Tag: proverbs

  • [Asian Figures], by W.S. Merwin

    Asian

    Some of the earliest writing in English that we have are Anglo-Saxon proverbs. These pithy statements are a good way to pass on wisdom because they are easy to remember.

    Merwin, a prolific and popular poet, a former poet laureate, chose to translate these proverbs from various Asian cultures. He side-steps the thorny question of whether they are poetry, and instead concentrates instead on what they share.

    There are qualities that they obviously have in common: an urge to finality of utterance, For example, and to be irreducible and unchangeable. The urge to brevity is not perhaps as typical of poetry as we would sometimes wish, but the urge to be self-contained, to be whole, is perhaps another form of the same thing, or can be, and it is related to the irreversibility in the words that is a mark of poetry.

    I love poetry’s brevity, though I think of it more as the language being condensed, reduced to its essence.

    Two other things I love in poetry are its imagery or music, which he doesn’t mention. Yet his translations do have music of a sort. And in some, the proverb itself is an image. Take this one from Japan:

    foot itches
    he scratches the shoe

    It’s not so much telling us about a literal action, but rather giving us a metaphor for the man’s common sense. Here’s another from Japan that contains a more explicit metaphor:

    while they talk together
    a thousand hills
    rise between them

    Or this one from China that struck me as one of the best descriptions of utter poverty I’ve ever read:

    too poor
    to keep rats

    Some of these pithy statements seemed to describe our current political situation:

    one dog barks at nothing
    ten thousand others
    pass it on

    When they want to learn
    what he’s like
    they make him rich

    And then offer a perspective on it:

    nations die
    rivers go on
    mountains
    go on

    And of course there are those that advice on how to live a good life. Many Anglo-Saxon poems and proverbs describe the characteristics a wise person should strive to possess, offering counsel on how to treat others and how to obtain and use wisdom in life.

    can’t have two points
    on one needle

    Let your children
    taste a little cold
    and a little hunger

    And some that provide a startling insight:

    ice comes from water
    but can teach it
    about cold

    I like that Merwin includes proverbs not just from Japan or China, but also from other Asian countries, such as Korea and the Philippines. I’ll leave you with this one that captures the dilemma many poets face:

    Eat first
    poetry later

    Share a proverb, perhaps one that your parents told you or one you like to tell your children.