Some recently enjoyed poetry:
A haiku by Jan Benson.
Sonnet to Orpheus II:13 by Rainer Maria Rilke. Snippet:
An extract from Eben Bochan by Kalonymus ben Kalonymus, a medieval Jewish scholar and apparent would-be* transwoman. Snippet:
* The correct qualifier here, if any, is difficult to determine.
Our good friend, the anonymous Japanese poet:
---L.
Subject quote from "The Neva," Bayard Taylor.
A haiku by Jan Benson.
Sonnet to Orpheus II:13 by Rainer Maria Rilke. Snippet:
Be ahead of all parting, as if it were(A few alternate versions.)
behind you, like the winter you just weathered.
Because among the winters there is one so endless winter,
that, overwintering it, your heart recovers altogether.—tr. Howard Landman
An extract from Eben Bochan by Kalonymus ben Kalonymus, a medieval Jewish scholar and apparent would-be* transwoman. Snippet:
If my Father in heaven has decreed upon me(Longer excerpt here.)
and has maimed me with an immutable deformity,
then I do not wish to remove it.
And the sorrow of the impossible
is a human pain that nothing will cure
and for which no comfort can be found.
So, I will bear and suffer
until I die and wither in the ground.
And since I have learned from the tradition
that we bless both the good and the bitter,
I will bless in a voice, hushed and weak,
Blessed are you, O Lord,
who has not made me a woman.—tr. Steven Greenberg
* The correct qualifier here, if any, is difficult to determine.
Our good friend, the anonymous Japanese poet:
the love letter
from a man she despises --
she shows it to mother.—tr. Alan Cummings
---L.
Subject quote from "The Neva," Bayard Taylor.