Poems from Ish River Country Collected Poems and Translations

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-10-29
Publisher(s): Counterpoint
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Summary

Poems from Ish River Country collects the complete poems of poet, painter and calligrapher Robert Sund. Mr. Sund's few published volumes of poetry and frequent public readings established his reputation as one of the most distinctive poetic voices of the Pacific Northwest, where he enjoyed a tremendous popularity before his death in 2001. His short, imagistic poems, in the tradition of William Carlos Williams and Kenneth Rexroth, distill the essence of the Northwest landscape and in plain speech celebrate themes of family, friendship, work and quiet contemplation.
Included here are the poet's award-winning collections, Bunch Grass, which gave literary voice to the rolling wheat country east of the Cascade Mountains in his native Washington State, and Ish River, which celebrated the misty, riverine landscape of the Puget Sound country, a place, in the poet's words, "between two mountain ranges where / many rivers / run down to an inland sea". But the great bulk of this collection contains poems unpublished during the poet’s lifetime or published only in very limited editions. There is also a generous selection of his translations, from Issa, Buson, Basho, and most especially from the Swedish poet Rabbe Enckell, with whom Mr. Sund felt a close affinity.

Table of Contents

1. Bunch Grass (1969)
PART ONE
"In wheat country"
5(1)
"Dark leaves lift in light wind"
6(1)
"Women who marry into wheat"
7(1)
"In a landscape that desperately needs color"
8(1)
"I sit on a rickety bench just outside"
9(1)
"Looking out through the wide elevator doors"
10(1)
"Today, instead of sleeping through the noon hour"
11(2)
"Star Thistle, Jim Hill Mustard, White Tops"
13(1)
"A dusty black beetle"
14(1)
"Looking absurd as a near-sighted scholar"
15(1)
"Harvest at its peak"
16(1)
"At the top of the elevator"
17(1)
"A bee thumps against the dusty window"
18(1)
"First there is silence"
19(1)
"The rolling hills of wheat expect nothing"
20(1)
"At five-thirty in the afternoon'
21(1)
"After each truck fine dust settles on the floor"
22(1)
PART TWO
"America is a strange man"
23(1)
"There's a beetle walking on the ground below me"
24(1)
"Beneath an intensely hot sun"
25(1)
"Between incoming trucks"
26(1)
"With a sandwich"
27(1)
"Just outside the elevator"
28(1)
"It's surprising how many"
29(1)
"Late afternoon, there's a restlessness in the air"
30(1)
"From the southwest"
31(1)
"Cursing"
32(1)
"A dirt-crusted green jeep turns off the highway"
33(1)
"Seven o'clock"
34(1)
"Through a wide field of stubble"
35(1)
"Now as the sun sets, cricket songs"
36(1)
PART THREE
"There is no wind"
37(1)
"Two white"
38(1)
"Five magpies"
39(1)
"A wheat rancher drives up"
40(1)
"Each day fewer fields remain"
41(1)
"The ranchers are selling their wheat early this year"
42(2)
"A fieldmouse"
44(1)
"Afternoon"
45(1)
At one of the ranches there's a hand"
46(1)
"What day is it now?"
47(1)
"Blooming"
48(1)
"In Walla Walla, cool streams"
49(1)
"Near me"
50(1)
"Late tonight"
51(1)
"Next week I go"
52(1)
PART FOUR
"Dry, bleached kernels of wheat and barley"
53(1)
"Heavy rain now, darker skies"
54(1)
"We've come to town"
55(1)
At quitting time"
56(1)
"The fields are wider"
57(1)
"With the sun low"
58(1)
"Sharp lines"
59(1)
"Going home"
60(5)
2. Ish River (1983)
BOOK 1, THE HIDES OF WHITE HORSES SHEDDING RAIN
Night along the Columbia, Day in Blewett Pass, Going Home
65(2)
Two Poems from Swede Hill
67(2)
Just Before Sleep, I Dream of My Grandfather Returned to His Farm in the Early Spring
69(2)
My Father
71(2)
For My Brother, Don, at Porter Creek, in Late February
73(2)
On Christmas Eve in the Hospital, My Mother Finds She Has an Enlarged Heart
75(1)
There Is No Exile Where the Heart Is Pure
76(2)
Steel head
78(1)
Answering, for My Brother
79(1)
Considering Poverty and Homelessness
80(1)
In Praise of My Ink Bottle
81(4)
BOOK 2, STUMBLING THROUGH TOWNS
Centuries Go By
85(1)
Seattle in April, Cloudy Day and High Wind
86(2)
"Storm Sinks Greek Ship, 281 Perish"
88(3)
East of the Mountains, Driving to White Swan
91(3)
Monday Morning in Everett, Washington
94(2)
Americans Thinking of Religion
96(1)
Grey Afternoon in Seattle During the Viet Nam War
97(1)
Two Poems Against the Logging Companies
98(2)
Mean Dog on Country Road
100(1)
Spring in Ish River
101(1)
Lament for the Ancient Holy Cities
102(3)
BOOK 3, LOVE POEMS
It Seemed Summer When Everything Bloomed in Santa Barbara
105(2)
In the Woods Above Issaquah
107(1)
Sitting Alone at Night, Thinking of Old Promises
108(2)
On This Side of the Mountains
110(1)
Pyrrha and Deucalion
111(1)
Your Angels Go with Me Too
112(1)
The Widow
113(1)
Two Seasons
114(1)
Spring Poem in the Skagit Valley
115
3. The River with One Bank: Poems from Shi Shi
Dawn
119(2)
On the Way In
121(1)
Out at Shi Shi
122(1)
Salmon Moon
123(1)
Fishermen in Neah Bay
124(2)
Rain Poem
126(1)
A Thousand Windows
127(2)
In America
129(1)
Poem for the Naming of the Clearing above Shi Shi "Never-Look-Back"
130(1)
Bear Poem
131(1)
Running into the Sea
132(2)
Friends
134(1)
Shi Shi
135(1)
Sunset
136(1)
Autumn Equinox
137(4)
4. The Dancer
Why I Am Singing for the Dancer (1978)
141(2)
How the Dancer Is Carried into the Hall of Light (1982)
143(3)
This Flower (1982)
146(3)
Home: A Prayer for the World Where You Found It (1991)
149(6)
5. Joys of the Fluteplayer: Translations from the Swedish of Rabbe Enckell (1903-1974)
Spring
155(1)
Summer
156(1)
The Poet
157(1)
Boxcar
158(1)
Winter
159(1)
Joys of the Flutepiayer
160(3)
Matchsticks
163(4)
6. Bringing Friends Over: Versions of Issa, Buson, Basho & Friends (2002)
Issa
167(4)
Buson
171(3)
Basho
174(1)
and Friends
175(4)
7. As Though the Word Blue Had Been Dropped Into the Water: Seven Healing Poems (1986)
As Though the Word Blue Had Been Dropped Into the Water
179(1)
Set It Down, Carefully
180(1)
Homage to Ryokan
181(1)
Singer in the Shadows
182(1)
House of Many Ancestors
183(1)
A Dream Floods the Landscape
184(1)
Like a Boat Drifting
185(4)
8. Shack Medicine: Poems from Disappearing Lake (1990)
Ink Bottle
189(1)
Early March in Town
190(1)
Laura's Birthday
191(1)
Enough
192(1)
Summer Solstice
193(1)
The Frog I Saved From a Snake
194(1)
Shack Work
195(1)
Thanks to Tony Morefield
196(1)
Ten by Twelve
197(1)
Lettuce Box
198(1)
Eowyn
199(1)
Herons and Swallows
200(1)
The Big Rain of August 1976
201(1)
Woodpile Down to Nothing
202(2)
Two Poems for the Good Given
204(1)
April has Turned Cold
205(1)
"Looking for Friends in History"
206(1)
Some Dust
207(1)
Shack Medicine
208(5)
9. Ten Taos Poems Taos Mountain
213(20)
Birds at Dawn
215(1)
The Table I Keep
216(1)
A Blanket
217(1)
False Life
218(2)
The Ancient Peoples
220(2)
When the Wool Blankets Were Woven
222(3)
Rio Pueblo
225(1)
Pueblo Songs
226(3)
To One Far Back in Time
229(4)
10. The Rest of the Way: New and Uncollected Poems Five Oranges 233(21)
Poem
234(1)
Mid-September at the Boomshack in Town
235(2)
Poem to the Parot from Africa
237(3)
Seven Thoughts under the Plum Tree
240(2)
Two Poems from Disappearing Lake
242(1)
Frog and Me, Election Eve, 1980
243(2)
For Friends Stepping into Marriage
245(1)
The Rest of the Way
246(1)
Beetle
247(3)
Sun Shining through a Cabbage Leaf
250(2)
Lemon Cucumbers
252(1)
Afternoon Light
253(1)
Afterword by Tim McNulty 254

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