Kenneth Rexroth

satya - 1/10/2018, 7:04:42 AM

Translations from Japanese - Kenneth Rexroth

Translations from Japanese - Kenneth Rexroth

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:01:32 AM

Poems of Kenneth Rexroth

Poems of Kenneth Rexroth

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satya - 1/15/2018, 10:01:48 AM

Writings of Kenneth Rexroth

Writings of Kenneth Rexroth

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satya - 1/15/2018, 10:02:52 AM

On What Planet


Uniformly over the whole countryside
The warm air flows imperceptibly seaward;
The autumn haze drifts in deep bands
Over the pale water;
White egrets stand in the blue marshes;
Tamalpais, Diablo, St. Helena
Float in the air.
Climbing on the cliffs of Hunter?s Hill
We look out over fifty miles of sinuous
Interpenetration of mountains and sea.
 
Leading up a twisted chimney,
Just as my eyes rise to the level
Of a small cave, two white owls
Fly out, silent, close to my face.
They hover, confused in the sunlight,
And disappear into the recesses of the cliff.
 
All day I have been watching a new climber,
A young girl with ash blonde hair
And gentle confident eyes.
She climbs slowly, precisely,
With unwasted grace.
 
While I am coiling the ropes,
Watching the spectacular sunset,
She turns to me and says, quietly,
?It must be very beautiful, the sunset,
On Saturn, with the rings and all the moons.

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:09:45 AM

No question: Finely crafted poetry, essays, and translations

Finely crafted: Very few of that these days!! I don't mind being thirsty for that sort, be it in any media.

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:10:53 AM

Couple of these comments taken from this PDF: Gregory McNamee

Couple of these comments taken from this PDF: Gregory McNamee

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:11:03 AM

Gregory McNamee

Gregory McNamee

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satya - 1/15/2018, 10:11:48 AM

His art sprang from the classical tradition of which the mind of the West is made.

His art sprang from the classical tradition of which the mind of the West is made.

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:14:56 AM

In continuous revolt against the public hallucination

Whether found in his essays, or in his poetry, or in the works of the Chinese, French, Greek, and Japanese poets he undertook to translate, the tradition is alive and well, in continuous revolt against the public hallucination

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:18:08 AM

When we with Sapho - Rexroth

about the cool water
the wind sounds through sprays
of apple, and from the quivering leaves
slumber pours down.

satya - 1/15/2018, 10:35:38 AM

Gregory McNamee's translation of Greek Poem Apple Orchard

Leave Crete for this holy temple
Where a lovely grove of apple trees
Fringes an altar that smokes with incense
In your praise.

Shadows of roses fall on the ground,
And cold jets of water whisper in branches,
And shimmering leaves
Rain down deep sleep.

In the meadow stallions browse,
And wildflowers blossom,
And anise fills the air with fragrance.

Here, beloved Aphrodite, pour
Immortal nectar in golden cups,
Fill all with sudden ecstasy.