Radical Sandburg Essay, Research Paper
Radical Sandburg
Carl August Sandburg was born in Galesburg, Illinois on January 6, 1878. His parents, August and Clara Johnson, were immigrants from Sweden. After he encountered many August Johnsons in his job with the railroad, Carl?s father decided to rename the family. The Sandburgs were poor and as a result, Carl had to quit school at the age of thirteen to drive a milk truck and deliver milk to help support the family. At seventeen, Carl Sandburg went to Kansas as a hobo. During the eight months that he served in Puerto Rico for the Spanish American war, he encountered a student from Lombard College (now Knox College), the college located in his hometown. He was convinced to enroll there after the war. At Lombard College, Carl Sandburg wrote his first poems which attracted the attention of Professor Phillip Green Wright, who encouraged the writing as well as paid for the publication of Sandburg?s first volume of poetry in 1904, called Reckless Ecstasy. Even though he attended Lombard College for four years, he never received his degree, although he did receive many honorary degrees later in his life. After college, Sandburg moved to Milwaukee and became a journalist. There he met and married Lillian Steichen. Earlier he had adopted many socialist views and in Wisconsin he had the chance to serve as the secretary to the first socialist mayor in Milwaukee from 1910 to 1912. After that, he moved to Chicago and wrote for the Chicago Daily News
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and had his poems published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse. The editor liked his distinctly different style of poetry and encouraged him to write more. He became more widely known with the publishing of Chicago Poems in 1916. Cornhuskers was published in 1918 and then Smoke and Steel in 1920. When Sandburg was twenty, he began collecting information for a biography of his childhood hero, Abraham Lincoln. He collected information for this project for 30 years. While he was collecting information for this six-volume biography, he also began collecting folklore for his children books. When he finally finished the biography of Lincoln in 1939, Sandburg was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and then received a second Pulitzer Prize in 1951 for his Complete Poems. From 1945 on, Sandburg lived in Flat Rock, North Carolina and bred prize-winning goats. Sandburg died in his North Carolina home on July 22, 1967. His ashes were placed under Remembrance Rock in Carl Sandburg Park behind his childhood home. Throughout his life, Sandburg drew major opposition due to his radical attitude. (?Carl Sandburg? 461).
Sandburg is a definite radical. A radical is someone that is very different from the normal. Sandburg is very different from his contemporaries in his poetry and ideas. In his early years, Sandburg?s style of writing was said to offer an ?important challenge to traditional forms of poetry? (Lowell 337). Sandburg wrote completely different from the other poets in his time and incorporated unusual subjects and ideas for that time. In his early books, he talked about aspects of urban life, which had not been talked about much before in poetry. His focus is mainly on the common person, he cares and believes deeply in people (MacLeish 20). He is concerned with the poetry itself and leaves the
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colloquial speech unpolished. Many people enjoy Sandburg?s style of writing and enjoy his straying from the normal subjects and want to see other poets accept this poetic manner. There are also those that oppose this radical style. Sandburg?s choice to let his subjects talk for themselves make many critics accuse him of being a folklorist and not a poet at all (Lowell 337-338). Another major objection to Sandburg?s type of poetry is the lack of development in it. When asked of his feelings about Sandburg, Robert Frost said that Sandburg?s writing ?is like playing tennis with the net down? (Angyal 2450). Frost, a poetic rival clearly does not like Sandburg?s writing style and thinks it is unnatural, as do many critics. The New York Times Book Review said, ?Some of it is poetry, some is decidedly not poetry. It is a pity that so many writers are bent on confusing the terms?? (Lowell 338) This very different poet has a definite line dividing those who accept Sandburg and those who oppose this ra
Carl Sandburg?s ideas are very shocking to many people. His radicalism includes opinions about life and the welfare of society. When commenting on Smoke and Steel, one of Sandburg?s books, the Times Literary said,
What does it matter (he seems to say) that the Parthenon is the supreme expression of a supreme expression of a supreme wisdom, that Shakespeare is the supreme poet of tragedy and comedy, that anything supremely excellent and beautiful has been created in the past? The Parthenon is a ruin; Shakespeare is dust: excellence and beauty, what are they? (Untermeyer 306)
While people look back at the past, Sandburg feels that the present is all that
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matters. Sandburg was also very involved in the socialist movement early in his career and his feelings are shown through his poetry. Amy Lowell says, ?Two men speak in Mr. Sandburg, a poet and a propagandist? (Lowell 340). His radical views about the government clearly come out in many of his works. Lowell goes on to say,
In my study of Mr. Sandburg?I pointed out this danger of his practice. Then I had only one book to go upon, now I have three and the danger seems to me to be looming larger with terrific speed. It may be that Mr. Sandburg has determined to stuff all his theories into one book and let it go at that. In which case there cannot be too much objection, but I fear?oh I fear. (Lowell 340)
His strong feelings not only disturb some people, there were also times at which the military was watching his as a dangerous radical, yet at the same time ?he was giving recitals to groups of polite people who were distinctly unradical? (?Radical Sandburg? 7). Many people fail to realize that Sandburg has strong opinions against what they believe, even Sandburg did not realize that he was mixing propaganda with poetry. He admits sympathizing with the Socialist movement and agrees that political ideas should be kept out of poetry, but he says his radical feelings seemed to have ?crept in? (?Radical Sandburg? 4). The reason for the unintentional portrayal of his feelings have been said to occur because after he left the socialist party, ?Rather than renouncing his socialist beliefs and moving on?Sandburg became deeply radicalized, was absolutely partisan, moved startlingly leftward? (?Radical Sandburg? 2). His feelings have also escaped his fans throughout the years because his reputation as the biographer of Abraham Lincoln, the
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writer of poems, and the singer of ballads have overshadowed his early work and his radical character. His attitude has not escaped everyone, it?s been said that with the conditions of America in1920, Sandburg took his American Radicalism as far as he could (?Radical Sandburg? 7).
Most people either accepted Sandburg?s poetry or were completely opposed to it. Sandburg is remembered by most as a great poet, not as a radical. Others refuse to remember him as a great American Poet. W. W. Wright summed up the view of Sandburg?s opposers in a brief statement, ?He was an angry radical, and?few angry radicals make good poets. It?s the balance, stupid.? (Wright 1)
Bibliography
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Angyal, Andrew J. ?Carl Sandburg.? Critical Survey of Poetry. Vol. 6 Ed. Frank
Magill Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press, 1982. 8 Vols. 2444-2453.
?Carl Sandburg.? Encyclopedia of World Biography. 1998 ed. 461.
Lowell, Amy. “Carl Sandburg.” Contemporary Literary Criticism Vol. 35 Ed.
Daniel G. Marowski. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1985. 35 vols. 337-341.
MacLeish, Archibald. Introduction. Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg. By Carl
Sandburg. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978. 19-22.
?Radical Sandburg.? International Socialist Review. 7 pp. Online. Internet
6 October 2000. Available: htpp://www.English.ulua.edu/maps/poets/sa2/sandburg/radical.htm.
Untermeyer, Louis. “Carl Sandburg? Poetry Criticism. Vol. 2 Ed.
Robyn V. Young. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research Company, 1991. 30 vols. 305-306.
W. W. Wright. ?Carl Sandburg.? Poems For the People. 1 pg. Online. Internet
12 October 2000. Available: http://www.ralphmag.org/newU.html.