“The voice of his poems, though sometimes marred by an affectation of toughness, is severe, sardonic, and bruising.”
Who might be the subject of this evaluation? Hardly a recipe for poetry awards and grants today. Jonathan Swift would be a respectable guess. No political pieties, sensitive introspection or lines that read like flaccid prose. Irving Howe is speaking of his friend and fellow faculty member at Brandeis, J.V. Cunningham. In A Margin of Hope: An Intellectual Autobiography (1982), Howe devotes two out of his 382 pages to Cunningham but concludes by calling him “the one colleague whom I regarded as my teacher.” I have a copy of Cunningham’s Tradition and Poetic Structure (1960) inscribed “For Irving, Aug. 29, 1960, J.V.C.”
“Prickly, contentious,
rudely charming, he was a determined plebian. If I had a New York dress presser
for a father, he had a Montana carpenter, and we both felt warmth for the
unions to which our fathers had belonged, both despised the genteel pretensions
of many academics. Cunningham was not an easy man to be near. Inner torments
could make him savage (as they could make me sullen). The way to preserve a
friendship with him was to keep a certain distance.”
This rings true to life.
Nor will readers of Cunningham’s stringently witty poetry, written in the
classical plain style reminiscent of Ben Jonson, be surprised by Howe’s
characterization. Here’s an untitled poem from Trivial, Vulgar, and Exalted
(1959):
“I had gone broke, and got
set to come back,
And lost, on a hot day and
a fast track,
On a long shot at long
odds, a black mare
By Hatred out of Envy by
Despair.”
Cunningham published no mediocre
poems. I rank him among the finest American poets, with Dickinson, Robinson, Eliot, Frost and Wilbur. Howe describes him as “an intellectual opponent of romanticism [who]
struggled in his poetry, as in his life, with an ineradicably romantic
temperament.” This is shrewd criticism and character analysis, and Howe goes on
to praise the example Cunningham set for him as a critic, teacher, scholar and
human being:
“Between Cunningham and me there was an enormous gap in experience, temperament, ideas. Yet we worked easily together, amused and pleased that we could. Being professional himself, he honored me with the presumption that I too could become professional. I learned, by being with him, the value of scraping against a mind utterly unlike one’s own, so that finally there could emerge between our two minds a conditional peace, perhaps even pleasure in difference.”
I find it difficult to
choose a favorite poem by Cunningham but I’m partial to To What Strangers,
What Welcome (1964), subtitled A Sequence of Short Poems. In his
essay “Several Kinds of Short Poem” the poet, who grew up in Montana, writes:
“The poems would deal with
the American West, that vast spiritual region from Great Falls, Montana, to El
Paso, Texas; from Fort Riley, Kansas, to the sinks of Kansas; and with the
California Coast, another and perhaps less spiritual region. And the poems
would relate some sort of illicit and finally terminated love affair. And there
would be a fusion of the feeling in the personal relationship and the feeling
for the West and the Coast.”
The sequence consists of
fifteen poems. It’s not a travelogue but an elliptical narrative which he
sketches in the essay like this: “A traveler drives west; he falls in love; he
comes home.” The
fractured story is grim and occasionally squalid, more film noir than
happy romance, as in the sixth poem:
“It was in Vegas. Celibate
and able
I left the silver dollars
on the table
And tried the show. The
black-out, baggy pants,
Of course, and then this
answer to romance:
Her ass twitching as if it
had the fits,
Her gold crotch grinding,
her athletic tits,
One clock, the other
counter clockwise twirling.
It was enough to stop a
man from girling.”
It’s Cunningham’s
correlation of the vast, uninhabited landscape and the narrator’s fraught
emotional life that makes To What Strangers, What Welcome so compelling.
Here is the first poem in the sequence, summarized by Timothy Steele as an
“intimation of an as-yet-unmet lover”:
“I drive Westward. Tumble
and loco weed
Persist. And in the
vacancies of need,
The leisure of desire,
whirlwinds a face
As luminous as love, lost
as this place.”
Cunningham was born on
August 23, 1911, and died on this date, March 30, in 1985.
[The books to get are The
Poems of J.V. Cunningham (Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, ed. Timothy
Steele, 1997) and The Complete Essays of J.V. Cunningham, Wiseblood
Books, 2024). Also, see the class notes kept by the late D.G. Myers when he was
a student of Cunningham.]

