Following the U.S. entrance into
World War II, Rolfe was conscripted into the Army. When he arrived at Camp Wolters, he was met by
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents. Like other Spanish Civil War veterans, Rolfe was barred from becoming an officer in the
U.S. Armed Forces. He was assigned to an anti-tank gun battalion in the infantry. He found basic training "tough as hell on a 33-yr-old" competing with recruits who were 18-20 years old. He survived the training but a couple months later, while out on
maneuvers, he collapsed from
amoebic dysentery (the doctor suggested he might have ingested an amoebic cyst in Spain). Rolfe spent a month in the camp hospital, and was medically discharged from the Army before seeing action overseas. After the war, Rolfe resumed his literary work, co-authoring with Lester Fuller the 1946 mystery novel,
The Glass Room. He relocated to
Hollywood to adapt the novel for the screen. He was excited at the prospect—
Humphrey Bogart and
Lauren Bacall were set to star in the film—but ultimately the project never came to fruition. It may have been cancelled as a result of political pressure on
Warner Bros. since Rolfe and Fuller were both CPUSA members. It turned out that Rolfe's only screenwriting credit would be for the 1951
film noir,
The Scarf. As he prepared the poems that would comprise his 1951
First Love volume, Rolfe's mind kept returning to the Spanish Civil War, like in these opening lines of "Elegia" (1948): Although Rolfe and his wife remained in Hollywood, his hopes of earning a living as a screenwriter were thwarted by the
blacklist. In 1951, he was named a Communist by two "friendly" witnesses appearing before the
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). In April 1952, he received an HUAC summons, but was able to avoid testifying thanks to a doctor's letter. Meanwhile, Rolfe's health was failing. After suffering two minor heart attacks in 1944, he suffered his most severe one in July 1950 and was hospitalized until September. In his final years, Rolfe focused his energies on reworking earlier poems and writing new poems in response to the
McCarthy Era. He died of a heart attack in May 1954 at age 44. ==Legacy==