Tuesday, April 29, 2014


The Prisoner Poet

The Poems of James Lewisohn
 
James Lewisohn, the poet I interviewed in 1979 while he was incarcerated at the “Prison Farm” in Warren, Maine, has produced several volumes of poetry as well as editied several anthologies produced by the men in his poetry workshop at the prison. His work was also published by several magazines and journals: Finkel, New York Quarterly, Sojourner, and The New Yorker.
As it has been 35 years since I read his work, I don’t feel qualified to review Jimmy’s work here. He gave me two volumes of his work when I interviewed him, but they have since been lost in the flood of 2009 and I have not yet replaced them. I will therefore, give you some of the critiques from the mass of materials he gave me that day, as well as reviews and comments I have been able to find online. His books include:
Roslyn, 1975, Casco Printing Co., written partly before he went to prison and partly while he was incarcerated.
Golgotha: Letters From Prison, 1976, Greenfield Review Press
Lead us Forth From Prison, 1977, Greenfield Review Press
New and Selected Poems, 1990, Horizon Press
Anthology: The Pushcart Prize II, 1977, Pushcart Press
Anthologies of prisoners in his workshop which Jimmy edited are:
Light at the End of the Tunnel, 1976, printed in the prison printshop
Out of the Depths, 1977, Downeast Graphics
At the Ninth Hour, 1977, Downeast Graphics
Reviews from the media and comments from Jimmy
About Roslyn, The Church World, 1975:
…”there’s no mistaking the true poet in James Lewisohn.”…”there are mind-sticking lines as ‘I have become a celebrant of tombs’; ‘those who survive grow fat with angry cool’; ‘If you live in the dark too long your hate the light—and I have lost my sight.”
Jimmy’s forward for this book: “This small book is basically a love story…about my wife, Roslyn, our life together, and the final catastrophe…It is more of a Kaddish for her, for us, and someday a legacy I leave to our four children.”
 About Golgotha: Letters From Prison, The Bridgton News, 1976:
“These poems are not wounded birds; they soar and sing. Lewisohn has reservoirs of hope…as insights to the man, the poetry is excellent: reflections in a mirror.”
Back cover of the book: “They are all love poems, they praise or they are prayers or they are struggles against the darkness. They are psalms and failures, they are all I have and my small gift for everyone who suffers and hopes.”
About Lead us Forth From Prison, Lewiston Daily Sun, 1977:
“It is a poetry of suffering and humility, of asking forgiveness but expecting none. Mr. Lewisohn’s voice is strong and beautiful”…”a confrontation with James Lewisohn’s poems is a confrontation with the strongest religious impulses from the heart of an eloquent man.”
Joseph Bruchac reviews Roslyn
Joseph Bruchac, poet and editor of Greenfield Review, was oftentimes a guest poet at Jimm’y Poetry Workshop at the prison. In 1976 he wrote a review of Roslyn, which I believe was published in the Review. It was one of the handouts Jimmy gave me and the source was not given for this article.
He discusses the four sections of the book: “Tragedy,” “Roots,” “Introspection,” and “Origins,” a total of 51 poems. He says that “Tragedy,” about the tragedy of wife, Roslyn’s death, is the strongest work in the volume. He calls Jimmy, “a distinctive voice in contemporary poetry.”
He cites a poem called “Cerebral Palsy.” From “Roots,” as evidence of Lewisohn’s capacity for compassionate, yet clear vision:
“They have been joined to a rhythm
Not their own
And by their hard uncertainty
Each helps the other struggle to
Untie the knots that tangle in the mind
And joints…”
Another favorite of Bruchac’s is “The Old” from Origins, which he calls honest and direct, “the kind of poem needed by a society which relegates old people to places where they are out of sight and out of mind:”
“The Old
For Ed Muskie
The old are beautiful
If they will forgive themselves.
They arise out of granite
Burning with a fierce light.
The leaves fall
And they have learned
The trees by heart.
Words weaken against the sun,
Their hands are open.
One child eating an orange
Against the rain
Becomes a feast.
They taste the cold, clear fruit
Upon their tongues
Knowing that the fruit is ripe
And full of purpose.”
Bruchac continues:…“James Lewisohn has the gift of being able to look, with different eyes, at people whom society has condemned….Because of his own grief, James Lewisohn has a rare ability to know the grief of others, to penetrate into those lonely places of the soul which are best kept hidden if you are a prison inmate.”
He illustrates with one section of “Tragedy” which goes:
“Grief is a stone that leaves No Shadow
Or like the one Rose Lisa left me
The water evaporates and the Rose puts
Down its darkening head   until it Falls
    Away
Petal by Petal, as the last garland
Of its leaf   divides.”
The review is four pages long so I cannot include all the points Bruchac makes. I will close with his inclusion of a letter he received from Jimmy dated December 1975 in which he included this poem. I don’t know if it is included in any of Jimmy’s published work or not. It was one of his recent poems at the time:
“Years
For David Hasson
An old Lifer
Locks himself in at night.
He’s forgotten again
But today
Seagulls
Came over the walls
Without the sea.
 
Down in the shop
The band-saw
Cried like a child.
 
At night they give him Clorox
To sterilize his sleep.
Before a final cigarette
He turns to his ticking clock
And then remembers.
 
He’s forgotten how to dream.”
Buuchac ends by saying, “At the top of the sheet he had written: ‘Joe its/a difficult/Balance. Love/your life/Jimmy.”
Not all reviews of Jimmy’s work were positive. In 1984 when he was released, he was interviewed by Jon Fleming in a UPI story. I brought some of that story to you in the last blog. Fleming said of his work, it has…”stark, gritty lyrics…very autobiographical and usually bitter.”
He quotes from
 “Christmas Letter from Exile”
December December
Is rung out
And beaten from the year
A false redeemer’s face
Gloats from the market place
It’s dark to dark again…”
He quotes from Roslyn:
“Each day the air stands still in me
Because you are not here.”
He says Roslyn was not written as “a defense or as a confession…but there’s little doubt Roslyn and other volumes published during his first years in prison generated sympathy for his attempt to appeal and overturn his murder conviction.”
In that same story is a quote from our very own South End Poet, Kendall Merriam, which he wrote as part of his review of Lewisohn’s work for a newspaper:
“In all of James Lewisohn’s poetry, one has the feeling he is using it as a jailhouse lawyer uses writs to reduce his sentence, that it’s a form of special pleading to show that he is unlike the other murderers confined in Maine State Prison.”
Was it the passage of time that perhaps dulled sympathy and support for Jimmy’s case? Some of his supporters, including my brother, have since passed away. One thing is certain, his poetry will survive Jimmy in this life and I expect it will also become part of the legacy of Maine poets.
Thanks for listening.
Jimmy’s books are available on Amazon and you might also ask at the Prison Store in Thomaston, Maine.
 

 
 
 

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