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Africa anthology Asia Berlin Cambodia capitalism Cartagena Charity Travel children Consumerism death Delhi education essay freedom hitchhiking India Kenya Kisumu language Laos life love Malaysia meaning meditation memory Miru Money music Nairobi pain Philosophy poetry power refugees religion resistance Thailand time Tiruvannamalai Trump Vientiane Vietnam writing
17 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Via Velasca by Leonardo Sinisgalli

Leonardo Sinisgalli (1908-1981) studied engineering and mathematics before he became a poet, and they appear to call him the “engineer poet”. Here is a collection of his poetry in Italian. I found this impressionist poem about a street, in the translation of W.S. di Piero, and I quote: Via Velasca Years of pounding have nearly Caved …

anthology, Italian, light, Sinisgalli, street
16 October, 2017
Philosophy
The Gods are Back

The gods are back, companions. Right now they have just entered this life; but the words that revoke them, whispered underneath the words that reveal them, have also appeared that we might suffer together. – René Char

René Char 1 Comment
15 October, 2017
Poetry

For though I’m small, I know many things,
and my body is an endless eye
through which, unfortunately, I see everything. – Gloria Fuentes

Gloria Fuentes
14 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: I hear that the axe has flowered by Paul Celan

Today, let’s dive into a mysterious poem by the great Paul Celan, in a translation by Michael Hamburger. I hear that the axe has flowered I hear that the axe has flowered, I hear that the place can’t be named, I hear that the bread which looks at him heals the hanged man, the bread …

anthology, death, Paul Celan 1 Comment
13 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Female author by Sylvia Plath

An anthology has to have some Plath in it, or so they say. This one convinced me by its metaphorical precision. I would have liked it even if I didn’t know the author was Sylvia Plath (1932-1963). All day she plays at chess with the bones of the world: Favored (while suddenly the rains begin …

decay, female, Sylvia Plath
12 October, 2017
Poetry
Poetry

Poetry is always celebration
or its opposite. Making blackness
the word for everything:
A symbol, a sound,
To fill us
and to fill the tombs in our midst.

blackness, celebration, darkness 1 Comment
11 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: St. Sava’s Journey by Vasko Popa

The following poem by Serbian poet Vasko Popa (1922-1991) in the translation of Anne Paddington, did impress me. St. Sava’s Journey He journeys over the dark land With his staff he cuts The dark beyond him into four He flings thick gloves Changed into immense cats At the grey army of mice Amid the storm …

anthology, Serbian, St. Sava, Vasko Popa 1 Comment
10 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Meeting by Marina Tsvetsaeva

Marina Tsvetsaeva (1892-1941) I read Meeting in an English translation by Ilya Shambat who prepared it for the 110th anniversary of her birth in 2002. Meeting Evening dimmed, like ourselves charmed With this first warmth of the spring. Stirring alive, Arbat was alarmed; With sympathetic tenderness, the kind Gale touched us with a tired wing. …

anthology, Gogol, meeting, Tsvetsaeva 1 Comment
10 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Verwandlung by Georg Trakl

Today I read a poem by my famous German expressionist, Georg Trakl (1887-1914). I couldn’t find a translation of die Verwandlung online, so I created one myself. There is a website where you can contribute poetry translations, and I added this one. This is what the great German, who died at 27 (sounds familiar) from …

anthology, Georg Trakl, music, poetry, transformation
9 October, 2017
Poetry
A GARDEN

In my mind I have created a garden populated with insects who don’t bite and birds who don’t shit on my paper when I write there is a lily pond, with frogs who know Bach However, they keep quiet. This is my refuge where nothing pierces through the surface every ripple is merely the smile …

Bach, garden, writing 1 Comment
9 October, 2017
Uncategorized
Person of color

A person of color walks into a bar he gets seated on a prominent stool and whispers “triple scotch please” the bartender, who since the unfortunate event two weeks ago, is a person of color too, says right away sir and pours his drink and Nina sings Nina Simone was a person of color, too. …

8 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Kinaxixi by Augostinho Neto

Today, I wanted to read a poem by Hugo von Hofmannthal or Wisława Szymborska, but I couldn’t find (the time to make) a good translation of the German genius and I’m not fond of the Polish Nobel Prize winner. So I read a poet by former Angolan president Augustinho Neto (1922-1979) instead. Here it is, in …

Africa, Angola, anthology, Augustinho Neto, Kinaxixi, Luanda 1 Comment
7 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Enigma with Flower by Pablo Neruda

The great Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (1904-1973, born as Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto) deserves a place in our anthology as well. I browsed his poetry and found this item, ‘Enigma with Flower’ suitable for today’s short reading. Victory. It has come late, I had not learnt how to arrive, like the lily, at will, the white figure, that pierces …

flower, lily, Pablo Neruda, power
6 October, 2017
Poetry
EIFFEL TOWER

In Vegas and Macau they have fake Eiffel towers. Smaller of course than the original in Paris. They are there to invoke Paris. The Eiffel tower is 324 meters high I learned that number in school. One day someone will build a taller one in Shanghai or Dubai or Doha or such place Years will amplify …

Eiffel tower, memory, steel 1 Comment
5 October, 2017
The good life

“As a writer, I’m more interested in what people tell themselves happened rather than what actually happened”
― Kazuo Ishiguro

5 October, 2017
Poetry
You and Me

Would you come over and steal everything? that would be great. There are enough words but there must be light I cannot usurp alone all the words who write. Come stealthily, come at night I’ll leave some papers on my desk take all you need and run with it Use them up! You are not …

abundance, Literature, relation, theft 1 Comment
4 October, 2017
Laughs

Build a man a fire, and he’ll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire, and he’ll be warm for the rest of his life — Terry Pratchett

Terry Pratchett
3 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: L’Orangerie by Yves Bonnefoy

The French poet Yves Bonnefoy (1923-2016) published major collections of poetry throughout his livetime. He lived, and died, in Paris in 2016. Today, I read a poem headed ‘L’Orangerie’. I didn’t like the English translation by Galway Kinnell so I have improved it. As usual, here’s the poem: THE ORANGERY Thus we walk on the ruins …

anthology, death, finitude, Orangerie, salamander, Yves Bonnefoy 1 Comment
3 October, 2017
Poetry
Coffee

After the boil you wait. Then you pour. Then you wait again. Three minutes. And then you press down. Slowly. Each morning, I serve myself a cup of coffee. I smile for my master who is so free, almost like me We both saw a full moon last night and she turned us into a …

clouds, coffee, friendship 1 Comment
2 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Tourist by Yehuda Amichai

I like the accessible poetry of Yehuda Amichai. Today I read his poem ‘Tourist’ for a future anthology. Amichai (1924-2000) is generally considered the most important contemporary Israeli poet. She showed me her swaying hair in the four winds of her coming. I showed her some of my folding ways of life and the trick, and …

anthology, Hebrew, tourist, Yehuda Amichai 1 Comment
1 October, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Distances by Philippe Jaccottet

Today’s poem is by Swiss poet Philippe Jaccottet, born in 1925 and a prominent figure in the post-war era. The French original can be found here. Without further ado, as usual (ado can be googled and regurgitated), I do my reading. Swifts turn in the height of the air; higher still turn the invisible stars. When …

1 Comment
30 September, 2017
Poetry
Reading: It Was A November Of Bitter Rain And Snow Blackened By Use

Today I read a poem by the Lebanese poet (and former miss Beirut) Venus Khoury-Ghata in the English translation by Marilyn Hacker. It has a few things in common with poems I wrote about here earlier: It is short, but not too short and contains some surrealistic images that can shake the prepared reader. we filed …

anthology, children, Lebanon, parents, Vénus Khoury-Ghata 1 Comment
29 September, 2017
Poetry
Reading: White Lie by Abbas Beydoun

Today I read the poem White Lie by the Lebanese poet Abbas Beydoun, born in 1945. As usual, I write freely why I think this poem is a good one. The truth is also blood. And it might be a piece of tongue or someting severed from us. We might find it in semen or …

Abbas Beydoun, anthology, Fady Joudah, Lebanon, lie, poetry, truth 1 Comment
28 September, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Pieces of Shadow by Jaime Sabines

Today I found a poem by the Mexican poet Jaime Sabines (1926-1999) in a translation by W.S. Merwin. According to Octavio Paz he was one of the greatest. The original Spanish poem can be found here. I don’t know it for certain, but I imagine that a man and a woman fall in love one …

anthology, Jaime Sabines, love, Mexico, poem 1 Comment

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