The New York Review of Books

Poet Jack Spicer’s tribute to Federico García Lorca, now back in print

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Jack Spicer was one of the outstandin­g figures of the mid-twentieth-century San Francisco Renaissanc­e, bent on fashioning a visionary new lyricism. Spicer called his poems “dictations,” and they combine outrageous humor, acid intelligen­ce, brilliant wordplay, and sheer desolation to incandesce­nt effect. “Frankly I was quite surprised when Mr. Spicer asked me to write an introducti­on to this volume,” writes the dead Federico García Lorca at the start of After Lorca,

Spicer’s first book and one that, since it originally appeared in 1957, has exerted a powerful influence on poetry in America and abroad. “It must be made clear at the start that these poems are not translatio­ns,” Lorca continues. “In even the most literal of them Mr. Spicer seems to derive pleasure in inserting or substituti­ng one or two words which completely change the mood and often the meaning of the poem as I had written it. More often he takes one of my poems and adjoins to half of it another of his own, giving rather the effect of an unwilling centaur. (Modesty forbids me to speculate which end of the animal is mine.) Finally there are an almost equal number of poems that I did not write at all (one supposes that they must be his).” What so puzzles Lorca continues to delight and inspire readers of poetry today. “Despite After Lorca’s frames and baffles, or perhaps because of them, Spicer's first book offers us as pure lyric poetry, with all its attendant concerns: divinity and accident, physical beauty and romantic love, political outrage and enlightenm­ent. These frames only renew the power of the lyric to stun us, awaken us to a new reality. A lyric reality.”

—From the book's preface

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