Articles About Umberto Saba

Post-Postmodernism and Hope

“Every evening / words /–not stars–light the sky. // No rest in life / like life itself.”

“I hear that the axe has flowered, / I hear that the place can’t be named, // I hear that the bread which looks at him / heals the hanged man, / the bread baked for him by his wife, // I hear that they call life / our only refuge.”

-Paul Celan, “I Hear That The Axe Has Flowered,” trans. Michael Hamburger

I find myself drawn to poets who survived The Second World War. This, in combination with frequently watching the remarkable BBC series Foyle’s War in the evening, as well as, on a more personal note, the recent passing of my wife’s uncle, Sven–a Marine who was at Normandy, and a man of whom I was fond–has got me thinking about the profound and continuing impact of WWII. Even as Czeslaw Milosz says that Communism was the only possible response to the atrocities of the Industrial Revolution, so, too, it occurs to me that Postmodernism may well be a kind of understandable, almost logical response to the atrocities of WWII.

Part of my thinking has been fueled by researching Seamus Heaney, including a number of essays in The Art Of Seamus Heaney wherein various critics attempt to place him, as an accessible, intelligent, lyric poet, within the context of the Twentieth century, and the decline of centrality, gentility, and structure. These abstract thoughts have gained specificity through reading selected works of Paul Celan and Umberto Saba. Both men, in the face of profoundly difficult personal circumstances, heightened their attention to language in their poems. Yet in the case of Celan, the attention presses ever more inward, into a symbolic and even cryptogrammic relationship to German; whereas with Saba, his Italian becomes more specific and spare in a way that promotes universal resonance.
Continue Reading “Post-Postmodernism and Hope” »

Umberto Saba’s Bleat

So much of contemporary poetry seems to be a reaction against sentimentality and self-aggrandizement. To this end, many poets seem to be attempting to remove themselves as a direct presence in their poems. Persona poetry is one device by which an interplay of consciousness can exist without the complications of the troublesome “I.” Yet without the poet in the poem, so many poems of consummate craft fall short of the ultimate aim–to touch on the human condition in a way that transcends intellectual tinkering.

Even as Adrienne Rich speaks of “a permeable membrane between art and society,” so, too, does a permeable membrane exist between the inner and outer realities of the poet. Expressing this interplay effectively requires not only skill and sensitivity, but self-awareness.

Consider the following translation (mine) of Umberto Saba’s “The Goat”:

I was speaking to a goat.
She was alone in the field, tied up.
Sated with grass, wet
with rain, she was bleating.

That selfsame bleat was brother
to my own pain. And I replied, at first
in jest, then because pain is eternal,
a constant voice.
This voice sounded
in the groan of a lonely goat.

In a goat with a Semitic face,
a sound to represent all other woes,
all other life.

Continue Reading “Umberto Saba’s Bleat” »

Umberto Saba

Volume One, 2007 of Northwest Review contains stunning translations of the autobiographical sonnets of Umberto Saba. My favorite, “4″, is available on the bottom of this page.


Popular Tags

Academia Academy Of American Poets Accessible Poetry Adam Zagajewski Aliso Street Bear Andrew Philip Anna Akhmatova Arroyo Arts Collective Artists' Union Gallery Art Therapy Avant Garde B.H. Fairchild Bart's Books Bell Arts Factory Blogging Code Poet Conservation Czesław Miłosz David Allen Day Fire Denise Levertov Dorianne Laux Facebook First Books Friday Lubina Galway Kinnell George Wallace Gerard Manley Hopkins Gregory Orr GTD Gwendolyn Alley Heart And Mind Henri Cole Hope Jackson Wheeler James Valentine Peake Japan Jawanza Dumisani John Ashbery John Keats Joseph Millar Kathleen Tyler Li-Young Lee London Los Angeles Louise Glück Low-Residency MFA Mark Doty Marriage Marvin Bell Mary Oliver Merlin Mann MFA Residency 1 MFA Residency 2 MFA Residency 3 MFA Residency 4 MFA Residency 5 Michael Wells Michelle Bitting Miranda Nature Negative Capability Ojai Ojai Poetry Festival Pacific University Passings Performance Poetry Phil Taggart Poetry In The Windows Polish Poetry Post-Postmodernism Ralph Waldo Emerson Rattle Read Write Poem Robert Hass Robert Pinsky Sandford Lyne Sandra Alcosser Sarah Maclay Seamus Heaney Social Networking Sonnets Spirituality Stanley Kunitz Stephen Booth Stephen Dunn Suzanne Lummis The Economy The Phoenix The World Stage Tree Bernstein Twitter Umberto Saba Wallace Stevens Why Poetry Zbigniew Herbert ZCE Zen Zoey's Cafe