Friday, March 15, 2013

a poem by Jorge Luis Borges



Shinto

When sorrow lays us low 
for a second we are saved 
by humble windfalls 
of the mindfulness or memory: 
the taste of a fruit, the taste of water, 
that face given back to us by a dream, 
the first jasmine of November, 
the endless yearning of the compass, 
a book we thought was lost, 
the throb of a hexameter, 
the slight key that opens a house to us, 
the smell of a library, or of sandalwood, 
the former name of a street, 
the colors of a map, 
an unforeseen etymology, 
the smoothness of a filed fingernail, 
the date we were looking for, 
the twelve dark bell-strokes, tolling as we count, 
a sudden physical pain. 

Eight million Shinto deities 
travel secretly throughout the earth. 
Those modest gods touch us-- 
touch us and move on.

2 comments:

  1. I love roaming around Shinto shrines. My own wedding was Shinto ... but a lot of damage has been done to Shintoism, by trying to fit into the procrustean bed of a *national* religion. Nothing irks me more than seeing a Japanese flag at a shrine – same with seeing an American flag at a Christian church.

    That's a beautiful poem, by the way.

    My voice will be cracking from underuse, but I plant to start posting some new poems around mid-April ... since the end of last year, mostly I've just been studying Japanese in my free time ... I've been in Japan 19 years this month. This overwhelms me.

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  2. 19 years! Wow. Your brain waves have probably been permanently altered. Maybe that's why we are always at cross-purposes. :))

    New poems in April -- that's good news.

    I really like how Borges finds a way in this poem to say something important (and with unexpected flair). Most poems are a million miles away from saying anything significant.

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