Masters and Master Works
Black Male Poetics as a title begs and defies definition. Langston Hughes
set himself the task of being the architect of a culture’s literature,
a culture that developed against the antagonism of racism. In the Harlem Renaissance,
some black artists were achieving the unthinkable, but on the whole, they were
a curious subset in the eyes of the dominant culture. So does black male poetics
suggest an examination of the obstacles in a black male poet’s career?
Perhaps. Does it suggest there is still a choice to be made regarding the role
a black male poet should choose? Perhaps, but that implies the ideal of leadership,
which is a problematic holdover from centuries of male domination. The black
poetic tradition is defined, to a large extent, by the accomplishments of black
women, accomplishments that never came to black men. Phyllis Wheatley published
the first book. Gwendolyn Brooks received the first Pulitzer. Rita Dove became
the first Poet Laureate of the United States. Hughes might have been the architect
of the first half of the twentieth century, but the first major award for poetry
went to Brooks at the end of those first fifty years. Brooks was encouraged
by Hughes during a reception she attended with her mother as a teenager. Brooks
notes in her autobiography just how significant that encouragement was to her.
So in a poetic tradition figured by racially-based political oppression and
distinguished by the achievements made first by black women, what is a black
male poetic? I would like to consider this question in terms of “Masters
and Master Works,” alluding to the tradition exemplified by Pound but
referring to the black male poets Langston Hughes, Robert Hayden, and Jay Wright.
Hughes believed in the necessity of affecting the whole of African-American
culture in a manner echoing Joyce’s annunciation in Portrait of the Artist
as a Young Man. Hayden arrives as the craftsman more concerned with his immediate
and intimate connections in lyrical expression, and Wright resumes the role
of speaker to a culture but to the whole of human culture out of a spiritual
wellspring that moves out of an African-American base to multiple cultural references
in multilingual expressions. If we pose the question of what constitutes black
male poetics, we might also offer a circuitous response in quoting the title
by Wright, namely “What Is Beautiful.”
In the first volume of his seminal biography of Hughes, Arnold Rampersad notes
the poet’s inability to express anger. Rather than do so, Hughes internalized
the emotion until he became physically ill. That in conjunction with the fact
that no one knew Hughes as a person speaks to the price of being an architect,
a denial of intimacy to one’s self for martyrdom in poetics. Had it been
Rilke or Neruda, or even Stevens, we might have the poet’s work as a suggested
intimacy, but Hughes’ self-denial was deeper. He opted to serve black
folk and write out of his imaginative and empathic force, however accurate that
might or might not have been to the people he observed. The lyric content he
thus denied himself so he might experience giving love to black folk and enjoying
whatever signs of adoration from reading audiences, however imaginary it might
have been. It is too easy and simplistic to say that racism denied him lyrical
expression as we really can only surmise what Hughes would have written had
the quotient of freedom in American society during his lifetime been much higher
than it was. He may not have had that gift. His gift instead might have been
just what he gave to African-Americans, a hero’s faith in all our ability
to be creative, which translates as an enhancement of the will to live in a
world that all too often would have us die.
Hughes subjected himself to a rigorous honesty as much as he could, and that
challenge is part of a poet’s life, no matter the race, ethnicity, or
gender. Those who would parade a lack of talent as instead a self-chosen leadership
role have, I argue, failed the test of this necessary and rigorous honesty,
brutal as that test may be.
Langston Hughes was not pretentious about the tenor of his work. In choosing
to be an architect, he had to imagine his role. That imagining is never accurate.
All too often any poet will simply not know who cares whether he lifts pen to
another page ever again in life. How else was Hughes to be famous given the
exigencies of the blatant racial hatred during his lifetime? What are the requirements
for fame today?
If American society has progressed, it should have done so such that fame has
other requirements and, concurrently, poets such as Hayden who are more interested
in simply being poets have more space to be, although there is no such thing
as “simply” being a poet. Critical specificity requires more. Hayden
and Wright are poets who write with less concern to the complexities of race
and racism, and some consideration of this choice of theirs might illumine this
idea of black male poetics.
Conversely, there is the black constituency that believes the urge to use one’s
gifts with a focus on craft is whiteness and cultural betrayal to an ideal of
blackness. This notion of betrayal is nonsensical and steeped in a lingering
anxiety born in the space between black and white as evidence shows that the
desire to have fame and greatness extend over the globe, even as they manifest
differently according to cultural difference. The urge does live. The more sensible
line of questioning out of all of this, I maintain, is whether we as citizens
in an increasingly smaller and complex world need poets to continue with phallic
notions of conquest inherent in greatness or aspire to newer notions of community,
notions made possible by concentrating on one’s own development first,
that kind of selflessness. The desire to fame and greatness is exploration of
the opportunities to extend one’s self, which is not ascension to the
sublime. If we look at the movement from Hughes to Hayden to Wright in this
way we might see a journey toward selflessness in this thing we call black male
poetics, selflessness as opposed to the quest for greatness that is more an
earmark of patriarchy than anything.
Of the central conceits in Hughes’ work, that of the “genius child”
is more useful to a discussion of the poet’s need for an audience and
his desire for greatness in choosing such a challenging leadership role. As
much a grieving over tragic failures in his relationships with his parents,
a father who disliked black people and a mother who gave an envious rather than
a supportive love, Hughes’ was orphaned into the vanguard of the black
poetic tradition with an undeniable literary gift in a society ripe with blatant
abuse and hatred of blacks and blackness. A poet has no way of shaping and shifting
such tectonic plates surrounding his life, and he can be so unlucky as to be
helpless over his own personality, that is personality and not self. I take
the two entities to be quite different. In fact, I suppose personality to be
an obstacle to realization of self and that realization of self prerequisite
to a poet’s ascension to the sublime.
Greatness can bloat and in that way enlarge the personality, or it can lead
to a distillation of the same.
So Hughes’ petitioned America, his white family, for membership in poems
such as “I, Too,” where he writes “They’ll see how beautiful
I am/And be ashamed—.” Forty years later, the strategy of shaming
America would be abandoned by many poets who saw it better to arm the culture
and engage in constructive combat, however metaphorical, rather than constructive
conversation. The sixties afforded a perverse path to fame, which is to say
poets were caught in the nuclear breaking open of over three centuries of separation
and cast into this space of supposed opportunity that was as much confusing
as it was exciting. The shift in generations is often full of the kind of anxiety
where the young people cannot readily assume strategies set forth for them by
their elders because the elders could not see the societal shifts in which they
themselves were often unconscious participants.
One of the pinnacles of Hughes’ work as a leader, “The Negro Artist
and the Racial Mountain,” contains his prophesy of a self-confident poet
arising from the masses to be the first manifestation of the great black poet.
However, Hughes could not foresee the birth of an entire generation of poets
from the working classes as a result of opportunities afforded their parents
and thus themselves by the post-war industrial boom of the nineteen forties,
the tireless work of A. Phillip Randolph and others, and, of course, the Brown
decision. Whereas postal workers had been a solid line in the black middle class
despite working class appearances, the nineteen fifties would see the rise of
the children of sharecroppers whose families flooded America’s major cities
as late as the nineteen sixties. All this was beyond Hughes’ vision, and
the inability of most people to fully comprehend this at the time that it was
happening left black male poets to once again consider leadership as greatness.
Considering the level of confusion at that time in American history, leadership
seemed the only logical choice for several of the key players.
The word “perverse” might apply to the sixties literary circumstance
for black men as per Hughes’ legacy. Societal pressures created such an
enormous anxiety that the composure needed to maintain Hughes’ genteel
positioning was nigh impossible. In the wake of the illusory opening of the
gates and the illusory “freeing” of black people, such genteel demeanor
looked too much like whiteness. Poets moved to cradle the culture in their arms.
It was a time of actual combat, the police and military in gun battles in black
neighborhoods, helicopters overhead, black children shot dead in the streets,
underscored by Johnson’s deployment of a unit of the U.S. Airborne soldiers
to Detroit in nineteen sixty-seven. Poets born in the late nineteen sixties
and afterwards, who are now in their mid to late thirties and early forties
can only imagine this history, and that experiential gap makes for some of the
current anxiety.
The sixties contained a literary moment that was perverse inasmuch as the choices
made by these revolutionary poets made them famous, a fame that troubled and
confused them more than it excited and fulfilled them, a cruel fate.
Hayden made different choices. Born thirteen years before the publication of
The Weary Blues, Hayden was approaching his sixties in the nineteen sixties,
a poet with his feet firmly planted in the fields of craft. If his work invoked
shame in the dominant culture’s literary community, it was due more to
the power of his craft, poems well-wrought, carefully conceived and painstakingly
revised. There is the classic photograph of Hayden in his very thick eyeglasses
as he examines a poem during the time that he was the first black consultant
in poetry to the Library of Congress, a position that later became U.S. Poet
Laureate, to be assumed by Rita Dove two decades later.
In what seems to be a supreme understanding of charity, Hayden constructed “Middle
Passage,” the African-American epic commemorating the African holocaust.
With a publication date of nineteen sixty-two, this towering poem is the annunciation
of a prophecy yet to be fulfilled. Hayden approaches the subject with a courageous
forgiveness and a level of self-awareness not available to Hughes, whose forgiveness
was evident but troubled, mired in the tragedy of his childhood. “Those
Winter Sundays” is a balm for Hughes’ terrible wounding. As an adopted
child, Hayden had a more concrete break perhaps. Whatever the interstices of
his mind, it gave us “Middle Passage.”
“You cannot stare that hatred down,” he writes. Hatred is a terrible
and seductive force, and the younger poets who surrounded Hayden in the sixties
had to hold this force in their hands, as one would hold a fire. Earlier in
that same section of the poem Hayden writes, “…the dark ships, the
dark ships move/their bright ironical names/like jests of kindness on a murderer’s
mouth.” The sixties was likewise a time where irony was raised to exponential
dimensions, and only one gesture could have a predictable outcome. Hatred brought
more hatred, and the quality of the writing was sacrificed as much as Hughes
sacrificed his chances for genuine love and intimacy in his personal life.
Hayden had no pretensions to leadership. He simply wanted to write, but there
is never such a thing as simply wanting to write, or simply wanting to be a
man. Hayden was crucified by some of the younger revolutionaries, but to some
degree it was only in effigy as Hayden would never be bound actually to anyone’s
cross. As much as some of these revolutionary poets wanted a Cultural Revolution
of their own, it was not possible in America, another and completely “other”
country. Although Mao’s little red book was popular in the sixties, the
sixties’ activist poets had little access to a realistic understanding
of Marxism, let alone China’s specific and unique problems.
Despite their different choices, Hughes and Hayden had one thing in common.
They loved living the life of the poet. No matter his political consciousness,
Hughes saw himself as a poet and artist, and his life is a blessing still unattainable
to many living poets, namely enjoying a life based on one’s writings,
sans teaching with its limitations and yet full of all the excitement and indeed
romance of that life, the travel, the joy of being in the midst of exciting
times. When it comes to living in exciting times, we are all bound to history’s
roulette wheel of chance.
Jay Wright lives another life of the poet. In the twenty years that I have had
the privilege of knowing him, I have made several meccas to his private home,
full as it is with books and all the matter one would expect the most erudite
living African-American poet to possess, all in the most overwhelming lack of
pretension. Respectfully, I refrain from any surmise about his inner life and
take minor liberties in discussing his work as it pertains to my exploration
of what this thing might be, black male poetics.
In an early interview in Callaloo, Wright commented that if black poets have
any “mission” it is a spiritual one. I offer that as insight alongside
what I know to be his aversion to envisioning reality along the lines of race.
It is, therefore, a bit of an entanglement to include his work in this essay,
but I take the risk. Wright’s opus has been my primary mentoring light
over these twenty years. My meditations on the works of Jay Wright and Sharon
Olds have been my guides through my own project.
One of the few contemporary poets who still subscribe to the ideal of masterworks,
Wright’s poetic project is conceived in total, which is to say he moves
along a path to the completion of a work as a painter or sculptor or composer
might organize his various opuses around a core piece or set of principles.
This is in opposition to the poem by poem investigations of confessional and
more solipsistic projects, or the silly mistake of writing to trends and thus
chasing stardom. The masterworks ideal requires an envisioning or omniscience
that can consume a lesser poet.
For example, Wright explains his series “Love’s Dozen” as
the reconstitution of love in the world, a global project. Wright’s graduate
preparation in comparative literature and his facility in several languages
secure the inner structures of his works, and his grounding is distinctly different
from Jean Toomer’s. Toomer’s Blue Meridian is more of an escape
from race than a conscious working through the same.
In this comparison it is possible to glean also an understanding of self as
I attempt to use it here in the context of selflessness.
For Toomer, the escape from race made it all the more inescapable. His selflessness
was complicated by an obsession with wanting to be free of self, and this is
a comparable paradox to that of revolutionary sixties’ poets whose commitment
to ideals of justice caught them in the ironic mire of the time. Whatever they
saw as the achievement of selflessness through a compassionate commitment to
community proved to be only a compounding of the same. Selflessness could only
have come in the complete turning away from the traditional ways of literary
life, a more cruel fate and thus impossible.
America’s northeastern cities were no place to live a real revolutionary’s
life. New York and New Jersey were galaxies away from Cuba and Angola. It was
in those areas during the sixties that Wright attended seminary and did graduate
work at Rutgers in comparative literature. His understanding of charity was
already profound.
In “What Is Beautiful” Wright names beauty as the body of love,
and love as the realization of the divine.
He writes “Here, there is no form untuned by eye, or voice/there is no
body waiting for its metaphor.”
Imagine this as the critical space that has confounded those living in the
stream of black male poetics. Imagine it as the awesome weight Hughes assumed,
the painful and solitary path Hayden chose, the tragic and ongoing loss suffered
by revolutionary poets. Imagine it as those things, but see it as Jay Wright’s
naming of a place of genuine selflessness, a commitment to language and learning
with a willingness to tackle the inhumanity of racism, to throw a larger net
over the thing, a net capable of dissolving this social construction it catches,
of erasing the spaces where it might opt to live, knowing the first space to
be removed is that inside one’s own heart and cranium.
Later in “What Is Beautiful,” he writes ‘This is the gift
of being transformed/the emptiness that calls compassion down.” The charity
we see in Hughes is deepened in Hayden and taken to levels approaching the sublime
in Wright. Charity informed their choices as it did the choices of Amiri Baraka,
Haki R. Madhubuti and Askia M. Toure. I see them all as noble.
However, the choice now for black male poets is to embrace this space where
they can ask themselves this question of what constitutes beauty and ask it
in terms of their own lives, and not those lives weighed by the suppositions
of group identity. Time has moved on, and if black male poetics is to assume
a more manifest place, even as poetry itself is marginalized in exponential
leaps in every waking second, then black male poets must explore the beauty
of the quality of being human. Assume that humanity and not the task of proving
the same. Black male poetics must upend and suspend the idea of race.
There is now no more greatness for a black male poet to assume other than a
commitment to reality and the investigation of that reality arising from a deeper
self-awareness. Racism is not dead, but we are now in a vortex of confluences,
where the black male poet can opt to free himself from freeing the race. The
first person he can save is himself, perhaps the only person. Another set of
literary choices waits for black male poets as a prize, not a predator in the
grass, if they can see the current vortex or junction in time as an invitation
to be free to be poets and to have a greater freedom as human beings.