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Title | : | View With a Grain of Sand: Selected Poems |
Author | : | Wisława Szymborska |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 214 pages |
Published | : | May 26th 1995 by Mariner Books (first published 1995) |
Categories | : | Poetry. Cultural. Poland. European Literature. Polish Literature. Nobel Prize |
Wisława Szymborska
Paperback | Pages: 214 pages Rating: 4.33 | 3912 Users | 260 Reviews
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Nobel poetry! This got under my skin! I think I owe it partly to this collection that I started loving modern poetry and sharing this love with the next generation. I remember a class when we read Szymborska's "Some Like Poetry". We took it apart, and wrote our own poems following the same idea and pattern. One student looked at me and said: "But this doesn't have anything to do with Humanities!" I remember being worried about this. Why could poetry not express the questions taught in Humanities? So I brought this small collection to class, and we read Szymborska's poem from 1956, titled "Two Monkeys by Brueghel": I keep dreaming of my graduation exam: in a window sit two chained monkeys, beyond the window floats the sky, and the sea splashes. I am taking an exam on the history of mankind: I stammer and flounder. One monkey, eyes fixed upon me, listens ironically, the other seems to be dozing-- and when silence follows a question, he prompts me with a soft jingling of the chain. After looking at Breughel's sad and beautiful painting, talking about the situation in Szymborska's home country in 1956, and analysing the different attitudes the two monkeys display, we all sat quiet for a moment, taking in the message from all those different perspectives. We realised that it was easy to identify with the sarcastic monkey who was staring at the world, thinking it was not worth the effort to care. But all agreed that the other one, seemingly dozing, but then gently jingling his chain, loved mankind more, and had secret hopes for a different future. Otherwise he would not help out! Ever since then, when I try to find my way through the maze of contemporary politics, I imagine being like the monkey prompting students with that soft jingling of the chain, reminding them of the course of history, that we are studying in the hope of one day making this world a better place. We cannot get rid of the chains of the past, but we can be better at passing the exam of the history of mankind in the future. And by passing that exam, we are less likely to repeat mistakes. I can't imagine anything more powerful than the combination of Breughel's art and Szymborska's verse to make the chain of history come alive. The only other poet I have experienced in the same way is her fellow Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney, whose Human Chain left a similar mark on me. When history is made tangible through the medium of poetry, it gets under your skin. Through its language and art it reaches you on an emotional level and enhances the factual, historical knowledge. From year to year, I have expanded the integration of poetry into my history units, and there is no end to the possibilities, once the initial hesitancy to "mix English and Humanities" is overcome. The chain is also a link. Heaney taught me that! The way Szymborska's short, prosaic poems analyse her time and place in history and yet remain part of a universal, human quest for truth is simply breath-taking. Love it! I'll jingle the chain to remind you all of this gem!
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Original Title: | Widok z ziarnkiem piasku |
ISBN: | 0156002167 (ISBN13: 9780156002165) |
Edition Language: | English |
Literary Awards: | PEN Translation Prize for Stanislaw Baranczak & Clare Cavanagh (1996) |
Rating Appertaining To Books View With a Grain of Sand: Selected Poems
Ratings: 4.33 From 3912 Users | 260 ReviewsPiece Appertaining To Books View With a Grain of Sand: Selected Poems
Leer a Szymborska para mà fue como un encuentro con un mundo desconocido que siempre ha estado ahÃ. La poesÃa de Wislawa retrata la profundidad del ser humano ante una realidad ignota. Nos revela el mundo desde una perspectiva sensitiva y crÃtica. Paisaje con grano de arena es un viaje por un siglo nostálgico que se busca asà mismo en el pasado. Szymborska utiliza muchas veces la ironÃa y eso hace de algunos versos un ameno paseo por la vida. El único problema con este libro es la traducción, noI feel that poetry may be considered "wack" by anyone born after 1970, but, seriously, assholes, there is some good shit out there, e.g. this book. I know, I know, I know: where are the undead? where are the plastic explosions? where are the ersatz realities? Shove it all up your butt, Mugwumps! In an interview someone asked her why she didn't publish very frequently and the card replied, "I have a trash can in my home."
I chose this collection for the Book Riot Read Harder Challenge task: "Read a collection of poetry in translation on a theme other than love". It contains poetry from various collections of Szymborska, spanning the years of 1957 and 1993. I was amazed that this poetry was translated, as it reads as if it were first written in English. It was interesting to see how the poet developed over the years, and how her themes became more serious - a lot of the later poems are related to death or war.

Part of my most recent poetry binge, I finally got around to reading a Nobel Prize winner who had been on my radar for a while, but I could never find her work in poetry sections of bookstores when I was looking. It's amazing. I can't tell if the poetry is so good because of or in spite of the translation, but one way or another the poems broadly range in topic but all have an incredible and brilliant spirit. I'll have to find more of her poetry soon.
Nobel poetry! This got under my skin!I think I owe it partly to this collection that I started loving modern poetry and sharing this love with the next generation.I remember a class when we read Szymborska's "Some Like Poetry". We took it apart, and wrote our own poems following the same idea and pattern. One student looked at me and said:"But this doesn't have anything to do with Humanities!"I remember being worried about this. Why could poetry not express the questions taught in Humanities? So
'Bruegel's Two Monkeys' eulogizes the collection. It is haunting. Most other poems belong in the remnants bin: too succinct, parched accounts of qualia. Each piece becomes an ode to its subject; Szymborska's bland narratives would best befit the essay genre.
WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA: MOZART OF POETRYBestowing Nobel Prize for literature on relatively unknown poets has some merits. I must confess that I was totally unaware of the Polish poet Wislawa Szymborska poet till she won the Nobel Prize in 1996. Szymborska received the Nobel Prize in Literature for poetry that with ironic precision allows the historical and biological context to come to light in fragments of human reality, according to Nobel prize citation. Having read almost all her collections of
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