Immagine dell'autore.

Saigyo (1118–1190)

Autore di I canti dell'eremo

9+ opere 252 membri 3 recensioni 2 preferito

Sull'Autore

Comprende i nomi: 西行, Saigyō,

Comprende anche: S (1)

Nota di disambiguazione:

(eng) aka Sato Norikiyo

Fonte dell'immagine: Everything Is Illuminated

Opere di Saigyo

Opere correlate

Zen Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets) (1999) — Collaboratore — 173 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1118
Data di morte
1190-3-23
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
Japan
Luogo di residenza
Osaka, Japan (death)
Attività lavorative
priest
poet
Nota di disambiguazione
aka Sato Norikiyo

Utenti

Recensioni

There were a handful I liked, the rest were just OK.
 
Segnalato
unclebob53703 | 1 altra recensione | Dec 11, 2017 |
I bought this because Saigyo is traditionally considered the principal model for Basho. But sadly, the book has crippling flaws. There is a long biographical introduction, which does not solve problems of interpretation. For example there is this lovely poem:

My body will somewhere fall
by the wayside into a state of
sleep and more sleep --
like the dew that each night appears,
then falls from roadside grasses.

This stands out among dozens of others because of the specificity of its simile. But that specificity may be an illusion, brought to the poem by my Western reading habits: I see it as more particular than tropes in other poems, because I picture the leaves of grass bending slightly, and the drops drooping, and I think of those as figures for exhaustion, made poignant by the lightness of drops of water. But perhaps I'm only supposed to be thinking of the raindrops' ephemerality and anonymity.

Another example, said to be Saigyo's most famous poem:

I thought I was free
of passions, so this melancholy
comes as a surprise:
a woodcock shoots up from marsh
where autumn's twilight falls.

The translation permits two readings: in one, the melancholy is what's figured by the image of the woodcock and the marsh, and together they comprise the writer's mood; in the other, surprise is what is figured, and melancholy is previous and unexplained. The gloss doesn't discuss this, and introduces a completely different idea:

"What happens in the scene of the darkening marsh is is reflected in the person of the poet, someone in whom, fortunately, long and arduous practice had not taken away the capacity to respond emotionally to a sudden manifestation of beauty." (p. 68)

I can't understand this, or how the author, William LaFleur, could think it is an adequate interpretation. If it is right, then the woodcock in the autumn marsh means only beauty, and neither surprise nor melancholy play any determinate part.

Perhaps I'm thinking too much like William Empson, but unless I can understand the basic ground rules of interpretation, it doesn't help to be told Saiygo sounds "medieval" in comparison to Basho, and it certainly doesn't help to be given a long biography of the poet. For all I know, I'm reading into translations that themselves read into, or even past, the poet.

And "Awesome Nightfall," as a title, does not do anything for my confidence in these translations. It's such a stupid title that my wife made fun of me every time she saw the cover. It sounds like a teenager's reaction to a sunset.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
JimElkins | Jan 11, 2011 |
Saigyo was a 12th-century Buddhist monk who left court life to pursue priesthood and poetry. He writes waka in a form which seems to be innovative for its time by focusing more closely on nature themes and imagery and less on social and emotional situations. Saigyo was a strong influence on later poets such as Basho.

This book is a selection of Saigyo's poems organized according to seasonal topics (plus "love" and "miscellaneous"). I enjoyed the poems, though none in particular stand out as exceptional. The introduction and footnotes are helpful and explain Saigyo's life in a sketchy fashion, though apparently very little is actually known about him.… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
tombrinck | 1 altra recensione | May 13, 2006 |

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Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
9
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
252
Popolarità
#90,785
Voto
4.1
Recensioni
3
ISBN
21
Lingue
6
Preferito da
2

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