total descendants:: total children::3 10 ❤️
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● nejake to info: Modern American Poetry - Gary Snyder ● par basni: Gary Snyder Poems ![]() What You Should Know To Be A Poet all you can know about animals as persons. the names of trees and flowers and weeds. the names of stars and the movements of the planets and the moon. your own six senses, with a watchful and elegant mind. at least one kind of traditional magic: divination, astrology, the book of changes, the tarot; and dreams. the illusory demons and the illusory shining gods. kiss the ass of the devil and eat shit; fuck his horny barbed cock, fuck the hag, and all the celestial angels and maidens perfumed and golden - & then love the human: wives, husbands, friends, children's games, comic books, bubble-gum, the weirdness of television and the advertising. work long, dry hours of dull work swallowed and accepted and lived with and finally loved. exhaustion, hunger, rest. the wild freedom of the dance, extasy silent solitary illumination, enstasy and real danger. real gambles and the edge of death. ![]() Axe Handles One afternoon the last week in April Showing Kai how to throw a hatchet One-half turn and it sticks in a stump. He recalls the hatchet-head Without a handle, in the shop And go gets it, and wants it for his own A broken off axe handle behind the door Is long enough for a hatchet, We cut it to length and take it With the hatchet head And working hatchet, to the wood block. There I begin to shape the old handle With the hatchet, and the phrase First learned from Ezra Pound Rings in my ears! "When making an axe handle the pattern is not far off." And I say this to Kai "Look: We'll shape the handle By checking the handle Of the axe we cut with--" And he sees. And I hear it again: It's in Lu Ji's Wên Fu, fourth century A.D. "Essay on Literature" -- in the Preface: "In making the handle Of an axe By cutting wood with an axe The model is indeed near at hand." My teacher Shih-hsiang Chen Translated that and taught it years ago And I see Pound was an axe Chen was an axe, I am an axe And my son a handle, soon To be shaping again, model And tool, craft of culture, How we go on. ![]() Poetry Comes to Me It comes blundering over the Boulders at night, it stays Frightened outside the Range of my campfire I go to meet it at the Edge of the light ![]() After Work The shack and a few trees float in the blowing fog I pull out your blouse, warm my cold hands on your breasts. you laugh and shudder peeling garlic by the hot iron stove. bring in the axe, the rake, the wood we'll lean on the wall against each other stew simmering on the fire as it grows dark drinking wine. ![]() Siwashing it out once in Siuslaw Forest I slept under rhododendron All night blossoms fell Shivering on a sheet of cardboard Feet stuck in my pack Hands deep in my pockets Barely able to sleep. I remembered when we were in school Sleeping together in a big warm bed We were the youngest lovers When we broke up we were still nineteen. Now our friends are married You teach school back east I dont mind living this way Green hills the long blue beach But sometimes sleeping in the open I think back when I had you. ![]() A Walk Sunday the only day we don't work: Mules farting around the meadow, Murphy fishing, The tent flaps in the warm Early sun: I've eaten breakfast and I'll Take a walk To Benson Lake. Packed a lunch, Goodbye. Hopping on creekbed boulders Up the rock throat three miles Puite Creek -- In steep gorge glacier-slick rattlesnake country Jump, land by a pool, trout skitter, The clear sky. Deer tracks. Bad place by a falls, boulders big as houses, Lunch tied to belt, I stemmed up a crack and almost fell But rolled out safe on a ledge and ambled on. Quail chicks freeze underfoot, color of stone Then run cheep! away, hen quail fussing. Craggy west end of Benson Lake -- after edging Past dark creek pools on a long white slope -- Lookt down in the ice-black lake lined with cliff From far above: deep shimmering trout. A lone duck in a gunsightpass steep side hill Through slide-aspen and talus, to the east end, Down to grass, wading a wide smooth stream Into camp. At last. By the rusty three-year- Ago left-behind cookstove Of the old trail crew, Stoppt and swam and ate my lunch. ![]() Mid-August at Sourdough Mountain Lookout Down valley a smoke haze Three days heat, after five days rain Pitch glows on the fir-cones Across rocks and meadows Swarms of new flies. I cannot remember things I once read A few friends, but they are in cities. Drinking cold snow-water from a tin cup Looking down for miles Through high still air. ![]() Civilization Those are the people who do complicated things. they'll grab us by the thousands and put us to work. World's going to hell, with all these villages and trails. Wild duck flocks aren't what they used to be. Aurochs grow rare. Fetch me my feathers and amber * A small cricket on the typescript page of "Kyoto born in spring song" grooms himself in time with The Well-Tempered Clavier. I quit typing and watch him through a glass. How well articulated! How neat! Nobody understands the ANIMAL KINGDOM. * When creeks are full The poems flow When creeks are down We heap stones. |
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