- A. M. Klein
Abraham Moses Klein was a Canadian poet, journalist, novelist, and short story writer. He was born in Ratno,
Ukraine on14 February 1909 and died in Montreal,Quebec on20 August 1972 . Best known for hispoetry , Klein also published onenovella entitled "The Second Scroll " in 1951, along with numerousessay s, reviews, short stories. Many of his lesser known works, including several unfinished novels, were published posthumously in a series of collections from theUniversity of Toronto Press .Early Life and Publications
In 1919, at age ten, he moved with his family to Montreal, the city in which he would live most of his life. Ratno had seen a series of
pogroms and, like many Ukrainian Jews, Klein's parents sought a safer life elsewhere. As a result of the influx of Jewish immigrants to Montreal, its Jewish community flourished, even though many families lived close to the poverty line. The family ofIrving Layton was another notable addition to this community. Klein's father, an Orthodox follower of the Jewish faith, influenced Klein's early development. The son's early education and literary interests owed much to his plan to become arabbi when he grew up, a plan that he never fulfilled.Klein attended
Baron Byng High School , and institution that would later be immortalized inMordecai Richler 's novel "The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz ". Later, he went on to study law atMcGill University . It was there that he met a group of poets and critics, includingF.R. Scott andA.J.M. Smith , who would soon form the foundations of the so-called Montreal Group of Poets in the 1930s. Klein's first submission of a poem to the Scott and Smith-edited magazine, "The McGill Fortnightly Review", was rejected on the basis of its author's refusal to alter the word "soul," which the editors felt was out of step with the modernist principles they espoused. Klein nevertheless became friends with the elder poets and was soon an avid modernist himself, thanks partly to the influence of such peers asLeon Edel , the futureHenry James biographer who introduced Klein to the works ofJames Joyce and other writers. Klein would add Joyce to his list of life-long fascinations, an interest that bore fruit in a complex literary study of Joyce's "Ulysses ", published posthumously in the Klein volume "Literary Essays and Reviews".In spite of his growing literary interests, Klein's early poetry of the 1920s and 1930s was largely concerned with Jewish themes, including the history of Jews in
Western society ("Design for Mediaeval Tapestry"), the importance ofreligion as a mediating force in modern society ("Heirloom"), and tributes to important figures in Jewish culture ("Out of the Pulver and the Polished Lens," about the philosopherSpinoza ). Klein published many of these early works in Canadian and American periodicals, although theGreat Depression made it difficult for him to find a publisher willing to accept an entire book. Belatedly, in 1940, Klein's firstmonograph , "Hath Not a Jew", was published in theUnited States . Although the book sold poorly, many of its poems would later become standard selections in anthologies ofCanadian literature and posthumous collections of Klein's work.Literary Maturity and Prominence
During the
Second World War , Klein published two more books, "Poems" and "The Hitleriad", both in 1944. "Poems" developed ideas forecast in "Hath Not a Jew" but also reflected Klein's anxieties over current events and the plight of Jews in the wake of theHolocaust . Poems such as "Polish Village," "Meditation Upon Survival," and "Elegy" were thoroughly contemporary accounts of persecution and suffering with which Klein, despite his relative safety in Canada, deeply sympathized. "The Hitleriad" was a very different work, amock epic written in a satricial style reminiscent ofAlexander Pope in such works asThe Dunciad . In it, Klein attempted to satirizeAdolf Hitler and hisNazi cohorts, although later critics often noted that the inescapable bitterness of the subject caused Klein's humorous intentions to run awry.Klein's greatest achievement as a poet came in 1948 with the publication of "
The Rocking Chair and Other Poems ". The book earned Klein aGovernor General's Award in poetry and sold in numbers far exceeding the norm for a book of Canadian poetry. The success of the book owed much to Klein's new-found focus on domestic Canadian subjects, particularly the culture of French Canada, which Klein, fluent in French and sympathetic to their minority status in North America, understood better than mostEnglish-Canadian writers of his day. Along with the oft-anthologized title poem, "The Rocking Chair," a poem that uses the chair in a rural Quebec house as asynecdoche of French-Canadian heritage, the book included such poems as "Lookout: Mont Royal," "Grain Elevator," and "The Cripples," all of which showed Klein at the height of his creative powers and survived long after as lyrical encapsulations of specific aspects and locations of Montreal. A lengthyelegy at the end of the book, "Portrait of the Poet as Landscape," reflected Klein's indignation at the general indifference of the Canadian public to its own literature.Klein's mission to Israel in 1949 on behalf of "The Canadian Jewish Chronicle" inspired his last major work and only complete novel, "
The Second Scroll ". Taking cues equally from James Joyce, theTorah andTalmud , and the events of recent history, Klein structured his novel as a series of five chapters, fromGenesis toDeuteronomy , each of which corresponds to one of the five books of thePentateuch . The story's narrator, an unnamed character based loosely on Klein himself, goes in search of his long-lost uncle, Melech Davidson, a Holocaust survivor who drifts toRome and thenCasablanca before immigrating to Israel. Just as the narrator is about to catch up to his mercurial uncle, Davidson is murdered by a group ofPalestinians , leaving the end of the novel open as to whether Davidson was amartyr to the Jewish nation or a falseMessiah whose heroic status was inflated by his nephew's eagerness to meet his elusive uncle. Following the main narrative of "The Second Scroll" is a series of numbered glosses that add further commentary to the narrative in the form of poems, aliturgy , a playlet, and, most notably, a meditative essay on theceiling of the Sistine Chapel painted byMichelangelo . Although "The Second Scroll" was not a commercial success in its first edition fromKnopf inNew York , a subsequentre-print in Canada'sNew Canadian Library ensured its survival as one of the significant works of modern Canadian literature.Klein as a Public Figure
Aside from his writing, Klein was also an important member of the Montreal Jewish community during his lifetime. By profession he was a lawyer, and spent many years as a consultant and speech writer for
Samuel Bronfman , owner of the Seagram distillery. He was editor of the "Canadian Jewish Chronicle" from 1932 until 1955, a periodical to which he also contributed articles on such subjects as the rise ofNazism inGermany , the social position of Jews in Canada, and the founding of the state ofIsrael in 1948. Klein was aZionist but his enthusiasm for the new Jewish state was tempered by a critical eye for political realities. This ambivalence toward Israel is best expressed in "The Second Scroll", which he wrote after a fact-finding journey to Israel in 1949 and published two years later. Also in 1949, Klein ran unsuccessfully for the Canadian Parliament as a member of theCo-operative Commonwealth Federation . In 1956, he was awarded theLorne Pierce Medal by theRoyal Society of Canada , but by then he had lapsed into the mysterious silence that saw him give up writing altogether and become arecluse in his home in Montreal'sOutremont district, until his death in 1972.Legacy
Fellow Jewish-Montrealer,
Leonard Cohen , is an admirer who has cited Klein as an influence and has written a song in his memory.Mordecai Richler is said to have used Klein as a model for the character L. B. Berger in "Solomon Gursky Was Here " (1989). He was also a friend ofNew Democratic Party leader David Lewis. He introduced Lewis to his wife, Sophie Carson, when they were at Baron Byng High School. cite book
last = Smith
first = Cameron
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Unfinished Journey: The Lewis Family
publisher = Summerhill Press
date = 1989
location =Toronto
pages = pp. 146-157
url =
doi =
id =
isbn = 0-929091-04-3 ] They founded "The McGilliad" magazine at McGill University in 1930. As well, Lewis introducedIrving Layton to Klein. Klein became Layton's Latin tutor so he could pass his matriculation exams.He is honoured posthumously through the A. M. Klein Prize for Poetry, presented by the Quebec Writers' Federation. [http://www.qwf.org/awards/]
Bibliography
Published during Klein's lifetime
* "Hath Not a Jew..." (1940)
* "Poems" (1944)
* "The Hitleriad" (1944)
* "The Rocking Chair and Other Poems" (1948)
* "The Second Scroll " (novel, 1951; critical edition, 2000)Published posthumously
* "The Collected Poems of A.M.Klein" (1974)
* "Beyond Sambation: Selected Essays and Editorials" (1982)
* "Short Stories" (1983)
* "Literary Essays and Reviews" (1983)
* "Doctor Dwarf and Other Poems for Children" (1990)
* "Complete Poems" (1990)
* "Notebooks: Selections From the A.M. Klein Papers" (1994)
* "Selected Poems" (1997)Notes and Citations
References
*Caplan, Usher. "Like One That Dreamed: A Portrait of A.M. Klein". Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1982.
*Marshall, Tom, ed. "A.M. Klein: Critical Views on Canadian Writers". Toronto: Ryerson, 1970.
*Mayne, Seymour, ed. "The A.M. Klein Symposium". Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 1975.
*Pollock, Zailig. "A.M. Klein: The Story of the Poet". Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994.
*Smith, Cameron. "Unfinished Journey: The Lewis Family". Toronto: Summerhill Press, 1989.
*Waddington, Miriam. "A.M. Klein". Toronto: Copp Clark, 1970.External links
* [http://www.library.utoronto.ca/canpoetry/klein/ Biography and works]
* [http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0004344 A. M. Klein's] entry in [http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=HomePage&Params=A1 The Canadian Encyclopedia]
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