Complete poems: 1980-2006
eBook - ePub

Complete poems: 1980-2006

  1. 300 páginas
  2. Spanish
  3. ePUB (apto para móviles)
  4. Disponible en iOS y Android
eBook - ePub

Complete poems: 1980-2006

Detalles del libro
Vista previa del libro
Índice
Citas

Información del libro

Well-established as a poet, essayist and novelist, the writer Luis Benítez needs little introduction. His books have been published in Argentina, Mexico, Chile, Uruguay, the United States and Venezuela. He was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Among other things, he is a member of the Latin-American Academy of Poetry, the International Society of Writers, and the Argentinian Foundation for Poetry. His work has brought him international recognition and he has been the recipient of many prestigious awards including the La Porte des Poétes International Award (Paris, 1991), the International Award of Fiction (Uruguay, 1996), the Primo Premio Tusculorum di Poesia (Italy, 1996) and the International Award for Published Work "Macedonio Palomino", (Mexico, 2008). Over the years, many of his poems have appeared in the small press magazines and journals in the USA and the UK but this is the first time that a substantial body of his work has been translated into English and presented as a full-length collection in its own right. The editorial team at Ravenna Press are to be congratulated on making a selection of his work available to the English-speaking world. This can only serve to enhance the poet's reputation by bringing his work to a wider audience. As with all great writers, his themes are universal. The way in which he chooses to convey these themes is masterful. Each poem has a conciseness about it, an ease which can be deceptive at first reading, because it belies the weight of the subject matter that lies beneath the surface. There is no florid language, no superficial excess; Benitez cuts to the chase and makes his statements with the minimum of fuss. "This Morning I Wrote Two Poems" is a good example. The almost conversational title might bring to mind William Carlos Williams (I am thinking of his poem "This is Just to Say…"). The conversational tone continues throughout the poem because the words fall easily down the page. It is, of course, a work that concerns itself with the mysterious craft of writing—where does the Muse come from and why is it that the finished object is more than the sum of its component parts? I wonder about the origin of those two things that are now on the table, not exactly made of paper and ink. Always modest about his own achievements and wise enough to know that the perfect poem is in all probability an impossible thing (but worth pursuing), he goes on to wonder About the men who have said it better and are now dead about the length of time, expressed in superlatives, that it can take for a work of art to come to its full maturity, and how, at the last, a poem can have a transformational effect which can be out of all proportion to its existence on the page: I wonder why, a short while ago, this world has changed twice. Animals and birds feature in a number of his poems. In all of them, they are celebrated for what they are. His powers of observance are acute, the shape of the heron is concisely described as resembling the letter "S"; a leopard is a beast always under the rain (because of its spots) and an insect whose diaphanous wings are almost transparent is hardly distinct from the air in his elementary design. There is a metaphysical feel to these poems. His consideration of the salmon, in "The Extravagant Upstream Traveller" is a beautifully honed metaphor for mankind "swimming against the tide" in a world threatened by pollution: Then I saw him in the oily water, a gift of industry and the hatred for what lives, climbing upstream: the impossible salmon… unusual iridescence amid the garbage of the condemned river… In "Aurochs" Benitez succeeds in capturing a real sense of antiquity. He reaches back to ancient Greece and Rome and also, perhaps, to primitive forms of writing. The animal knows what he writes because before he existed it was already a name.

Preguntas frecuentes

Simplemente, dirígete a la sección ajustes de la cuenta y haz clic en «Cancelar suscripción». Así de sencillo. Después de cancelar tu suscripción, esta permanecerá activa el tiempo restante que hayas pagado. Obtén más información aquí.
Por el momento, todos nuestros libros ePub adaptables a dispositivos móviles se pueden descargar a través de la aplicación. La mayor parte de nuestros PDF también se puede descargar y ya estamos trabajando para que el resto también sea descargable. Obtén más información aquí.
Ambos planes te permiten acceder por completo a la biblioteca y a todas las funciones de Perlego. Las únicas diferencias son el precio y el período de suscripción: con el plan anual ahorrarás en torno a un 30 % en comparación con 12 meses de un plan mensual.
Somos un servicio de suscripción de libros de texto en línea que te permite acceder a toda una biblioteca en línea por menos de lo que cuesta un libro al mes. Con más de un millón de libros sobre más de 1000 categorías, ¡tenemos todo lo que necesitas! Obtén más información aquí.
Busca el símbolo de lectura en voz alta en tu próximo libro para ver si puedes escucharlo. La herramienta de lectura en voz alta lee el texto en voz alta por ti, resaltando el texto a medida que se lee. Puedes pausarla, acelerarla y ralentizarla. Obtén más información aquí.
Sí, puedes acceder a Complete poems: 1980-2006 de Luis Benítez en formato PDF o ePUB, así como a otros libros populares de Literatura y Poesía. Tenemos más de un millón de libros disponibles en nuestro catálogo para que explores.

Información

Año
2018
ISBN
9789874660657
Categoría
Literatura
Categoría
Poesía
ON A SWIFT TRIP TO WINTER TERM
In the poem there is daylight at first
on a swift trip to the night of the end:
in the poem it is spring
and notions bloom and open transient,
to be written and give fruits in ink,
fruits of hauntings
fruits of voices and names
on a swift trip to winter term.
In the poem it is spring
(because I walk along poems
like others along streets,
looking for the end of all streets
there where all poems begin
and now the old wood that has dozed
all the winter of silence,
the wood of my soul’s doors,
the wood of my soul’s violins,
the sweet woods of love
and the hard woods of mind
stretch yawning creaks,
tearing from their once dry fibers,
voices of the trees that complain ,
sounds of the wood’s heart
that still remembers wind, rain and earth.
Because the notion
(which comes up in the poem’s spring
along the ducts of words)
nourishes hands and breaths again,
awakening the wood fiber by fiber,
to rebuild the tree
and force it to bear fruit
for the thirst of man, of the stranger,
of the one who reads the poem on a swift trip
to winter term.
POETIC PROSE- TOWN PROSE
Everything is. Nothing is.
And the cities that dust built will be dust;
but while growing follows birth and death awaits,
tense on the bow, it is necessary to have a town.
To see it far away or to see it in there,
in the other space: blind, deaf,
mute to man, just like life.
They live of him and will die with him.
And what is a town in the whole
of towns but the town itself?
The same, since the faraway and first
with which we greeted brutality, death;
the last one. from which we’ll see that something
drives the horizon to us.
It will come and the cities will hold it for a moment,
until the last suburb falls
and with the last window dust closes down the ultimate town.
When it falls we’...

Índice

  1. Luis Benítez by Neil Leadbeater
  2. POEMS OF LAND AND MEMORY (1980)
  3. BEFORE YOU SAY ANYTHING
  4. MYTHOLOGIES / THE BALLAD OF THE LOST WOMAN (1983)
  5. DEAD LANGUAGE
  6. BEHERING AND OTHER POEMS (1985)
  7. BEHERING
  8. WARS, EPITAPHS AND CONVERSATIONS (1989)
  9. ON A SWIFT TRIP TO WINTER TERM
  10. FRACTAL (1992)
  11. RIMBAUD’S EYES
  12. THE PAST AND THE VESPERS (1995)
  13. THIS MORNING I HAVE WRITTEN TWO POEMS
  14. THE MARE OF THE NIGHT (2001)
  15. THIS MORNING I HAVE WRITTEN TWO POEMS
  16. THE POISONER AND OTHER POEMS (2005)
  17. THE POISONER
  18. THE AFTERNOON OF THE ELEPHANT AND OTHER POEMS (2006)
  19. A HERON IN BUENOS AIRES
  20. ON THE AUTHOR