Matsuo Basho Haikus

Along this road

Goes no one,

This autumn eve

Sick on a journey,

my dreams wander

the withered fields

Under the same roof

Prostitutes were sleeping—

The moon and clover

I am one

Who eats his breakfast,

Gazing at morning glories.

Sad nodes

we're all the bamboo's children

in the end

What luck!
The southern valley
Make snow fragrant.

A autumn wind
More white
Than the rocks in the rocky mountain.

Another year is gone

A traveller's shade on my head,

Straw sandals at my feet

From all directions
Winds bring petals of cherry
Into the grebe lake.

Even a wild boar
With all other things
Blew in this storm.

The crescent lights
The misty ground.
Buckwheat flowers.

Bush clover in blossom waves
Without spilling
A drop of dew.

The wind from Mt. Fuji
I put it on the fan.
Here, the souvenir from Edo.

*Edo: the old name of Tokyo..

Sleep on horseback,
The far moon in a continuing dream,
Steam of roasting tea.

Spring departs.
Birds cry
Fishes' eyes are filled with tears

Summer zashiki
Make move and enter
The mountain and the garden.

*zashiki: Japanese-style room covered with tatamis and open to the garden.

now then, let's go out

to enjoy the snow... until

I slip and fall!

Sweet-smelling rice fields!

To our right as we push through,

The Ariso Sea.

Deep autumn—

my neighbor,

how does he live, I wonder?

Though I would move the grave,

my teary cry

was lost in the autumn wind.

Matsuo Basho

Barbie Doll




This girlchild was born as usual
and presented dolls that did pee-pee
and miniature GE stoves and irons
and wee lipsticks the color of cherry candy.
Then in the magic of puberty, a classmate said:
You have a great big nose and fat legs.

She was healthy, tested intelligent,
possessed strong arms and back,
abundant sexual drive and manual dexterity.
She went to and fro apologizing.
Everyone saw a fat nose on thick legs.

She was advised to play coy,
exhorted to come on hearty,
exercise, diet, smile and wheedle.
Her good nature wore out
like a fan belt.
So she cut off her nose and her legs
and offered them up.

In the casket displayed on satin she lay
with the undertaker's cosmetics painted on,
a turned-up putty nose,
dressed in a pink and white nightie.
Doesn't she look pretty? Every one said.
Consummation at last.
To every woman a happy ending.

Marge Piercy
1959


A story wet as tears

by Marge Piercy

Remember the princess who kissed the frog
so he became a prince? At first they danced
all weekend, toasted each other in the morning
with coffee, with champagne at night
and always with kisses. Perhaps it was
in bed after the first year had ground
around she noticed he had become cold
with her. She had to sleep
with a heating pad and down comforter.
His manner grew increasingly chilly
and damp when she entered a room.
He spent his time in water sports,
hydroponics, working on his insect
collection.
Then in the third year
when she said to him one day, my dearest,
are you taking your vitamins daily,
you look quite green, he leaped
away from her.
Finally on their
fifth anniversary she confronted him.
'My precious, don't you love me any
more?' He replied 'Rivet. Rivet.'
Though courtship turns frogs into princes,
marriage turns them quietly back.

Goodbye My Lover - James Blunt

Did I disappoint you or let you down?
Should I be feeling guilty or let the judges frown?
'Cause I saw the end before we'd begun,
Yes I saw you were blinded and I knew I had won.
So I took what's mine by eternal right.
Took your soul out into the night.
It may be over but it won't stop there,
I am here for you if you'd only care.
You touched my heart you touched my soul.
You changed my life and all my goals.
And love is blind and that I knew when,
My heart was blinded by you.
I've kissed your lips and held your head.
Shared your dreams and shared your bed.
I know you well, I know your smell.
I've been addicted to you.

Goodbye my lover.
Goodbye my friend.You have been the one.
You have been the one for me.(x2)

I am a dreamer but when I wake,
You can't break my spirit - it's my dreams you take.
And as you move on, remember me,
Remember us and all we used to beI've seen you cry,
I've seen you smile.
I've watched you sleeping for a while.
I'd be the father of your child.
I'd spend a lifetime with you.
I know your fears and you know mine.
We've had our doubts but now we're fine,
And I love you, I swear that's true.
I cannot live without you.

Goodbye my lover.
Goodbye my friend.
You have been the one.
You have been the one for me.(x2)

And I still hold your hand in mine.
In mine when I'm asleep.
And I will bear my soul in time,
When I'm kneeling at your feet.

Goodbye my lover.
Goodbye my friend.
You have been the one.
You have been the one for me.(x2)

I'm so hollow, baby, I'm so hollow.
I'm so, I'm so, I'm so hollow.(x2)

An Interview With Orhan Pamuk

[Orhan Pamuk] – Hello.
[Adam Smith] – Hello, may I speak to Orhan Pamuk please? Hello?
[OP] – Hello.
[AS] – Hello, may I speak to Orhan Pamuk please?
[OP] – Speaking.
[AS] – Oh, my name is Adam Smith and I'm calling from the official website of the Nobel Foundation in Stockholm.
[OP] – Yes.
[AS] – We have a tradition of recording very short conversations with new Laureates immediately after the announcements.
[OP] – OK.
[AS] – So, first of all, many, many congratulations on being awarded ...
[OP] – Oh, thank you very much. It's such a great honour.
[AS] – I gather you're in New York. What were you doing when you received the news?
[OP] – Oh, I was sleeping, and thinking that, in a hour, probably they will announce the Nobel Prize, and then someone would maybe tell me who won it. And then I'm thinking, so what am I going to do, what's today's work? And I'm a little bit sleepy. And then the phone call, and then I'm "Oh, it's already half past seven". You know, this is New York and I don't know the light, so I don't feel pretty ... And I answered, and they said I won the Nobel Prize.
[AS] – That's an extraordinary phone call to receive. There was an enormous cheer went up at the press conference when they announced the prize.
[OP] – Really, of that's great, I'm very happy to hear this. This is great.
[AS] – We've recorded it on the website so you can, when finally you get off the phone you can go and relive the moment.
[OP] – And also I saw so many journalists you know, wanted me to have it, so I'm pleased about that. I'm very pleased about all these details. Thank you very much, sir.
[AS] – You're the first ever Turkish writer to be awarded a Nobel Prize for Literature. Does that give the award a special significance for you?
[OP] – Well, unfortunately, that makes the thing very precious in Turkey, which is good for Turkey of course, getting this prize, but makes it more extra sensitive and political and it somehow tends to make it as a sort of a burden.
[AS] – Yes, because it's been quite a public year for you.
[OP] – Yes.
[AS] – So I imagine this will add to that. The citation for the award refers particularly to your "quest for the melancholic soul of (your) native city", and there's an extremely long tradition of writing about Istanbul, and in praise of Istanbul. Could you describe briefly what it is about the city that has acted as such a strong draw for people's imagination over the years?
[OP] – Well, it was at the edge of Europe, but different. So it was the closest ‘other'. And it was really both close and, in a way, other. Mysterious, strange, uncompromising and totally un-European in ways, although in its spirit there was such a great place for Europe [words unclear].
[AS] – And referring to the phrase "melancholic soul", how would you describe Istanbul to those who've never seen it?
[OP] – I would say that it's one of the early modern cities where modernity decayed earlier than expected. I would say that the ruins of the past gave the city its melancholy, along with its poverty. But then I would also say that it's now recovering from this melancholy, hopefully.
[AS] – And another facet of your writing that was particularly emphasized in the citation, from the Committee, is the way that you deal with the interactions between different cultures. And of course it's a cliché to say that Turkey lies at the crossroads between East and West, but it does presumably offer the perfect vantage point from which to view the cross-cultural interface?
[OP] – This meet of East and West and clash of civilizations, this is unfortunately one of the most dangerous and horrific ideas that have been produced in the last twenty years, and is now serving for... This fanciful idea is now unfortunately getting to be real, and this theory is serving the clash of civilizations and the deaths of so many people.
[AS] – Because historically there has really been much more mixing of cultures than is popularly supposed.
[OP] – Culture is mix. Culture means a mix of things from other sources. And my town, Istanbul, was this kind of mix. Istanbul, in fact, and my work, is a testimony to the fact that East and West combine cultural gracefully, or sometimes in an anarchic way, came together, and that is what we should search for. This is getting to be a good interview by the way.
[AS] – Thank you, that's very kind of you. Many of your characters might be said to embody multiple cultural influences. I mean your writing indicates that they're far from uniformly either Eastern or Western, it's a mix.
[OP] – Yes.
[AS] – Do you write solely in Turkish?
[OP] – Yes. I think I wrote some six or seven articles in English, in international magazines, in Times Literary Supplement, in Village Voice.
[AS] – So there are presumably...
[OP] – But of course I'm a Turkish writer, essentially, and live in the language. Language is me, in a way. Really, I feel it.
[AS] – Right, and there are ideas that you can express in Turkish, I assume, that would be very hard to capture in other languages?
[OP] – Exactly. Because thinking is composed of two things; language and images, and then yeah, half of thinking is the language. I agree, yes sir, please ask the question.
[AS] – Well, could you give an example of a concept that...?
[OP] – Wow! I can of course, but not on the day that I have received the Nobel Prize.
[AS] – That's fair enough, you don't really have to answer any questions on the day you receive the Nobel Prize.
[OP] – Yeah, OK.
[AS] – You can say anything you like.
[OP] – OK, thank you very much sir.
[AS] – So then an easy question. I mean the award will encourage a lot of new readers to dip into your work for the first time. Where would you recommend they start? What would you suggest to people, and also...
[OP] – Oh, depending on the reader of course; the reader who buys books because the writer has received the Nobel Prize should start with My Name is Red. The reader who has already read that book should continue with The Black Book. The reader who is interested in more contemporary issues and politics should go ahead with Snow, so forth and so on.
[AS] – Wonderful, wonderful. And if your readers are lucky enough to be able to read in multiple languages, but can't manage Turkish, do you have a recommendation for which language most excellently captures the spirit?
[OP] – Of course English is the world's language now, and that's the language I've been checking my books with, and I'm proud with my translator and I'm also confident. So, basically English translations.
[AS] – OK, thank you very much.
[OP] – Thanks, as you see I'm a dutiful good boy, I did my homework very well now.
[AS] – Very well indeed! No, I'm thrilled with your cooperation. Thank you very much.
[OP] – Bye, bye. I'm have to hang now because my agent is calling and others, so many responsibilities that I have to address.
[AS] – Of course, quite so, thank you for sparing the time. See you soon, bye, bye.
[OP] – OK, bye, bye.

Israeli Police Recommend Charges Against President

JERUSALEM, Oct. 15 The Israeli police recommended on Sunday that President Moshe Katsav face charges of rape and sexual assault allegedly committed against several women in his office. Israels attorney general must now decide whether to file such charges.
Mr. Katsav, who has held the mostly ceremonial post since 2000, has denied any wrongdoing. He has said that at least one of his accusers was trying to extort money and that his political enemies were behind the investigation.
After an inquiry that lasted nearly two months, the police on Sunday handed
their findings to the attorney general, Menachem Mazuz. He will review the
material and decide whether charges are warranted. It could be weeks before
he announces a decision.
A joint statement by the police and the Justice Ministry said there was evidence that the president committed rape, aggravated sexual assault, indecent acts without permission and offenses under the law to prevent sexual harassment.
According to the police, the inquiry also found evidence that the president had committed fraud and was engaged in illegal wiretapping.
As far as were concerned, weve completed the investigation, said Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman. There is hard evidence and hard facts in this case.
Mr. Katsavs lawyer, Zion Amir, said in a statement that Israels attorney general had in the past dismissed police findings as insufficient and had chosen not to file charges after investigations of senior officials.
Mr. Katsav has been facing calls for his resignation, and Sundays statement by the police was sure to intensify those demands. Israels Parliament opens its winter session on Monday, an event Mr. Katsav normally attends. Mr. Katsavs brother, Lior Katsav, told Israeli radio that the president planned to attend but would not address the legislators.
Several female lawmakers have threatened to walk out of the session if Mr. Katsav is present.
The president must resign, Education Minister Yuli Tamir told Israeli
television. If he doesnt do so, I believe a process will be launched to force him to resign.
Mr. Katsav is immune from standing trial while in office. However, if he resigns or is impeached by Parliament, he would have to face any charges against him, according to legal scholars. Mr. Katsavs seven-year term ends next year.
Although the case has received widespread coverage in Israel, any charges against Mr. Katsav are not likely to have broader political ramifications. Israels president is expected to serve as a unifying force and set a moral tone, but his position is more symbolic than substantive.
Still, the controversy surrounding Mr. Katsav comes at a time when the Israeli public has expressed widespread disappointment in the countrys leadership. Many Israelis say that the government and the military mismanaged the recent war with Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, a target for much of that criticism, has been under investigation regarding the sale of his Jerusalem home and the purchase of a new one. His critics say he received favored treatment, getting an above-market price for the home he sold and buying the new one at below its true value.
Several other politicians are under investigation or have been charged with wrongdoing, including the former justice minister, Haim Ramon, who quit in August and was subsequently charged with sexual harassment. Mr. Ramon is accused of forcibly kissing a female soldier, a charge he denies.

Mr. Katsav, 60, is married and has five children. He was born in Iran and came to Israel a few years after the countrys independence in 1948. When he was 24, he was elected mayor of Kiryat Malachi, a poor town populated by immigrants in southern Israel. He was elected to Parliament in 1977 and served for many years with the right-wing Likud party.
In 2000, the elder statesman Shimon Peres was the heavy favorite to become the president, a position that is filled by a vote in Parliament. However, Mr. Katsav was the surprise winner.
As president, Mr. Katsav has been a low-key figure who frequently attends public ceremonies here and abroad, but has generally steered clear of the frequent controversies and political upheavals in Israel.
The allegations of sexual misconduct against Mr. Katsav first surfaced during the summer, and the formal investigation began in August. The police confiscated a computer and documents from the presidents official residence on Aug. 21 and have since questioned him at length on several occasions.
Although his accusers have not been identified, police officials say they are five women who have worked in the presidents office.
Israels previous president, Ezer Weizman, resigned in 2000 amid scandal. During the 1980s, when he was a lawmaker and cabinet minister, he received hundreds of thousands of dollars from a French businessman with interests in Israel. No charges were filed against Mr. Weizman, who died in 2005.

By GREG MYRE
Published: October 16, 2006
66


So from the mould
Scarlet and Gold
Many a Bulb will rise _
Hidden away, cunningly,
From sagacious eyes.

So from Cocoon
Many a worm
Leap so Highland gay,
Peasants like me,
Peasants like Thee
Gaze perplexedly!

Emily Dickinson