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11/27/02
Joyce,
Thomas and Mayakovsky join forces in Jack Hirschman
By
Thomas Crowe
Front
Lines by Jack Hirschman.
City Lights Books: San Francisco, 2002. $12.95 — 204 pp.
Jack Hirschman is one of the most galvanizing public readers
of poetry performing today.
— Contemporary Authors
I
met Jack Hirschman 28 years ago on the streets of North Beach, San
Francisco, following a reading he had just given at the then Malvinas
Coffeehouse. Never having read any of his poetry and having been
nothing less than astonished by what I had heard earlier that evening,
I asked after something of his work that I could lay my eyes on.
We walked into the nearby City Lights Bookstore on Columbus and
Broadway and he directed me to a small odd-shaped book on one of
the many shelves of the downstairs poetry section, saying This
is my most painterly of books. The book was Aur Sea, which
had recently been published by Tree Books in Bolinas, Calif., just
up the coast from San Francisco.
I have been following the work of Jack Hirschman ever since. And
while Aur Sea is maybe still my favorite collection of his work
— with its Joycean, Finnegans Wake-like lyricism, wordplay
and inventive punning — I have found reason to delight or
even be amazed in each of the many books he has published over the
last quarter century or more.
Today, I see Hirschman not with the same youthful, star-struck eyes
of that first meeting, but rather, more critically, as one of the
most important poets of the American 20th century.
For a poet as prolific as Jack Hirschman, the 224 pages of his new
City Lights book Front Lines, selected poems covering a half-century
of work from 1952 to 2001, gives us only a fraction of his gargantuan
output over that long, productive arc. (With over 100 books of original
work and translations at last count.) With a deft touch, he has
lifted many of the best poems from these years, giving us a consolidated,
if not a best of Hirschman reader, in which the turning
of each page causes something of a small epiphany, if not outright
cause for celebration. Yet, while being single-handedly Americas
most prolific, public, and most politically outspoken poet, his
work has been critically neglected, even ignored. Only this year
did he receive an American Book Award Lifetime Achievement Award
at the age of 70 —the first, if not the only, literary award
bestowed upon him by the American literary establishment.
Hirschmans 50-year arc is as high as it is wide. In Front
Lines, we are taken on that kabbalist-to-communist ride over the
lyrical bridge of international influences that, appropriately,
begins with a poem from 1952 entitled For Dylan Thomas
While cold November rain rapped fate,
I do not lament.
For in the poverty of days, I am swollen
By the fullblown cantos, from the mouth
Of the choir of the bellringing dead.
It ends with The Twin Towers Arcane written in 2001
as an homage to the city of his birth as well as a requiem to American
democracy and highlighted in such lines as:
Children of a star-spangled nihilism....
The rule of nothingness is complete now
Hirschman confided in me during another meeting during the San Francisco
1970s that it had been at a New York reading given by Dylan Thomas
that he had been inspired to devote his life to poetry, and more
specifically to lyric poetry. Amidst this arc, a diverse multi-culturalism
and many languages are, also, invoked, transfiguratively, making
him a true American cornucopia of sensibility where an iconoclastic
world-view is concerned.
During what has been a long period (following the more libertarian
50s and 60s) of poetic malaise — due in large measure to the
increasing domination of MFA (corporate) poets and programs —
Hirschman emerges larger than life as the Paul Revere of the American
literary scene. From his long-time home in North Beach, San Francisco,
he has been sending out the cry: the capitalists are coming,
the capitalists are coming! A quarter century later, and following
the almost nightly news of corporate corruption and scandal in the
autumn of 2002, he, now, looks very much the prophet — with
books like The Bottom Line [Curbstone Press, 1988] and The Xibalba
Arcane [Azul Editions, 1994] being the essential proof of his clairvoyance.
In poems such as Workers Poem in Front Lines,
the cultural and political sympathies of Hirschmans oeuvre
are accessibly evident.
You whose brows are knit
with electric streets, come sit beside
on thin air, spaced out and longing
for nothing, broken violins
of bodies, diamonds of mind fractured
by the plague of money, come sit
in my winter flake, my room
which is part of this vast cage
where free birds break their wings
against the sunlight and warm
their suspicions at the broken
shoe-balance of the street.
Yet, while there is an explosive Mayakovsky-like power in his political
voice, for my money his most memorable poems are love
poems, or heart-felt elegies to the living and the dead as evidenced
in poems in this new collection such as Headlands, One
Night, Vimba and The Love Poem —
the last lines of which serve as a virtual coda for Hirschmans
all poems are love poems credo: there is a language
called/Soul, a tongue that is/the kiss thats the bliss/of
all blisses. Untranslatable. For a top-flight translator,
thems strong words! But Jack Hirschman is a poet who has,
quite literally, lived a life of words. Hes walked the
walk as the saying goes. Since taking his domestic and literary
life out of the boardroom and the classroom and into the streets
in the late 60s, hes never looked back. And along that pathless
path many younger apprentices and literary on-lookers have been
nourished and fed with the manna of his exemplary life and generosity,
as well as from the continuously high quality of this work.
The publication of Front Lines, if nothing else, serves as an appropriate
celebration of Jack Hirschmans 70th birthday and his staying
power as a poet of conscience. His poetic lines, these days, are
every bit as charged with the scintilla that defined his youth—as
the darling of the academic scene. If anything, Hirschman seems
to be getting poetically younger! Still, after all these 50 years,
he has managed to maintain an enviable, if not hard-fought for,
position in American arts and letters: on the front line.
(Thomas Rain Crowe lives in Jackson County. His books of poetry
and translation include The Personified Street, Water
From The Moon, The Laugharne Poems (written from the
Dylan Thomas home in Laugharne, Wales) and Drunk on the Wine
of the Beloved: 100 Poems of Hafiz.)
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