The Poet and the Sea
By (Author) Juan Ramon Jimenez
Translated by Mary Berg
Translated by Dennis Maloney
White Pine Press
White Pine Press
12th November 2009
United States
Paperback
230
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 17mm
382g
This is a very valuable book! Dozens of poems are here that have never been translated into English before, and I think Berg and Maloney have done beautifully transferring Juan Ramon's enthusiastic calm from Spanish to English. Terrific.Robert Bly
As he observes metaphysical somersaults of sea and land, Juan Ramn is the master of replete simplicity. 'A steel sea' pops up on a 'hard flat field/of exhausted mines/in a devastation of ruin.' Or, like Emily Dickinsons 'hope falls down a hill,' Jimnez has, 'Hope, a seagull,/ alights here and there.' The utter nakedness of his verse touched virtually all modern Spanish poetry, directly engendering, for example, Rafael Albertis masterful sea book, Sailor on Land, and 'I walk the streets of the sea.' In The Poet and the Sea, a delicious book perfectly rendered by Mary Berg and Dennis Maloney, Juan Ramn has made essential pacts of intimacy with the great waters of the world. The seas grow in trickery and gravity in endless dramas as two figures emerge: a blind yet live sea and a poet who sees through the sea. The sea is a changing mirror of the poet who has imposed his vision on the whims of his companion sea.Willis Barnstone
This bilingual collection traces Juan Ramon Jimenezs relationship with the sea, a major theme in his work, from his seminal book Diary of a Poet Recently Married alongside other poems from his body of work.
Seas
I feel my boat
has struck something large
there, in the depths of the sea!
And then nothing
happens! NothingSilence Waves
Nothing happens Or has everything happened And are we now, calm, in someplace new
Juan Ramon Jimenez (18811958) was a member of the Generation of 1898, which ushered in a renaissance in Spanish poetry. In 1956 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Translators Marg Berg and Dennis Maloney have previously collaborated on Antonio Machados book The Landscape of Castile.
Juan Ramon Jimenez (1881-1958) was a member of the generation of 1898, which ushered in a renaissance in Spanish Poetry. In 1956 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature. He dedicated over 60 years of his life to poetry and published many volumes of work. He also is well known for his prose work, Platero and I.