BUGHOUSE DOPE : SELECTED ESSAYS
AND ARTICLES
By Maxwell Bodenheim (Edited
and with an introduction by Paul Maher Jr.)
Tough Poets Press. 421 pages. $24.99. ISBN 979-8-218-37191-3
Reviewed by Jim Burns
It’s difficult to think of Maxwell Bodenheim without stories of his status
as a legendary figure of American bohemia coming to mind. Histories of
Greenwich Village recount the usual tales of sexual indiscretions and other
escapades, and his later decline into a drink-soaked shambles of a man
peddling his poems in the bars and
on the streets. Memoirs mention him, and he crops up in fictional
form in a novel like Terence Ford’s
He Feeds the Birds, published by the Dial Press in 1950.
The portrait painted isn’t a
positive one, with the poet sitting on a bench in Washington Square and
wondering who he can approach for “a quarter, a dime, a nickel, or even an
unused cigarette”.
What these accounts fail to mention is that Bodenheim (born 1892) had, in
his day, been a productive writer. Between 1923 and 1934 he published at
least twelve novels, and between 1920 and 1942, eight collections of poetry.
These are my quick calculations, and some sources suggest thirteen novels
and ten books of poetry. In addition, he had poems published in many
magazines, including The Dial, The
Little Review, Poetry, The Double Dealer, Tambour and
New Masses. I’ve just pulled a few names from Frederick J. Hoffman’s
The Little Magazine: A History and a
Bibliography (Princeton
University Press, 1946), and they show Bodenheim in the company of
contemporaries such as Hart Crane, Vachel Lindsay, Marianne Moore, Carl
Sandburg, Charles Henri Ford, and Parker Tyler.
It’s worth noting that he was
represented in the fourth edition of Louis Untermeyer’s
Modern American Poetry
(Jonathan
Cape, 1932).
Bodenheim also wrote a substantial number of essays and articles, and it’s
good to have them rescued from the publications they appeared in and brought
together by Paul Maher in Bughouse
Dope. As he says in his introduction, “I wanted Maxwell Bodenheim’s
written output to be free of the tabloid scandals that served to drag down
his literary legacy. My aim was to bring this sadly neglected writer back to
the literary marketplace”.
From a personal point of view, I welcome what Maher has done. Although I
know about the Bodenheim of the “tabloid scandals” and bohemian capers,
I have, in my slow way, tried to
collect a few of his books with a view to establishing an idea of his
qualities as a writer. I have seven of the novels and a couple of the poetry
collections. There is also the anthology,
Seven Poets in Search of an Answer
(Bernard Ackerman, 1944), with Bodenheim placed firmly alongside six other
socially-conscious poets like Norman Rosten, Joy Davidman, Alfred Kreymborg,
Martha Millet, and Langston Hughes, and indicating that he was still capable
of producing well-written poems. He wasn’t in good condition in 1944,
however, and Aaron Kramer, a fellow poet and contributor to the anthology,
who was one of the few who, over the years, maintained an awareness of
Bodenheim, remembered him arriving at the book launch scruffily dressed and
clearly intoxicated. (Aaron Kramer,
The Burning Bush : Poems and Other Writings 1940-1980, Cornwall Books,
1983). Kramer’s memoir of his encounters with Bodenheim is a moving tribute
from someone who loved his poetry and understood his failings in life and
literature.
There were others who knew about Bodenheim’s better days. Some years ago I
was in touch with the American writer Djelloul Marbrook. He’d written to me
about an article concerning Bodenheim I’d written for a little magazine in
England that had somehow found its way onto the Internet. He said he’d met
him when his aunt, the artist Irene Rice Pereira, sent him with some money
for the poet. She’d had a brief relationship with Bodenheim around 1926,
according to her biographer Karen A. Bearor in her
Irene Rice Pereira ; Her Paintings
and Philosophy (University of Texas Press, 1993). Pereira presumably had
sufficient good memories of the poet to help him along in, as far I can work
out, the late-1940s or early-1950s.
Jack B. Moore in his book, Maxwell
Bodenheim (Twayne Publishers, 1970) describes his work in
Seven Poets in Search of an Answer
as “generally competent, and less rhetorically flamboyant than his earlier
poems”. Faint praise, perhaps, but on the whole accurate.
He could be variable in both intent and achievement, but to his
credit there were usually lines in a Bodenheim poem that had something to
offer in terms of imagery and rhythm.
With regard to Bodenheim’s reviews and essays, they mostly cover a period
between 1914 and 1939, though there seems to have been a slackening in his
output in the Thirties. There may have been several reasons for this. His
personal situation was unsettled and there were signs of a drift into the
alcoholism and other problems that scarred his later days. And there was the
fact that, as more than one person who knew him pointed out, he had a
capacity for self-destruction. This didn’t only take the form of excessive
drinking and outrageous behaviour but also involved antagonising people who
might have been able to help him when it came to publishing. Bodenheim was
not given to flattering those in positions of power as editors and
publishers. It may sound like a piece of self-promotion, but he told his
wife, Minna, “I am a distinguished outcast in American letters – a renegade
and recalcitrant, hated and feared by all cliques and snoring phantom
celebrities, from ultra-radical to ultra-conservative”.
In a brisk 1916 review of The
Catholic Anthology, 1914-1915, published in the magazine
Others, Bodenheim came up with
some quick-fire comments on several of the contributors. A long poem by
Harriet Monroe taking up eight pages should have been “squeezed to thirty or
forty lines”, and “As an appreciator of poetry she is a giant, but as a
poet, she is too far behind the van”. Harold Monro “is always a bit
uncertain of himself, his unsubtle emotions brush over you, and have no
impress”. Alfred Kreymborg’s is said to have “a small unfortunate
representation”, and a poem by William Carlos Wiliams has a “solemn, tired
flavour”. As for Ezra Pound, he “has a group two miles below his best, and
six above his worst”, and John Rodker “enters a little blind alley of
rhythmical sound and diluted intricate emotions”. It’s smart stuff from a
bright young man just starting out, but it doesn’t aim to flatter editors
like Monroe and Monro, nor someone with influence like Pound. Bodenheim was
much more insightful about Pound’s work in a long review he wrote for
The Dial in 1922. On the subject
of “The Cantos”, he was of the opinion that they “represent the nervous
attempt of a poet to probe and mould the residue left by the books and tales
that he has absorbed, and to alter it to an independent creative effect”.
Bodenheim didn’t only write about poetry, and in fact the majority of pieces
in the book deal with different subjects. ForThe
Nation in 1922
he discussed “Psychoanalysis and
American Fiction”, and knew how to open with a phrase sure to attract
attention: “Psychoanalysis is the spoiled child of a realistic age, and its
boisterous manner should be corrected by a metaphysical spanking”.
The reader might have to pause to
consider if what Bodenheim said was valid, but would most likely be sure to
carry on reading to find out.
He could be amusing, too, as in “Soulful Flirtation Between ‘Beauty and the
Beast’ “, written for the Chicago
Literary Times in 1923. Bodenheim at one point ponders “ the recent
descent of professional ‘highbrow’ writers on vulgarity and the whistling
shimmy of street emotions.
Every now and then your “high brow” suspects he is not a regular guy, that
he is not in tune with the warm and profane undulations of the world. This
discovery brings him a nervous chagrin, and with a determined frown he
proceeds to invade the vaudeville theatre, the moving picture, the prize
fight and the evening problems of chorus girls”.
It may seem a little dated today. especially in its references, but
could still have a grain of truth in it when we consider the nonsense some
intellectuals have written in recent years to justify their interest in
forms of popular entertainment.
The Chicago Literary Times was a
publication established in Chicago by Ben Hecht, with Bodenheim as associate
editor. It would appear that the pair wrote most of its material during its
lifespan from March 1923 to June 1924. And the evidence for this is in
Bughouse Dope where Bodenheim’s
contributions account for over two-thirds of the total contents. Most of the
pieces are fairly short and their subject-matter ranges from the anarchist
Emma Goldman to D.H.Lawrence, Greenwich Village characters, T.S. Eliot, the
streets of New York, and much more. The object was to entertain as well as
inform, and Bodenheim was good at it. His
style was easy-going, conversational, and sometimes provocative in a
humorous way.
There was a decline in his output in the 1930s, though a lengthy essay,
“Esthetics, Criticism and Life” appeared in 1931 in
The New Review, a magazine edited
from Paris by Samuel Putnam. Maher says it was the first chapter
of a book “Bodenheim planned or indeed finished”, though only this
portion has survived. But by the early-Thirties he had begun to identify
with the left-wing in politics, as was reflected
in a couple of his novels,
Run, Sheep, Run (1932) and
Slow Vision (1934), and in poems
and articles he published in The
Daily Worker and New Masses.
Maher is of the opinion that a 1935 article in
The Daily Worker, “Yellow Hearst
in Frenzy of Anti-Communist Hysteria” may
have “doomed Bodenheim’s writing career for good in the mid-1930s”.
It was certainly a scathing view of William Randolph Hearst and placed him
in the same league with Hitler. But I suspect his literary endeavours may
have been fading, anyway.
Like many writers during the Depression he was employed by the Federal
Writers’ Project, and it would seem that he did act responsibly during this
period. But he was dismissed in 1940 for having denied being a member of the
Communist Party. His old friend Ben Hecht commented, “Bogie was the sort of
Communist who would have been booted out of Moscow overnight.....He not only
angered the police but disturbed, equally, the Communist Party leaders of
New York”.
There are a number of unpublished essays that Maher has found among
Bodenheim’s surviving papers, and I can’t help wondering how much was lost
due to the chaotic nature of his life, particularly in his later years. An
essay on the German writer and novelist, Karl Jacob Wasserman possibly dates
from around 1934, and one on Dostoevsky might be from the same period. Two
others – “Should Sex Dominate Modern Literature?” and “The Relation of
Economics to Poetry” – also have roots in the 1930s.
Jack B.Moore asserts that “throughout his career Bodenheim was a vocal
anti-intellectual”, but that, of course, in no way suggests that he wasn’t
intelligent. His essays and reviews can quickly convince the reader that he
was capable of dealing with ideas, and that he had a mind able to look
beyond the ordinary and take note of the wider society and what was
happening to it. This may not have been obvious to those who only
experienced him when his life was ruled by alcohol and the need to exist on
a day-to-day basis, but the best of his essays and reviews demonstrate that,
when he could function clearly, he had something to say that was worth
listening to.
Paul Maher has performed a useful service by locating the previously
scattered material in Bughouse Dope
and presenting it in one volume. Obviously, it doesn’t include
Bodenheim’s poetry or his novels, and to round out the survey of his
activities I’d recommend Isolated
Wanderer: The Maxwell Bodenheim Reader, edited by Maher and published
“independently”, which I assume means privately. It may not be easy to find
– my copy doesn’t have a date of publication, nor any other details – but it
reprints a fair amount of his poetry, excerpts from his novels, some essays
and reviews, and a few odds and ends.
In deference to Maher’s wish to move attention away from Bodenheim’s
reputation as a misbehaving bohemian I’ve tried to limit my comments on that
aspect of his activities to the necessary. He’s too often known only because
of the nature of his death. He was murdered in 1954, along with his
common-law-wife, by a psychopath who when he was arrested said, “I ought to
get a medal.I killed two Communists”, which is, perhaps, a sad comment on
the fact that any kind of unconventional behaviour could be looked on with
suspicion in McCarthyite America. Bodenheim
deserves better than being remembered only for sensational reasons.