Cover art by John Bennett
Busy, busy times, so posts for the next couple of weeks will be sporadic and brief. The Basho Haiku Challenge is off to a great start, with lots of entries coming in. Thanks very much to Poet Hound, Haiku and Horror , Blogging Along Tobacco Road, and trout fishing in minnesota for getting the word out. I'm sure there are some others, too, that I don't know about, but thanks all.
So, keep the haiku coming in, folks. Instructions may be found at the Basho Haiku Challenge link, above.
And keep spreading the word.
As alluded to above, not much progress on any fronts. I haven't read any fiction in over a month and I am seriously jonesing. When I see the piles as I go room to room, you can't imagine the variety of voices I hear calling to me from every corner: classic, modern, sci-fi, horror, any damn thing. They all want to be read and I want to read them all and the discipline is killing me.
I continue to read, however, for both the haiku challenge and a future Modest Proposal project, two different translations of Basho, one at work and one at home. At home, I'm reading the Jane Reichhold Basho: the Complete Haiku, which is the prize for the challenge and, I'm happy to say, I'm beginning to warm to it a bit. All the translations I've read so far have had one thing to recommend them: specifically, Basho himself. This may seem ludicrous but what I mean specifically is that I seem to be encountering different aspects of the same poet in the different translations. A poem I loved in one translation, I'm indifferent to the next and, of course, vice versa. At work, I'm still reading David Landis Budhill's Basho's Journey which, after the Reichhold, is the most complete and has notes for every poem. They'll be more details on both of these volumes in future posts.
Come mid-October, I hope to be working on the new issues, #'s 165 & 166, along with a new chapbook in the Modest Proposal series, a second volume of translations from 100 Poems by 100 Poets, by Dennis Maloney and Hide Oshiro. This volume will concentrate on poems of nature following the previous Unending Night, which contained love poems.
Jilly Dybka at Poetry Hut has pointed to a beautiful, pointed September poem by one of my favorite poets, Amy Lowell (particularly her shorter poems). Here it is, September, 1918; I think you'll enjoy it.
A Richard Brautigan poem, Star Holes, seems to be making the blog/live journal rounds. This guy just won't lay down and, of course, that's why we love him. Here it is:
Star Holes
I sit here
on the perfect end
of a star,
watching light
pour itself toward
me.
The light pours
itself through
a small hole
in the sky.
I'm not very happy,
but I can see
how things
are faraway.Richard Brautigan
Finally, in the news of the truly odd, Michael Jackson has reportedly recorded musical versions of the work of Robert Burns. If I didn't read it in The Guardian, I wouldn't have believed it.
You know what: I still don't believe it.
This week's issue from the Lilliput archive is #78 from March 1996.
----------------------------------------------------
I sought my heart
among the shadows
and found instead
a burnished leaf
Albert Huffstickler----------------------------------------------------
Drag me in,
you are a night that is just beginning.
You are a room I've seen
but have never slept in.
Your shoulder pushes against
the world's edge, and the sky
scrapes softly on my cheek.Ali Kress
----------------------------------------------------
Selfless
-----The pulsing
of the soft brown muslin curtain,
for example
And the quietness of rain,
taking you apart
Mark Jackley
----------------------------------------------------
Thank You
To the pirate faced biker
streaming slowly down
Marshall Avenue,
colors jazzed in the
night time light,
front wheeled Harley
out to here, black
jacket man with beard
of steel, who saw my
one year old boy craning
in his blue stroller
and waved.Michael Finley
----------------------------------------------------
Poem Inspired by Hokusai, #7
Hokusai
in hell
draws perfect
circles
one inside
the other.Alan Catlin
----------------------------------------------------
When My Ashes Have Cooled DownPitch me to the nearest wind.
I'll find my way home.Bart Solarczyk
----------------------------------------------------
best,
Don
15 comments:
A lot of good stuff here. Particularly like the ashes poem that ends to post.
that's a good Brautigan poem. I think i found it last time you posted about him and i went to look him up. also like Huff's poem.
glad you're liking the Basho. that Haiku Journey sounds like a good book to get.
in this
translation of Basho's
poem #16,322 I intrude
here are 2 of the countless numbers of trans of Basho's Frog Poem:
old pond
frog leaping
splash
trans. Cid Corman, 1988
the old pond-
a frog jumps in,
water's sound
trans. Ueda Makoto,1992
my 1998 'take on this (and there are at least 10 variations):
far beyond frog moon leaps
I cld say more... however
working on five poems
simultaneously
to send to your Basho Contest!
sun and moon
coming/going
rejection not an issue
Charles and Greg, I know its hitting on all cylinders when different poems grab different folks -
Ed, love your frog take, sun and moon made me laugh out loud ...
Don
"When My Ashes Have Cooled Down" grabbed my attention, wonderful little poem. Also, happy to get the word out about your contest, hope you receive plenty of entries.
Don:
I recently received issues #80 and #81 of "Bear Creek Haiku". In a previous post I think you modestly underestimated your talents. These were five very good poems and I hope to see more of your work in the near future.
I also enjoyed Greg Schwartz' two poems in #80 of the same magazine, one of which was featured on the cover of the issue. That was cool!
I procured a copy of Stryk's l985 "Basho" and have just begun to read it. It's quite an attractive book; I found a first-edition hardcover for a very reasonable price.
Best Regards,
Jeffery
Jeffery,
Glad you enjoyed the poems! "bear creek" is a great little magazine, and I'm always proud to be a part of it.
PH, "When My Ashes Have Cooled Down" was featured on the back page of issue #78 and is very fine, indeed. Bart Solarczyk is a Pittsburgh poet who can pack both feeling and power into just a few words. Glad everyone liked it. Thanks for the promotion, on your site - I'm getting a healthy selection of work for the Challenge.
Jeffrey, I, too, enjoyed Greg's work in the recent "Bear Creek." Daryl has reinvigorated me toward my own work, for which I am immensely grateful.
Greg, Jeffrey sent along some things for the challenge - how's about you? Here it is again: The Basho Haiku Challenge.
best,
Don
co:incidence just opening
Lucien Stryk/TakashiIkemoto's :
Zen Poems of China and Japan (The Crane's Bill) 1973
this is a book for all "beginners"
losts of familiar names/poets/monks lots I've never heard of
in the "Death" section:
Death sitting,death [standing -
Bone-heap on the earth.
Void somersaults in the [wind-
One final 'kwatz'!
-Koho, 1241-1316
Stryk taught/teaches at (I think) Northern Ill U I am not sure if he is yet breathing in-and-breathing out
those 2wo "[" s shld-not
bee there...
http://poetrywriting.org/Sketchbook3-6June08/Sketchbook_3-6_June_2008_Haiga_Ed_Baker_Bumble_Bee.htm
Ed:
Stryk's Zen Poems of China and Japan (subtitled the Crane's Bill in some editions) an excellent place to start (and, of course, the journey always finishes where it began - in a damned bath, Issa says!)
Beautiful art and bee poem, thanks for pointing to it ...
Don
http://www.poetrypoetry.com/Features/LucienStryk/LucienStryk.html
Ed, see also the August post:
http://lilliputreview.blogspot.com/2008/08/sunday-afternoon-with-lucien-stryk.html
Don
I was there,
but, instead
of
going in-
I went around.
all-ways (this)
just like this mind
just don't know mind:
"what's 'next'?"
"did you eat?"
"yes"
"clean your bowl!"
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