This week's selection for Issa's Sunday Service has a double literary pedigree: it is a song written by William Shakespeare, from Act II, Scene V, of As You Like It and the title of a Thomas Hardy novel after the Shakespeare song. In any case, this is a fine adaptation by Donovan.
Back about two years ago, I had a little something to say about this Hardy novel while blogging at my other job. Hardy is one of my unabashed favorites. Shakespeare and Donovan, too, for that matter, though none seem to be in the haiku business.
Hmn.
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Here's an amateur video of Tom Waits performing Lawerence Ferlinghetti's poem "Firemen" from Pictures of the Gone World at the recent Litquake festival in San Francisco. This is the long version with a typically wonderful Waits intro.
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Lilliput Review #109 featured a parcel of haiku and other short-short pieces. Here's one that was a little longer, calling an old friend to mind, reminding us of the true value of much literary criticism, and all the moon's light:
best,
Don
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Go to the LitRock web site for a list of all 73 songs
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Ephemera
Po Chui, we are told, wrote
too many poems on subjects
of no special significance.
Across eleven centuries
we can still see the poet's brush
draw the least leaf to life.
The critic's words, as our breaths
on a winter's night, are
bright in the moon's light.
Robert Chute
Lute
my lute set aside
on the little table
lazily I meditate
on cherishing feelings
the reason I don't bother
to strum and pluck?
there's a breeze over the strings
and it plays itself
Po Chu-i
translated by James M. Cryer
Children imitating cormorants
are even more wonderful
than cormorants.
Issa
translated by Robert Hass
best,
Don
PS Get 2 free issues Get 2 more free issues Lillie poem archive
Go to the LitRock web site for a list of all 73 songs
Hear all 73 at once on the the LitRock Jukebox