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Frank O'Hara
Frank O'Hara … intoxicating. Photograph: John Jonas Gruen/Hulton Archive
Frank O'Hara … intoxicating. Photograph: John Jonas Gruen/Hulton Archive

Selected Poems by Frank O'Hara – review

This article is more than 12 years old
Frank O'Hara's collection is full of spontaneity and wildness

It's nearly 40 years since the first publication of this important selection. In that time Frank O'Hara has transformed from a coterie figure into one regularly cited as a key influence by mainstream and more experimental poets alike. His standing has never been higher.

O'Hara was, in a radical sense, a writer of the occasional, responding constantly to events and people immediately around him (many poems were written for and about his wide circle of friends). We can get some idea of this by looking at Friday 7 August, 1959. On that day O'Hara was to have lunch with his flatmate Joe LeSueur and the painter Norman Bluhm. LeSueur phoned him at his office in the late morning to announce that he'd written a poem for Bluhm and daring O'Hara to produce his own. Reluctantly he took on the challenge. "Adieu to Norman, Bon Jour to Joan and Jean Paul" is one of the highlights of Selected Poems. It begins with the precise nature of the occasional, of the moment:
It is 12:10 in New York and I am wondering
if I will finish this in time to meet Norman for lunch

And finish it he did, producing one of his greatest pieces. It moves away from close, quick-fire details and builds to an impassioned, playful hymn to survival, to keeping going: "the only thing to do is simply continue / is that simple / yes, it is simple because it is the only thing to do / can you do it / yes, you can because it is the only thing to do / blue light over the Bois de Boulogne it continues / the Seine continues / the Louvre stays open it hardly closes at all". The idea of survival is crucial to O'Hara's poetry; it's what drives his work and, even though he's best known for this kind of "I do this I do that" writing, his style had been continually shifting and adapting since the late 40s.

At Harvard, after serving in the Pacific during the second world war, he wrote poems delighting in a barbed sense of fun, infatuated with the novels of Ronald Firbank. When he arrived in New York at the end of 1951 (after receiving a Hopwood Award in creative writing at Ann Arbor) he launched himself enthusiastically into more chaotic, energetic works that looked both to the example of Dada and the vigorous canvases of the Abstract Expressionists (many of whom O'Hara befriended). These intoxicating poems, swerving between high camp and a kind of violent insouciance, brandish the vulgar, eager to smash through any sense of diction or restraint. He also began producing poems about his experience of cruising, what he later called his "under the counter" writing.

It wasn't until 1956, after his 30th birthday and the death of his close friend Bunny Lang, that the "I do this, I do that" pieces started to appear. The surreal devices are toned down and a distinctive intimate voice emerges, delivering the close at hand. As he says in a poem to the painter Robert Rauschenberg: "Yes, it's necessary, I'll do / what you say, put everything / aside but what is here." By 1961, however, these had evolved into a series of charismatic, fragmented poems spinning on colloquial phrases and half-glimpsed details, scattering themselves in pieces across the page.

There's always been some controversy about how O'Hara's work should be presented in book form. The poems published in his own lifetime weren't always reflections of his best writing and when his Collected Poems was produced in 1971 (five years after his early death), its sheer scale and length surprised even his closest friends. In making any selection, which side of O'Hara's writing do you emphasise?

The 1974 Selected Poems edited by Donald Allen (which Carcanet are here reprinting) contains 140 poems touching on a broad range of O'Hara's output. But, inevitably, it's not without problems; there are several works missing that, over the years, have been recognised as central – "A Party Full of Friends", "At the Old Place", "Poem/The fluorescent tubing burns like a bobby-soxer's ankles", "Poem/Lana Turner has collapsed!" (a piece written 50 years ago this February that brilliantly embodies O'Hara's gift for "photographing the instant"). What the book does deliver, however, is the brasher, messier, more avant-garde side of O'Hara, typified by the rich and challenging textures of "Easter" and "Second Avenue". An alternative approach can be found in the 2008 Selected Poems edited by Mark Ford that, gathering together his lighter, frequently more accessible works (including the final version of the excellent one act play "Try, Try!"), stresses the camp O'Hara, O'Hara as the groundbreaking gay writer. Both books, however, agree on the central importance of the "I do this, I do that" pieces he was producing throughout 1959.

For O'Hara a poem was most of all a performance, the declaration of a moment, rather than a display of craft or control. Looking to Whitman, Mayakovsky and Benjamin Péret he expressed a flamboyant disregard for the built resonances of le mot juste, the traditional sanctities of versification. He wanted something closer to the idea of spontaneity and wildness, to a kind of camp version of the sublime – "the wilderness wish / of wanting to be everything to everybody everywhere". And regardless of emphasis, it's always this sense of boundless potential, of excitement, of irrepressible restlessness, that dominates O'Hara's poetry; the extraordinary immediacy of a voice that seems clearer now than ever before.

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