Moment to moment : poems of a mountain recluse / by David Budbill.
1999
PS3552.U346 M66 1999
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Details
Title
Moment to moment : poems of a mountain recluse / by David Budbill.
Author
ISBN
1556591330 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Imprint
Port Townsend, Wash. : Copper Canyon Press, c1999.
Description
xvi, 121 p. ; 23 cm.
Exhibited
2000 Poets House Showcase.
Call Number
PS3552.U346 M66 1999
Formatted Contents Note
What it is like to read the ancients
How he writes
Always in these ancient Chinese paintings
the road to buddhahood
Thirty years
Another kind of travel
Quiet and seldom seen
North is nowhere
Stillness, absolute, profound
How
Where live
Nothing much
When came to Judevine Mountain
In the ancient tradition
The progress of ambition
Like the clouds
The three goals
Bathroom reading: after a poem by Han Shan
Three
After reading Meng Chaio's "Seeing off Master Tan"
What would it be like?
Which of them sees more clearly?
No trail
Variation a theme by another recluse who also thought about ambition and the self
Alone and lonely
Three decades
The story of Chi Mu Chian
Another lie
As in Ryokan's brushwork
You false masters of serenity
The music of my own kind too
For Wang Wei
Home
An unassuming grandeur
When get depressed
My fifty-eighth birthday I write two poems: first one: what keeps me here?
My fifty-eight.
How he writes
Always in these ancient Chinese paintings
the road to buddhahood
Thirty years
Another kind of travel
Quiet and seldom seen
North is nowhere
Stillness, absolute, profound
How
Where live
Nothing much
When came to Judevine Mountain
In the ancient tradition
The progress of ambition
Like the clouds
The three goals
Bathroom reading: after a poem by Han Shan
Three
After reading Meng Chaio's "Seeing off Master Tan"
What would it be like?
Which of them sees more clearly?
No trail
Variation a theme by another recluse who also thought about ambition and the self
Alone and lonely
Three decades
The story of Chi Mu Chian
Another lie
As in Ryokan's brushwork
You false masters of serenity
The music of my own kind too
For Wang Wei
Home
An unassuming grandeur
When get depressed
My fifty-eighth birthday I write two poems: first one: what keeps me here?
My fifty-eight.
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