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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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Saturday, 10. February 2007

O! The Joy Of A Man Finding!



I had heard of the name "Tanner Lectures" when I saw it in Salman Rushdie's latest book of non-fiction "Step Across This Line", with the title essay being the Tanner Lectures he gave at Yale University. Now, it did not occur to me to look up Tanner Lectures until today. But finally I did, and what a treasure trove I found on discovering the entire Lectures Archive. Go pig out; if you haven't read Rushdie's book, you can begin with his Tanner lectures (pdf file).




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A Found Doodle



in a volume of Anna Akhmatova's poems

A jaguar's eye takes shape on the green glass of water misting over by the bedside table. It is in its gaze, I write with my tongue on your illium, words you can't read, as you lay naked in the intruding winter sun.




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Another Reason



as to why I love Russia (other than the fact that I haven't met an un-stylishly turned out Russian woman yet - yes, Dr. Freud, it's all about sex!) and Russian writers, this extract from John Crowfoot's introduction to "Moscow Memoirs" by Emma Gerstein, published by Harvill Press:

A scene from that later period provides a fitting conclusion. In early 1974, not long before Gerstein began to write her memoirs, a second printing of the long-awaited Leningrad edition of (Osip) Mandelstam's poetry suddenly came on sale. Moscow writer Alexander Gladkov made the following entry in his diary:

"15 January. This morning they sold (Osip) Mandelstam at the Bookstall. After the previous disappointments a list was drawn up of over 200 people. Lev put me down as # 65. At 9.30 am and even earlier there was a crowd waiting outside... The temperature was 19 below zero. We went off, once in a while, to warm up in some neighboring financial institution. Sometimes, as always happens in queues, amazing rumors began (they wouldn't bring any, they'd only have 50 copies, only people who brought their Writers' Union card would get one). At about 11 the books arrived. The shop's director announced that 200 copies would be put on sale. People lined up."

The diarist, a member of the union queuing up outside the Writers' Bookstall in the center of Moscow, was lucky. He'd left his card at home but was able to buy a copy for one ruble 45 kopecks ("They say it's already selling on the black market for 50-80 rubles"). Pleased with his good fortune, he forgot to mention an odd coincidence: January 15 1974 would have been Osip Mandelstam's 83rd birthday."




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