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IN THE HEADY DAYS LEADING UP TO AND INCLUDing the catastrophe of World War I, when Paris was the capital of modern art, the poet Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918) stood at the vital center of a gang of writers and artists who embraced the future with such tremendous energy that avant-garde became an adjective of glamour and prestige. Apollinaire- whose circle included painters (Picasso, Derain, Vlaminck) and composers (Satie, Poulenc) as well as poets (Blaise Cendrars, Max Jacob, Pierre Reverdy)was a superb activist and agitator. He championed Cubism and gave Surrealism its name. In 1917, his edition of Charles Baudelaire's poems linked the two men as kindred spirits, city poets who doubled as art critics; Baudelaire prefigured Apollinaire as the latter prefigures Frank O'Hara. Also in 1917, Apollinaire issued his manifesto, "The New Spirit and the Poets," making the case for innovation as a transcendent value. Poetry had to keep up with the technological advances of the day- the cinema, the radio, the motorcar, the flying machine. Driving with a friend from Deauville to Paris in "La Petite Auto," Apollinaire writes that "the little car had driven us into a New epoch / and though both of us were grown men / it was as if we had just been born."
Apollinaire experimented with audacious techniques for generating verse. On occasion he would sit in a café and weave overheard phrases into the composition. For his book Calligrammes, he made shaped poems - poems that looked like a mirror, a heart, the rainfall, a pocket-watch. In his most ambitious discursive poems, he wins over the reader by modifying his self-pity with his wit and ebullience. There is a rare combination of enthusiasm and melancholy in Apollinaire's self-presentation. A line from his poem "Les Collines" ("The Hills") is etched into his tombstone at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris: "Je peux mourir en souriant" - "I can die with a smile on my face."
"Zone," the central poem in Apollinaire's career, prefaces his collection Alcools, the title of which translates literally as "Spirits" in the alcoholic sense though I would argue for "Cocktails." Alcools...