Seasons Calling. James R. McCready

Seasons Calling - James R. McCready


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      The Seasons Calling

      The Seasons Calling

      HAIKU & WESTERN-STYLE VERSE

      by James R. McCready

       illustrations by Wakana Kozawa

      Charles E. Tuttle Company

       Rutland / Vermont & Tokyo / Japan

      REPRESENTATIVES

      Continental Europe: BOXERBOOKS, INC., Zurich

       British Isles: PRENTICE-HALL INTERNATIONAL, INC., London

       Australasia: PAUL FLESCH & CO., PTY. LTD., Melbourne

       Canada: M. G. HURTIG, LTD., Edmonton

      Published by the Charles E. Tuttle Company, Inc.

       of Rutland, Vermont & Tokyo, Japan

       with editorial offices at

       Osaki Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 141-0032

      Copyright in Japan, 1972

       by Charles E. Tuttle Co ., Inc.

      All rights reserved

      Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 74-182063

       ISBN: 978-1-4629-1168-4 (ebook)

      First printing, 1972

      PRINTED IN JAPAN

      To my wife

       LOIS

      Table of Contents

Preface
PART ONE: Haiku
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Miscellaneous
PART TWO: Western-Style Verse
Tall to the Stars
Japan Is a Longing Forever
See the Trains Go
Invisible Wounds
Tokyo Torment
The Waves Roll In
Gooney Land
Lone Vigil
Jimmy Boy
The Savage Sea
Green Images
By the Magothy
A Day in Spring
The Wanton Sea
Mood Music
The Ghost Got Up
Kids with Kites
The Shifting Tides
In Arlington
Hoofbeats
Forsythias
Two Leaves
Grass
The Bluebird
Bolero Bold
Old Phantoms
The Flame
Flowing
Ever the Sea
Hands
At Dawning
Woodsman with a Scythe
Sonnet to a Lost Madonna
Glossary

      Preface

      As ONE WHO has never been in love knows nothing about love, so I knew nothing about Japan until I came to this exciting land with its strange and fascinating customs. I was another Cortes, discovering the indescribable joys of a new country.

      One of my great joys was the discovery of haiku-which the Japanese had discovered and developed more than three centuries ago. Accustomed to the freedom of length, rhythm, and form that characterizes the poetry of the West, I was charmed and delighted with the lyric compression, sensitivity, and awareness of haiku.

      Poetry to the Japanese is the highest art. And haiku is the most imagistic of all Japanese literary forms. Soon I was immersed in the work of the greatest haiku writer, and the poet who set the style, Basho. A student of Zen Buddhism, Basho expressed the joyous awareness, in that mystical philosophy, of the identity of life in its myriad forms. With religious fervor and unexcelled craftsmanship, Basho converted even the tiniest ideas into imperishable poetry. Then I read Buson, Issa, Shiki, Kikaku, and a host of other haiku writers—and the challenge to attempt this form of literary expression was too great to resist.

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