“BOTH VISIONARY AND DEEPLY ROOTED IN THE REAL”: FIRST AMERICAN EDITION OF HART CRANE’S THE BRIDGE, 1930,WITH FRONTISPIECE AFTER A PHOTOGRAPH BY WALKER EVANS
CRANE, Hart. The Bridge. New York: Horace Liveright, (1930). Slim quarto, original dark blue cloth, uncut.
First American edition of the epic final work by Crane published in his lifetime—“the great poet of that generation” (Robert Lowell)—with frontispiece after a photograph by Walker Evans.
“There are certain single volumes of American poetry… which carry with them a special and spiritual power; they seem to arise from a mysterious impulse and to have been written from an enormous private or artistic need. The poems are full of a primal sense of voice… This tone, so apparent in Hart Crane’s work… matches a sensibility which was both visionary and deeply rooted in the real,” especially in The Bridge, the second and last book published during Crane’s brief and tragic life (Tóibín, New York Review of Books). “Acknowledging Crane’s centrality as an American modernist—‘I think Crane is the great poet of that generation— Robert Lowell observed of Crane’s poetry, ‘not only is the tremendous power there, but somehow he got New York city” (Edelman, Transmemberment of Song, 23-4). As a result of this work, Crane was granted a Guggenheim Fellowship and went to Mexico City to write another verse epic, which never materialized. On his way back to New York, on April 27, 1932, Crane jumped from the S.S. Orizaba into the Caribbean and was drowned. With frontispiece photogravure after a photograph by Crane’s close friend Walker Evans, who first met the poet in the “fall of 1928 when they were both living in Brooklyn Heights… Crane accompanied Evans on some of his photographic expeditions along the docks in Brooklyn and New York, even perhaps when he first began taking photographs of the Brooklyn Bridge” (Mellow, 69). Preceded the same year by the Black Sun signed limited edition. Without scarce original dust jacket. Connolly, Modern Movement, 62.
A fine copy.