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text 2016-08-22 16:32
On Translation
Crow with No Mouth (Old Edition) - Stephen Berg

I was turned on to the 15th century poet an Zen master Ikkyū by the writer Peter Matthiessen, author of The Snow Leopard and a practitioner of Zen himself. When he died in 2014 the Paris Review (which he helped found) printed an Ikkyū quote from one of his books with his obituary. I was struck by the quote and have incorporated it into my own life:

"Having no destination, I am never lost"

I used it recently in my employee profile at a new job and decided to look further into the original poet. I took out the only book they have at the Free Library and on the first page came across this couplet:

"if there's nowhere to rest at the end

how can I get lost on the way?"

It is terribly obvious that translations will differ, and this is hardly the most striking example but it stuck with me all week and now I have to learn Japanese so I can understand the original. It will go on the queue with Italian, French, Russian, Spanish, and ancient Greek and Roman. I must know!

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review 2012-09-10 00:00
Crow With No Mouth : Ikkyu : Fifteenth Century Zen Master - Ikkyu,Stephen Berg,Lucien Stryk angsty facebook status updates from six hundred years ago:


my gray cat jumped up just as I lifted this spoon
we're born we die



suddenly nothing but grief
so I put on my father's old ripped raincoat



I'm up here in the hills starving myself
but I'll come down for you


nobody knows I'm a storm I'm
dawn on the mountain twilight on the town
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