new forms of poetry and that this would benefit the magazine. She never openly approved of our poems, however. As a matter of fact, in the next issue she apologized to her readers.

Zukofsky hated the idea of pinning a name to a collection of diverse talents and protested, but being young and unknown himself at the time, he was in no position to hold out. I had letters from him at the time, sputtering angrily at how stupid she was. Anyhow, he came up with the term Objectivist, thinking that was as close as he could come to describing the work of Reznikoff, whom he admired most. In that connection, it is interesting that Pound never could understand what Zukofsky saw in Reznikoff, but he had the good sense not to interfere with Zukofsky’s judgment. Zukofsky wrote me at the time to ask, did I have any objection to the term. I wrote back, “ Hell no, just as long as I get into the magazine”, Poetry at that time being only one of two poetry magazines in the country, the other being one that I would not have wanted to appear in.

TD: I often read or hear people refer to the Objectivists as the “so called” Objectivists. Do you have any objections to the term, as a term, now?

CR: The term is a bit of a nuisance, because it has to be defined and it can’t be done when you try to use our work as evidence. There’s too much difference among us, for one thing, and one gets lost trying to define Objectivist or Objectivism as a theoretical concept. Zukofsky couldn’t define it either in his introduction to the first Objectivist poems and wound up on a tangent, simply describing what he believed went into the making of a really good poem that was Objectivist. To be precise, he always put single quotation marks around the term to indicate that what he meant by it was not strictly what you would think the word meant.

At the same time there is certain appropriateness to the word, because it does connote the opposite of the sentimental subjectivism of the poetry appearing in Poetry under Harriet Monroe’s editorship. Also the word Objectivist has a strong ring to it that I like. I still remember the little thrill I felt when Robert Bly introduced me years ago at an anti-Vietnam war reading with just the words: “Carl Rakosi, one of the great Objectivists”.

TD: So Zukofsky came up with the name Objectivist?

CR: Yes, he invented the term, but he himself was not one.

TD: Why wouldn’t Zukofsky be considered an Objectivist as well?

CR: Because his preceptor was Pound and Pound didn’t fit such a term and neither would Zukofsky’s work. One could get away with calling Reznikoff’s work Objectivist without objection and so that’s what we settled for. There was a period when Zukofsky was being showered with adulation for the impenetrability of parts of his work. Hugh Kenner, the distinguished critic, wrote that it would take a generation to plumb its depths. I had this to say about that.

(reads)

A Ditty for Louis Zukofsky

By a tree and a river an exegete linguist
sat singing Zukofsky, Zukofsky, Zukofsky

and I said to him, ‘Superbird,
why are you sitting there, singing
Zukofsky, Zukofsky, Zukofsky?’

‘Is it lyric aesthenia, birdie?’
I cried, ‘or a concept too big
for your little inside?’

With a shake of his tight little head
he replied, ‘Oh Zukofsky, Zukofsky, Zukofsky.’

TD: Had you met Zukofsky at that point?

CR: No, we were in touch only through letters then. I don’t remember the exact date we actually met but it was sometime in the 1930s and we became very close friends. We were two young guys then, full of ideas. We talked sometimes about poetry, but mostly about our personal lives.

TD: Was that in New York?

CR: Yes, I was working there then.

TD: What were you doing?

CR: Social work. Let me explain. When I was an undergraduate in the English Department at the University of Wisconsin, I was so immersed in my studies and in learning how to write that I had given no thought to how I was going to make a living, so as graduation approached, I was in a panic. I had to return to Kenosha and wait for something to turn up and to my great surprise, something did. In my desperation it seemed like a miracle. I came across an announcement that the American Association of Social Workers was interviewing applicants in Chicago for work-study positions. At that time there were almost no men in the field and they were especially interested in recruiting men. I didn’t have the slightest idea what social work was then, but it didn’t matter. I could now make a living and I leaped at the chance and they accepted me very cordially and with great warmth in Chicago. Once I was established in my first job in Cleveland, however, I became restless and craved to have experiences in other parts of the country, especially New York. Since social workers were always in great demand, I could move from job to job and I did, eventually winding up in New York twice and in Boston, Milwaukee, Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, San Antonio, Austin, Texas, and Minneapolis.

TD: You took a Master’s in Social Work at the University of Pennsylvania and then worked most of your life in that field. How did social work affect your ability or desire to write?

CR: It didn’t reduce my desire to write but in the end, after I was married and especially after I had my first child, it made it impossible. I couldn’t do both. Social work requires intensive concentration and I would have had to do my thinking and writing at night. It was too much and I had to stop writing. It was agonizing to stop and became tolerable after a few years only when I stopped all reading of poetry as well as writing it.

OB: You said that you insisted on keeping separate your social work and poetry. Why was that so important?

CR: Because when you’re doing social work you don’t want to be thinking as a poet. You have to be thinking as a social worker, which means that you have to be totally practical, literal, observant, identified with the client’s needs always and his psychology and not your own, and be thinking all the time of how to help him with his problem.

OB: How did your social beliefs percolate in your work?

CR: Well, it was a part of me so I guess they just came out naturally.

TD: One of the things that has attracted me to your work is the way you handle social subject matter, especially in the poems in ‘Americana’. They have a lot of grace and humor, but also some overt political content. Can you talk about some of the difficulties and possibilities of writing this kind of poetry?

CR: Well it’s very hard to do because social issues are always moral issues and the moral point with which you’re trying to move the reader is one he’s already full of, so if you’re going to rise above literary journalism and move him emotionally, you can’t attack the subject directly. You have to come up with some new way to look at it, some new way to express it so that it will come as a fresh, transmuted experience. Some poets have had a powerful enough imagination to do that, but not many. The one time I tried the direct approach, it didn’t work to my satisfaction. I was left with a poem that was not bad, but was not good enough either. In addition to the imagination, one has to be able to find the elements in the social issue which can be universalized. That’s tough going. A different approach, which came to me naturally, was satire. This worked for me for social subjects and, even better, for political subjects. I remember when I wrote my first social poem, Zukofsky strongly disapproved. That was not me, he said; I was a lyric poet. At the time, I thought he might be right. But satire came easily to me and it was fun to do, but not as emotionally fulfilling as my other work. My heart, I guess, is with gravitas.

TD: It seems that some of your most overtly political poems are also some of your most direct and clear. In TO A NON-POLITICAL CITIZEN you write,

“You choose your words too carefully.
You are afraid of being called agitator.
Every man is entitled to his own anger,
It’s guaranteed in the constitution.
Every man is also entitled to his own
opinion and his own death
but you spend too much time goosing.”

CR: (laughs)Yes, I had to get that out of my system. That’s the American in me goosing around.

TD: The poem shows a little of what we’ve been talking about.

CR: One nice thing about satire is that it has such a wide range, from gentle to savage to humorous. I must say, until it came to me, I didn’t know I could be humorous. If you want to totally demolish a social injustice in words and do it in the most effective way, use humor of course. But humor has to be in your genes, you can’t learn it.

OB: Your involvement in progressive politics goes back rather far. Before we started the interview you said you started with a Socialist father.

CR: Yes, he came upon socialism quite by accident. When we were living in Berlin — I was only a baby then — he was a partner in a firm manufacturing canes. At noon he used to stroll in the Tiergarten, a park something like London’s Hyde Park, with soapbox speakers scattered around. One of the speakers who always had an intent crowd of listeners was Karl Liebknecht, a far-left political figure of the time, the founder of the Spartacus movement. His reasoning and moral passion entered deeply into my father. He was never the same after that, and in quiet moments he would talk about this experience, and much of the beauty of that reasoning and morality entered into me too.

OB: In America were you keeping in touch with the Communist writers in Europe?

CR: Yes, it seemed to me that their writing in the early years had a special clarity and moral point. At the time I was sure that Capitalism was bankrupt, that it couldn’t survive and that you had to have something in its place. Communism offered a rational and achievable moral alternative.

TD: Did having strong political values and strong values about poetry ever come into conflict?

CR: Yes, from the very start. I did a couple of things for The New Masses, but it went against the grain and I knew that the editor, Mike Gold, who had written one rather good novel but was not himself a poet, hued rigidly to the Party line and had contempt for lyric poetry as a form of bourgeois self-indulgence. He savaged an early book of Reznikoff’s and I knew from that that I had no future with that guy.

OB: Did being a communist in America ever get you into trouble or cause you problems?

CR: Not really. That’s because I used a pseudonym in the Party so they couldn’t trace me, but to give you a feeling of the times, Kenneth Fearing, who was in New York then, had a number of friends who were Communist sympathizers, so Fearing became a suspect and was called up before a hearing. They asked him, “Are you a Communist?” “No”, he said. “Have you ever associated with a communist?” “No”, again. They kept asking the same questions over and over until he said impatiently, “Not yet, Senator, not yet”.

TD: What are your thoughts about how many of those ideas hold up today?

CR: The idea of socialism, and communism which is simply a less democratic, less open and more controlling form of socialism, is a moral idea: fairness and justice for all. Who would quarrel with that? During the Great Depression, when capitalism seemed to have failed and nobody but teachers and social workers could find work and people were desperate, anybody with half a brain and half a conscience had to be either a socialist or a communist or a communist sympathizer if he was living in New York or the West Coast. There was turmoil in the Middle West too. I remember when I was working in The Cook County Department of Public Welfare in Chicago, returning to my office one day and finding the police there. An irate, desperate client had shot and killed a social worker over his welfare check. In other places, angry welfare clients stormed welfare offices and had to be dispersed by the police.

Under these circumstances, the communist party looked irresistible. The first mistake it made however, was to depend on the Soviet Union for guidance on what to do next instead of developing an indigenous American program of action. Had they done so, their actions would have taken a different course because democratic behavior was a firm American principle, and they might have become a viable political party here, but Russia had never had a democracy and Lenin simply brushed it aside at the outset by seizing military control when he saw his Bolshevik party was going to lose the election to the more moderate Mensheviks. Stalin’s paranoid nature turned the regime into a dangerous despotism. The strange, what you might call un-American behavior of the communist leaders here, was a result of trying to follow a Moscow model.

Looking back, one sees other elements now that were not perceptible then. If all the planning and direction come from the top and there is no effective way to challenge it or change it, the economy and the arts and creativity go to pot. In communist thinking the party elite are there to instruct and the people are there to be instructed and to follow. Add to that the nature of political leadership itself and you have an intractable problem, for we know now from looking around in the world that its leaders are the most ruthlessly aggressive, the most ambitious, often the most opinionated people in the population. They become drugged by the power of their position and become almost impossible to dislodge.

Now of course we’re into not just capitalism, but global capitalism with its wild, unpredictable, complex behavior. If it stumbles, it could pull half the world down with it. I see nothing to restrain what’s going on. The unions used to be a counter-force, but alas, no more.

OB: Do you still read a lot of political magazines, and if so, which ones?

CR: I’m afraid so. I can’t seem to let go of my insatiable need to know what’s going on in the world. At different times I read The Nation, The American Prospect, The New Republic, Harper’s, The Economist. Too many.

TD: Alan Ginsberg was a big supporter of your work.

CR: Yes, very big. There was an interview with him and the interviewer, among other questions, asked which poets are you reading now and what’s your opinion of them? So my name came up and he said, “He’s the best living poet in America now” (pause). That’s going a little too far, I’m afraid.

TD: How would you answer the question that the interviewer asked Ginsberg?

CR: (mishearing the question) Oh, I don’t go into the business of comparing myself to others. You get into trouble that way. If you mean how do I appraise myself, (long pause) I think as a poet who is able to express exactly what he intends and to whom subject matter is very important. That I am able to do it.

OB: I think Tom meant to ask what poets are you reading now? Anyone in particular?

CR: I must confess that I read very little poetry, not because I think there’s nothing out there worth reading but because I don’t want to clutter up my mind with other poets’ imaginings. It tends to choke off my own imagination and to dry up my impulse to write. Having said that however, there are many poets that I read from time to time to refresh myself and many more that I could read and don’t. Of the older generation the ones that come to mind are Mandelshtam, Ritsos, Machado, Lesmian, Cendrars, Szymborska, Milosz. Of the young ones, Anne Carson and the Howe sisters have captured my interest with their inventiveness. And those who have been touched by Buddhism, like Philip Whalen, touch me too, though I’m not a Buddhist. I’m a sucker for meditative poetry.

TD: How did you come back to poetry after several decades of not writing?

CR: It’s a strange story ( laughs). Early in 1968 I was getting ready to retire from my job as Executive Director of Jewish Family and Children’s Service in Minneapolis when I got a letter from an Andrew Crozier, who described himself as a young British poet studying with Charles Olson at the University of Buffalo. Olson had suggested that he read my work. Apparently it had made such an impression on him, that he had made copies of everything that he could find in the University Library and in his discreet British way wondered whether I was still writing. I looked at the letter. I wasn’t sure I had read it right. It was just an ordinary communication, but it was like a missive from another planet. I reread it to make sure I was reading it correctly and to collect my thoughts. I had not been with poets or given any thought to poetry for almost 25 years, so it took me a few minutes to register it in my mind. I had long assumed that nobody, I mean nobody, remembered my work anymore or even remembered my name. That Crozier found my work so interesting meant that others of his generation might also. That knowledge rushed through me and propelled me into writing again.

TD: I loved what you told me about Pound, which I’m guessing was much earlier when he was asking around if anybody had heard from you.

CR: Yes, Pound lost track of me during those early years and wrote Zukofsky that he was afraid I had died.

TD: He was wrong.

CR: Yes (laughing).

TD: What are your thoughts on Pound.

CR: I still think of him as a grand figure. He is grand even when it’s difficult to stomach some of his ideas in The Cantos. His critical ideas were priceless to the generation of poets that followed him. They are no less indispensable now. He had a great musical ear and a great prose ear as well. He reevaluated and clarified early English poetry and reintroduced the epic form into modern poetry. His critical judgments seemed infallible. What he did to transform The Waste Land is an example. The historical range of The Cantos is grand. In fact, during most of his life you could say he was a one-man institution dedicated to saving poetry from mediocrity, and I think he did do just that.

TD: How do you deal with his anti-Semitism?

CR: When I think of his radio diatribes against Jews when he was living in Italy, I am appalled. I can only explain it to myself as some form of senile deterioration, although it is consistent with his idealization of all-powerful monarchs, in this case, Mussolini, with whom he was hoping to develop a literary relationship. His earlier anti-Semistism appears only rarely in his poetry and is much less offensive to me than the anti-Semitism in the work of Eliot and Cummings. It is more open and confrontational. In a perverse sense, it is more honest, where Eliot sneaks a couple of loathsome Jewish portraitures into his poetry, distorted so grossly that they are obviously despicable. I can’t forgive him for that. By contrast, Pound’s one Jewish-mocking poem, Alexander’s Rag Time Band, was never included in his Collected Poems. Pound probably picked up some of his anti-Semitism from his family and the small town in Idaho where he grew up and may never have seen a live Jew, and more basically from the general anti-Semitism prevalent all over the country at that time. I knew only one writer of his generation who had none of it, Sherwood Anderson. It was still so prevalent in my generation that when I found out that my friend, Margery Latimer had none. It was like a revelation.

Much as I find anti-Semitism disturbing and evil, I have to add that I am slightly uneasy about evaluating poetry on the basis of its subject matter. Obviously there’s a limit to how offensive a poem can be, but short of that, it’s simply impossible to disregard a poem’s aesthetic merits or to what extent you can disregard them. If you try doing that, you wind up judging a poem by its social effect. I haven’t been able to figure out how to solve this dilemma. Maybe it’s not solvable and one simply has to steer a prudent course. It’s aesthetic’s subservience and obligation to humanity.

TD: It’s paradoxical, considering Pound’s many friendships and relationships with people who were Jewish.

CR: I doubt whether he had many friends who were Jewish. His contact with Zukofsky, for instance, was mostly by correspondence and they were not friends, and his visit with Ginsberg in Italy was purely literary and they did not become friends.

TD: The other day we were also talking about Groucho Marx’s letters. What are your thoughts about the letters between Groucho and T. S. Eliot?

CR: Those letters are interesting and surprising. I wouldn’t have thought Elliot, the anti-Semite, would have wanted to have anything to do with a Jew. But people are not that uncomplicated. The other side of Eliot was that he loved burlesque and comedy. We know from his letters to Conrad Aiken that when they were students at Harvard, they used to hang out at burlesque houses. In a couple of letters to Aiken, Eliot knocked off a couple of rollicking, ribald burlesque-style poems. So the chances are that when Eliot thought of Groucho, he didn’t see him as a Jew but as a burlesque comedian who had perfected his routines to such a fine art that Eliot considered himself a lesser artist and was eager to meet him personally. “It would be a great honor”, he wrote. Groucho, on his part, wrote as if there was nothing unusual about a great poet and a comedian writing to each other as equals.

TD: There’s the story about when they met and Groucho wanted to talk about The Waste Land and Eliot wanted to talk about Duck Soup.

CR: Yes, that’s interesting. We don’t think of comedians as intellectuals, but Shakespeare’s view of the comedian-clown was accurate, They’re ultra-quick in their perceptiveness.

TD: One writer also included in the Norton Anthology of Jewish American Literature, which you had out the other day, is S.J. Perelman. He wrote a lot of the famous screen plays for the Marx Brother’s movies and was a keen satirist, which also might be connected to some of the things you said about Satie as well. What are your thoughts on Perelman?

CR: Well, pretty much the same thing. Perelman wrote on a very elegant level. He was very precise. Too precise and elegant for my taste, too much of a stylist. You can’t breathe in such an atmosphere.

TD: Your work is also included in the Norton Anthology.

CR: Yes, John Felstiner and the other editors did a great job of showing the wide range of writing in so many different genres and styles.

OB: Have you thought a lot about what it means to be a Jewish-American writer?

CR: I don’t think of it at all consciously, oh no, never. That would be very bad if I did.

TD: Still, you must have some feelings about what it means to be included in this anthology.

CR: Oh yes, it did pull me back into what, for lack of a better definition might be called my Jewish self, which I don’t walk around with ordinarily, and it does give me a feeling of warmth and a kind of homecoming and pride in how much Jewish-American writers have contributed to the culture. I was surprised at how much there is.

TD: You have a lot of short poems I admire, and I know you have some thoughts about the form of the short poem. One from Americana I think is great is “Very Short Poem on a Racing Form”:

     Wouldn’t you know it?

                      Autobiography
     won

          by a nose.

     A lot

          of horse there!

TD: Can you talk briefly about the short poem?

CR: Sure. This has been the age of the novel. By the time the Objectivists came along, the short form had already lost favor. Part of the reason I think is that poetry has been constantly expanding its subject matter and the short form is not suitable to an expanding subject matter. It works in the opposite direction. So the short form doesn’t get the credit it deserves, but to people who have a taste for the epigrammatic, the short form has an incomparable allure.

TD: Do you have one that you could read us?

CR: (reads)

EVERYMAN

copulate
          < copulare:
to join,
          to couple.
Says nothing
          of lust,
the iron master,
          sweaty,
breathless,
          fierce.

TD: I wanted to ask you about William Carlos Williams and how you see your work in relation to his.

CR: From Williams ( and Cummings) I got the form that I usually use. I saw no need to invent anything of my own. It was already there and suited my subject matter.

TD: What was your relationship with Williams?

CR: My relationship with him started with my application for a Guggenheim. I had sent him my first book, Amulet, and he praised it to the skies. He said he would be glad to write me a recommendation, but he advised against it. If he recommended me, he said, I would never get a Guggenheim. I approached Wallace Stevens too, but he had a different response. He liked my work for its realism. It was just what poetry needed then but he didn’t see any reason to write a recommendation. Those people were just as able to evaluate my work as he was. It was obvious that he had no use for requiring references for a grant. Marianne Moore was curt in her rejection. She couldn’t approve the project I had proposed for the grant, to write on the psychology of the poet. So, as I said, I never got a Guggenheim.

I never met Williams himself. In those days I never felt the need to be with other poets. Had Williams and I spent any time together, I’m sure we would have become friends. We had so much in common. A meeting with Pound would have been more iffy. I imagine that in a person to person contact, he would have gotten off his high horse and been just another person absorbed in other matters than literature. If not, I would have found him insufferable. Had we connected, he would have had something to learn, I think, from my experiences in the world.

To expand this further, what I have in mind is the common touch, the human touch. Borges, that master of metaphor, with his superb intellect, had it to a touching degree. I witnessed it when he came to the University of Wisconsin in Madison for a series of lectures to the Spanish department around 1970. I was writer-in-residence then. By that time Borges had become so famous that no auditorium was large enough to seat all the people who came to hear him. Borges was already blind and had to be guided, so his young wife turned him over to me, thinking he would have things in common to talk about with another poet, and to relieve her of the responsibility which had become burdensome and boring. So I took over and guided him at mealtime and we became quite close, as you have to be with someone who is blind. We had a great time talking together. Then I had to guide him to the Men’s Room and at the urinal he turned to me and said, by way of explanation, “ I’m Borges.” The implication was unmistakable that he assumed that he was not anyone I could have heard of, just another writer, another person. That’s the common touch.

OB: I was wondering if you have read a lot of French poets and poetry?

CR: Oh, a lot of them. Dozens.

OB: Who?

CR: Oh, everybody, everybody. I’m trying to think of one, but his name slips my mind. The one who claims he’s just writing prose.

OB: Is it Michele Butor?

CR: No, someone around my age. Oh, it doesn’t matter.

OB: Was he associated with the surrealists?

CR: Oh, heavens no, the opposite. I got it, Ponge, Francis Ponge. A composer here has actually written music to a couple of Ponge’s poems.

OB: Who’s the composer?

CR: (tries to remember) I don’t remember.

OB: You like Ponge’s poetry?

CR: Yes, I do, very much. I admire it. It’s a small miracle how his patient, careful buildup of precise, minute particulars turns into a monument with all the metaphorical associations in place.

OB: Is that The Nature of Things, where he has those very minute descriptions.

CR: I can’t say, but his work is like Fabre describing the life of tiny animals.

OB: Did he influence you?

CR: Oh no, he came to my attention late in life.

TD: I was struck the other day when we were talking about the surrealists and you emphatically said, “ I dislike the surrealists. I’m a realist first and always.”

CR: Well, it’s not quite true that I dislike them, or some of them. I hate them!

TD: (laughing)

CR: (laughing too) Yes, it’s because their imaginings are outside the scope of human nature.

TD: But don’t you think that through their work they were able to show a certain sense of reality in contemporary life?

CR: No I don’t. All they showed is that they were writing it.

OB: I do a lot of work in translation and I was wondering if you have done translations yourself?

CR: Yes, I’ve made some adaptations of Jewish poets who lived in Spain during the 10th and 11th century: Solomon Ibin Gabirol, Moses Ibin Ezra, Jehudah Halevi. They were poets in the lyric mode of the Old Testament. They were also rabbis. They have a rich, deep, meditative tone. I found them in a very dead translation by the Anglo-Jewish novelist, Israel Zangwill and simply had to transform them, with some slight changes. They were a discovery for me.

TD: Pound’s adaptations of Fenollosa’s translations have always been something I’ve learned a lot from.

CR: I’m not surprised. Pound really made something out of them. Beautiful things.

TD: Your poem “Services” seems to combine many of the things we have been discussing — a poetry that’s meditative (despite its title and content), secular and deeply felt, yet not overplayed. I was wondering if you could read it?

CR: (reads)

Services

There was a man in the land of Ur.

Who’s that at my coattails?
A pale cocksman.

Hush!
the rabbi walks in thought
                    as in an ordained measure
to the Ark
            and slowly opens its great doors.
The congregation rises
                  and faces the six torahs
and the covenant
                 and all beyond.
The Ark glows.
              Hear, O Israel!

The rabbi stands before the light
inside, alone, and prays.
It is a modest prayer
for the responsibilities of his office.
The congregation is silent.

I too pray:
Let Leah my wife be recompensed for her sweet smile
and our many years of companionship
and not stick me when she cuts my hair.
And let her stay at my side at large gatherings.
And let my son George and his wife Leanna
and my daughter Barbara be close,
and let their children, Jennifer, Julie, Mimi, and Joanna
be my sheep
          and I their old shepherd.
Let them remain as they are.

And let not my white hair frighten me.

The tiger leaps,
the baboon cries,
Pity, pity.
The Rabbi prays.

There was a man in the land of Ur.

I, son of Leopold and Flora,
also pray:
I pray for meaning.
I pray for the physical,
for my soul needs no suppliant.
I pray for man.

And may a special providence look out
for those who feel deeply.

TD: What are your thoughts about how feelings do or do not factor into poetry?

CR: Hard to get a grip on such a question. My intuitive response is that there is a paucity of expressed feeling in English poetry, having partly to do, I expect, with English temperament and manners. But then, I’m not English and maybe this is not well taken. My stricture does not include Shakespeare and Elizabethan drama of course. Blake, and sometimes Robert Burns, are the great exceptions to this. I don’t see how you can get away from the fact that what pulls a reader into a poem and moves him are the feelings in it, not the intellectual content. But expressing feelings openly is risky because they are so close to sentimentality, so one has to be careful and at the same time bold. Blake’s Songs of Innocence are a model for this kind of partnership

TD: Are you still writing poems?

CR: Absolutely. Oh yes, I’m going high speed right now. I’m lucky.

OB: Are you working on a new book?

CR: I’m hoping it will be.



February 2004  |  Jacket 25  Contents  |  Homepage  |  Catalog  |  Search  |
about Jacket | style guide | bookstores | literary links | 400+ book reviews |


Copyright Notice: Please respect the fact that this material is copyright.
It is made available here without charge for personal use only. It may not be
stored, displayed, published, reproduced, or used for any other purpose

This material is copyright © Carl Rakosi and Tom Devaney and Olivier Brossard
and Jacket magazine 2004
The Internet address of this page is
http://jacketmagazine.com/25/rak-devan.html