William Bronk: “Several Possible Worlds”

Photographers Unknown, Several Possible Worlds

Whether what we sense of this world
is the what of this world only, or the what
of which of several possible worlds
–which what?–something of what we sense
may be true, may be the world, what it is, what we sense.
For the rest, a truce is possible, the tolerance
of travelers, eating foreign foods, trying words
that twist the tongue, to feel that time and place,
not thinking that this is the real world.

Conceded, that all the clocks tell local time;
conceded, that “here” is anywhere we bound
and fill a space; conceded, we make a world:
is something caught there, contained there,
something real, something which we can sense?
Once in a city blocked and filled, I saw
the light lie in the deep chasm of a street,
palpable and blue, as though it had drifted in
from say, the sea, a purity of space.

William Bronk, Metonymy as an Approach to a Real World, 1964, The World, the Worldless, New Directions

Born at Fort Edward, New York in February of 1918, William Bronk was an American poet and essayist. A poet of statement, he fashioned experimental and meditative works that used a language stripped of imagery, metaphor and ornamentation.

A descendant of settler Jonas Bronck for whom the Bronx River is named, William Bronk entered Dartmouth College in 1934, where he studied under poet and critic Sidney Cox. After graduation, he studied for a semester at Harvard and left college to write a paper on Herman Melville,  Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman entitled “The Brother in Elysium: Ideas of Friendship and Society in the United States”.

During World War II, Bronk served in the U.S. Army, first as a draftee and, later after attending Officer Candidate School (OCS), as an officer. After his military discharge in October of 1945, he taught English for one year at Union College in Schenectady, New York before returning to Hudson Falls, the site of his family’s homestead. In the latter half of 1946, Bronk finished writing his “The Brother in Elysium”; this volume of essays would be published in 1980 by The Elizabeth Press in Virginia.

Upon the unexpected death of his father in 1941, William Bronk had  managed his father’s business in Hudson Falls, the Bronk Coal and Lumber Company, until he was called up for military service. In January of 1947, Bronk again took the responsibility of managing the family business; this position, at first temporary, lasted until his retirement in 1978.

Bronk’s work follows the New England poetic tradition, an evocation of nature and its seasons that delves into the essence of reality and truth. This core tenet is also examined in the  works of Thoreau, Emerson, Dickinson, Wallace Stevens and Robert Frost. As a poet, Bronk was a spontaneous writer; poems would emerge in his mind as he went through his daily life. Known for his austerity, both in world-view and writing style, Bronk believed the world was only a semblance of the truth. While able to intuit its existence, he understood it was really beyond his grasp.

A prolific poet, William Bronk never used the typewriter, but wrote longhand. His manuscripts revealed that he seldom rewrote or modified a poem once it was written down on paper. Bronk’s poetry is clean and even in tone, free of unnecessary wording and filled with a subtle congruity of sound set to a basic iambic line.

In 1951, Bronk published his first major poetic works in the Journal “Origin”, an American poetry magazine founded in that year by poet Cid Corman. The response to his first two books, the 1956 “Light and Dark” and the 1964 “The World, The Worldless” did not garner him any reputation. Following those disappointments, many publishers proposed and later abandoned projects for Bronk’s poetry. Throughout the 1970s, the Elizabeth Press published his poetry volumes and established his place in the literary world.

William Bronk was the author of thirty-two published collections of poetry. His 1981 “Life Supports” won the National Book Award for Poetry. In addition to his 1980 essay collection “The Bother in Elysium”, Bronk wrote two other volumes of essays: the 1974 “The New World” and “Vectors and Smoothable Curves” published by North Point Press in 1983, Talisman House, Bronk’s publisher since 1993, published his final collection of poems, “Metaphor of Trees and Last Poems” in 1999.

William Bronk died of respiratory heart failure at the age of eighty-one, on the twenty-second of February in 1999 at his home in Hudson Falls, New York. He is interred in Union Cemetery in Hudson Falls, New York.

“To Bront, poetry is about what exists independent of writing. It’s about that something, that force, which sweeps poetry (and just about everything else) away. . . Behind Bronk’s deadpan voice, there’s often humor, warmth, even compassion.”—Daniel Wolff, “Why Nobody Reads William Bronk”, Literary Review, Spring 2014

Notes: Poet Burt Kimmelman, Professor of English at New Jersey Institute of Technology, wrote an extensive and interesting 2001 essay on William Bronk for the NJIT educational site: https://web.njit.edu/~kimmelma/poetessaylong.html

Two audio recordings with William Bronk can be found on the Poems to a Listener website: https://poemstoalistener.org/interview/william-bronk-1986-1994-series/

A biography and a taped 1978 poetry reading by William Bronk can be found on the PennysPoetry website: https://pennyspoetry.fandom.com/wiki/William_Bronk

Harvard Library’s “Listening Booth” site has thirteen audio recordings of William Bronk reading his poems: https://library.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/static/poetry/listeningbooth/poets/bronk.html

Top Insert Image: Daniel Leary, “William Bronk”, Date Unknown, Gelatin Silver Print, Poems to the Listener

Second Insert Image: William Bronk, “Metaphor of Trees and Last Poems”, 1999, First Edition, Paperback, SOS Talisman House, Northfield, Massachusetts

Third Insert Image: William Bronk, “Manifest and Furthermore”, January 1987, First Edition, North Point Press, New York City

Bottom Insert Image: William Bronk, “Light and Dark”, 1956, First Edition, Origin Press, Ashland, Massachusetts

Robert McAlmon: “The Possibility of All Things”

Photographers Unknown, The Possibily of All Things

Almost every night, Joyce and I met for apéritifs, and although he was working steadily on Ulysses, at least one night a week he was ready to stay out all night, and those nights he was never ready to go home at any hour. We talked of the way the free mind can understand the possibility of all things: necrophilia and other weird rites. We agreed in disliking mysticism, particularly the fake and sugared mysticism of many poets and writers. We spoke of what a strange man Robert Burton must have been to have compiled his Anatomy of Melancholy. and he didn’t know in the end a bit more about it than we did. Sir Thomas Browne, not to speak of Ezra Pound and Eliot and Moore and Shaw, we discovered, but sooner or later Mr. Joyce began reciting Dante in sonorous Italian. When that misty and intent look came upon his face and into his eye I knew that friend Joyce wasn’t going home till early morning. 

Wyndham Lewis arrived for a stay in Paris and he was a different man from the Lewis of London. He was free and easy and debonair. Indeed, too many Englishmen will do on the continent what it does not do to do in London. Lewis was intent upon going to the Picasso exhibition; he must meet Picasso and Braque and Derain, although these painters of Paris were cagey and suspicious about English painters of talent. Picasso at the time was doing his pneumatic nudes, which always made me want to stick a pin in them to see if they would deflate. 

Lewis was most gracious and jovial and instructed me with a constant flow of theories on abstraction and plastic values. It would not have done to let him know that I had heard most of what he was saying before, in New York. Somehow there was no wonder in Lewis’ discovery that the engineering demand of structures often give them an aesthetic value. The Egyptians, Greeks and Mayans seemed to have known that before Lewis.

Robert McAlmon, Don’t Be Common, Being Geniuses Together 1921-1927, McAlmon and the Lost Generation: A Self Portrait, 1962, Edited by Robert E. Knoll, University of Nebraska Press

Born at Clifton, Kansas in March of 1895, Robert Menzies McAlmon was an American modernist poet, novelist and publisher who, as an important expatriate in the 1920s, founded the Parisian publishing house Contact Editions. This avant-garde press published the works of such influential writers as Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound. 

The youngest of ten children born to traveling minister John Alexander McAlmon and Bessie Urquhart, Robert McAlmon grew up in several rural mid-western towns. In 1916, he studied briefly at the University of Minnesota before his 1918 enlistment with the United States Army Air Corps. Upon military discharge from his San Diego, California station, McAlmon studied intermittently at the University of Southern California. His first poems, inspired by his fellow Army Air Corps team members, were published in the March 1919 issue of “Poetry”.

After a brief stay in Chicago where he met Italian-American writer Emanuel Carnevali, McAlmon relocated in 1920 to New York City where he was hired as an art school’s nude model. He quickly became acquainted with Greenwich Village’s literary circle, including artist and poet Marsden Hartley with whom he formed a life-long friendship. Along with physician and writer William Carlos Williams, McAlone founded the literary magazine “Contact” in 1921. Although never financially successful in its short life, the magazine’s four issues published early works from such modernist writers as Hilda Dolittle, Glenway Wescott, Wallace Stevens and Mina Loy. 

On February 14th of 1921, Robert McAlmon entered into a marital arrangement with English writer Annie Winifred “Bryher” Ellerman, the heiress of a vast fortune and lover of Hilda Dolittle. This arrangement, which inspired much gossip, lasted four years and enabled Ellerman to receive control of her inheritance and gave McAlmon financial independence. In 1922, McAlmon moved to Paris where he founded the influential literary press Contact Editions. In addition to his own writings, McAlmon published Hemingway’s first work, “Three Stories and Ten Poems” (1923) and  Gertrude Stein’s “The Making of Americans” (1925).  He also provided financial support to James Joyce and assisted in the revision and typing of the Penelope section of Joyce’s “Ulysses”. 

McAlmon published his first book of short stories, the 1922 “A Hasty Bunch”, with James Joyce’s printer Maurice Darantière in Dijon, France. Contact Editions published his second volume of short stories “Distinguished Air” (1925); two collections of poetry, “Portrait of a Generation” (1926) and “North America, Continent of Conjecture” (1929); and an experimental novel on a North Dakota prairie farm community, “Village: As It Happened Through a Fifteen Year Period” (1924). Two collections of McAlmon’s poetry were printed through other presses: “Explorations” (1921) was published by London’s Egoist Press, and “Not Alone Lost” (1937) by New Directions in Connecticut. 

Robert McAlmon, who had openly stated his bisexuality, officially divorced Annie Winifred Ellerman in 1927. He closed Contact Editions and left Paris in 1929. McAlmon traveled over the next fifteen years, with visits to the United States, Mexico and Europe during which he drank heavily and, although he wrote, published little. McAlmon was a friend and a drinking buddy with James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway, whom he introduced to the spectacle of bullfighting. He knew artist Jean Cocteau, surrealist writer René Crevel, novelist Raymond Radiguet, surrealist poet Louis Aragon and many others from the parties, bars and cafés he attended. McAlmon’s closer ties, however, were with avant-garde painter Francis Picabia and modernist sculptor Constantin Brancusi. 

After 1935, McAlmon wrote very little. He was interested in radical politics but his views were not supported by the expatriates in Paris. After the German occupation of France, McAlmon was trapped in Paris and eventually stricken with tuberculosis. In 1940, he was able to escaped France through Spain and returned to the United States where joined his brothers in El Paso, Texas. McAlmon sought treatment for his ailment in El Paso and worked with his brothers in a local surgical supply house.

Despite his many published works, Robert McAlmon died almost an unknown writer in his own country. He passed away, at the age of sixty, in February of 1956 at Desert Hot Springs, California. His body was interred at Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In the 1990s, the first American editions of “Village”, “Post-Adolescence”, and “Miss Knight and Others” were published by the University of New Mexico Press. McAlmon’s memoir “Being Geniuses Together”, first published 1938 in London, was reprinted by Doubleday, New York in 1968.  

Notes: The Internet Archive’s Open Library site has several books by Robert McAlmon that can be read online after free registration: https://openlibrary.org/search?q=robert+mcalmon&mode=everything

Top Insert Image: Berenice Abbott, “Robert McAlmon”, 1925-1930, Gelatin Silver Print, 24 x 19.4 cm, Private Collection

Second Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Robert McAlmon with Canadian Poet John Glassco and His Partner Graeme Taylor in Nice, France”, 1929, Gelatin Silver Print, Private Collection

Third Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Ernest Hemingway and Robert McAlmon, Ronda, Spain”, 1923, Ernst Hemingway Photograph Collection, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston

Bottom Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Robert McAlmon”, circa 1930s, Gelatin Silver Print, Private Collection