Hart Crane
Crane befriended, in some capacity, other literary figures, such as Katherine Anne Porter, E. E. Cummings, Marianne Moore, Allen Tate, Sherwood Anderson, Harriet Monroe, William Carlos Williams, Waldo Frank, and Caresse and Harry Crosby. Crane's first published poem was "My Grandmother's Love Letters." His writings were published in many little magazines, including Broom, The Dial, Poetry, the Little Review, Secession, and more. He published two volumes of poetry in his lifetime: White Buildings (1926) and The Bridge (1930), the latter of which was published by the Crosby's Black Sun Press in Paris. Oftentimes noted as "ambitious," Crane modernized the epic in his attempts to capture the Brooklyn Bridge in its mythic, American essence by uniting the temporalities of the past and the present. First edition of The Bridge published by the Black Sun Press.
Awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1931 for his creative writing, he was appointed twelve months in Mexico. According to his biographer Paul L. Mariani, in The Broken Tower: A Life of Hart Crane, this was for him to work on "a poetic drama, on the Conquest, to capture the exact moment of contact between the Spanish and the Indigenous populations -- Cortés and Montezuma."[2] This work never came to fruition, though he wrote "The Broken Tower" in 1932. This same year, while traveling back to the United States aboard the Orizaba, he was "reported to have fallen or jumped from the liner," according to a contemporary New York Times article.[3]
Endnotes
[1] The Letters of Hart Crane: 1916-1932 edited by Brom Weber. University of Florida Libraries, 1965, pp. 187.
[2] Mariani, Paul L. The Broken Tower: A Life of Hart Crane. W. W. Norton, 2000, pp. 386.
[3] “Poet’s Death Linked with Loss of Father; Hart Crane, Missing from Ward Liner, Had Been Grieving, Friends Say.” New York Times, 29 April 1932, pp. 4.
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Transcriptions: All transcriptions have been done by Francesca Mancino unless otherwise noted. If quoting her transcription(s), we ask that she is credited in a citation.
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