Pages

Saturday, January 21, 2012

ON THE RIVER, I SAW THE WATERS SURGING LIKE THE OCEAN: A SKETCHY ACCOUNT


I have always been a little off,
      so driven by love of well-made verse,
pursuing that word of startling rightness,
      I'd sooner die than rest.
In my reckless old age,
      my words and I overwhelm each other.
So you needn't fear, birds and flowers,
     for the secrets of your spring.
Just now, I've put in a pier
      to dangle a fishing line from.
Before, I was angling from an anchored raft
      in place of a boat.
Who could I get with the mind of a master
      like Tao or Xie
to help out with my writing
      and wander the nearby world with me?
--Du Fu, my tr.


Posted this before.  Now I've reworked the first three lines.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Religious faith isn't necessarily incompatible w/ evolution, but faith of the the sort that holds everything in the Bible to be literally true--that kind of faith is. It seems to me an insupportable belief, but if you do believe it, you have to deny evolution or your head explodes. Also, God as the ground of being or the universe as God's art project snuggles up comfortably with evolution and modern cosmology. But when you've got a God whose main concern is the creation of us humans and the regulation of our lives, the vastness of the universe beyond our tiny speckappears suspiciously superfluous.https://www.facebook.com/NPR/posts/229330380483493 

Tuesday, January 17, 2012


I'm not inclined to take seriously the pronouncements of people, right or left, about what's constitutional or unconstitutional as long as they see everything they like to be constitutional and everything they don't like to be unconstitutional. The constitution is a good document, a great document, but not a perfect document. In providing for amendment, the constitution itself implies that it is not an infallible guide to the good.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

SPRING NIGHT: HEARING A FLUTE IN LOYANG


From which house, fleeting, invisible notes
mingling with the wind and filling the city?
Hearing that tune, A Willow Twig for Parting,
who would not dwell on thoughts of home?
     --Li Bai, my tr.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

UNTITLED


Meeting is hard and parting is harder.
The east wind slackens and flowers wither.
The spring silk worm spins silk till it dies.
The wax candle sheds tears till it's ash.
Morning mirror, fretting over disordered hair.
Midnight chanting, not feeling the cold.
Penglai, the faerie mountain, is somewhere near.
Bluebird, would you spy it out for me.
     --Li Shanglin, my tr.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

PASSING THE TEMPLE OF TEEMING FRAGRANCE


The Temple of Teeming Fragrance
measureless miles in summit clouds.
Ancient forest, a pathless way.
Deep mountains, directionless bell.
Spring water over jagged rocks.
Yellow sun on cool green pines.
Twilight, winding pool.  Quiet sitting
uncoils the poison dragon round the heart.
     --Wang Wei, my tr.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Dark, chilly, and rainy all day.  Perhaps it was a day like this when Ono no Komachi wrote

Falling, the long rain,
the color from the flower,
the eye through the world.

A tanka that I've managed to render as a haiku.  In Chinese literature two people separated in space are connected by their gazing at the same moon.  Perhaps, separated in time from Komachi and her original readers, we can make a similar connection with them through contemplation of an instance of the same phenomenon that Komachi pondered.