Robert Creeley, 78; Poet Known for Spare Verse
Robert Creeley, a leading figure of postmodern American poetry who was known for his spare, concise language and a free-form style that distilled powerful emotions into verse, died Wednesday at a hospital in Odessa, Texas, after a brief illness. He was 78.
Creeley had been struggling with a lung ailment and died of complications from pneumonia, according to a spokeswoman for the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he taught for 37 years.
A prolific poet and critic who wrote more than 60 books over the last five decades, Creeley had been a distinguished professor of English at Brown University in Rhode Island since 2003. He had gone to Texas on a two-month writing residency funded by the Lannan Foundation, which maintains the writers retreat in Marfa, Texas, where Creeley had been working.
A 1999 recipient of the Bollingen Prize, poetry’s top honor, Creeley was an early participant in movements that helped inspire the countercultural revolution of the 1960s. He was closely allied with writers of the Beat Generation, including Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, for whom he typed what may have been the first copy of the epic poem “Howl.”
Creeley also was associated in the 1950s with the “Black Mountain Poets,” whose other notable members included Denise Levertov and Robert Duncan. He emerged in the 1960s as a seminal figure in what became known as New American Poetry.
Creeley’s death “has robbed American poetry of one of its last great bohemian modernists,” poet Dana Gioia, chairman of the National Endowment of the Arts, told The Times on Thursday. “At his death he was a mainstream canonic figure, but he emerged and lived on the margins of American poetry.”
Using what the Bollingen Prize judges praised as the “stubbornly plain language that makes a Creeley poem instantly recognizable,” he wrote frequently about emotions as expansive as love and events as wrenching as aging and death. His best poems often were about those closest to him -- his mother, his wives, his children -- a preoccupation that prompted poet and critic Robert Graves to dismiss him as a “domestic poet.”
Creeley embraced the distinction. He assumed an intimacy with readers, one that bred extreme brevity to the degree that he often used incomplete sentences and his own abbreviations, such as “sd” for “said.” His unorthodox style was pronounced in “I Know a Man,” one of his most anthologized poems, which presents a complex philosophical statement as a casual conversation between two men in a car:
As I sd to my
friend, because I am
always talking, John, I
sd, which was not his
name, the darkness surrounds us, what
can we do against
it, or else, shall we &
why not, buy a goddamn big car,
drive, he sd, for
christ’s sake, look
out where yr going.
To some critics, such experimentation was a fatal flaw. “There are two things to be said about Creeley’s poems,” critic John Simon once wrote. “They are short; they are not short enough.”
To others, his economy of language was a virtue. “If Mr. Creeley can get his point across with fewer syllables, so much the better,” wrote David Kirby in a 1991 review of Creeley’s “Selected Poems.”
Creeley’s central contribution was an organic notion of poetry, one that insisted that “form is never more than an extension of content,” a radical reversal of the prevailing view in post-World War II American poetry.
Instead of setting down ideas within a preordained frame or rhythmic pattern, such as the iamb or trochee, Creeley agitated for freedom of form. He championed the principle that form should follow or evolve out of the idea.
This principle resulted in “a very personable kind of poetry that
Creeley’s sensibility was formed at North Carolina’s Black Mountain College, where he earned a degree and taught English in the mid-1950s, a decade after dropping out of Harvard. Black Mountain was a hotbed of experimental artists such as John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg and Merce Cunningham. Most influential on Creeley was poet Charles Olson, who collaborated with Creeley on the idea that poetry should be a process unhindered by the forms favored by the previous generation.
“His method is more like a jazz improvisation than a classical music composition. He invents as he goes along,” said Charles Bernstein, a poet and critic at the University of Pennsylvania and a former longtime colleague in Buffalo
Creeley was born in Arlington, Mass., the son of a doctor. He knew tragedy from a tender age: When he was 2, he lost an eye in a freak accident involving flying glass. Before Creeley was 5, his father died, plunging the family into poverty.
Insurance money from the accident and his father’s death enabled him to attend Harvard, where he drank and smoked heavily and floundered academically. He left in 1944 to become an ambulance driver in Spain.
He enrolled at Black Mountain College at the invitation of Olson, who was the school’s rector, and earned a bachelor’s degree in 1955. He later earned a master’s at the University of New Mexico.
Although he had been a published poet for a decade, Creeley did not attain prominence until the appearance of Donald M. Allen’s landmark anthology “The New American Poetry 1945-60.”
Creeley began teaching at SUNY Buffalo in 1966 and soon was changing the mold of literary education. He taught seminars on such stalwarts as Emily Dickinson, but he also met with young writers to develop their craft at a time when writing for college credit was unheard of.
“He opened his house to young writers,” said Joseph Conte, chairman of the English department. “That made him quite unique among the world’s great artists.”
Creeley’s favorite expression, according to Conte, was “Onward!” He was constantly on the go, giving as many as 50 readings a year around the country. In one of his last appearances a few weeks ago in Charlottesville, Va., he delivered a compelling performance, speaking honestly of his frailties despite being hooked up to an oxygen tank.
When he died, his wife, Penelope, and two of his eight children were at his side.
In his last years he often wrote of the anxieties of aging with humor, bite and wistful anticipation, as in “Goodbye”:
The century was well along
when I came in
and now that it’s ending,
I realize it won’t
be long.
But couldn’t it all have been
a little nicer,
as my mother’d say. Did it
have to kill everything in
sight,
did right always have to beso wrong?
I know this body is impatient.
I know I constitute only a meager voice and mind.
Yet I loved, I love.
I want no sentimentality.
I want no more than home.
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