Archive of 68 ALSs and TLSs addressed to his translator Shozo Tokunaga
Spender, Stephen
From James Cummins Bookseller, ABAA, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since May 29, 1998
From James Cummins Bookseller, ABAA, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since May 29, 1998
About this Item
Together 102 pages, many on aerogram paper or Encounter Magazine stationery. 65 letters Signed, "Stephen" or in full. 3 typescripts, Signed or with holograph emendations. 4to or 8vo. The letters, including 56 Autograph Letters, and 9 Typed Letters, mostly on personal subjects but many with literary content, a few illustrated with sketches. Each with the original envelope or address panel. The typescripts, including a two-stanza poem Signed entitled "To a Japanese Friend Translating My English," a 3-page untitled interview concerning his views on English literature and theater, and an 8-page essay entitled "The English Poet in the Modern World." Together 12 pages, folio or 4to, written on rectos only; the essay with moderate scattered staining and chipped edges. Annotated 35 pp. segement of his diaries "Tokyo., April 24, 58." With Shozos notes and TLS from Spender with emndations 8 October [1957]: "Everyone in England has Asian inflluenza. It's depressing. . . I am planning to come to Japan in the spring, if I can get a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation to give lectures at Japanese universities. . . . 22 October [1957]: ". . . I work all the morning at the magazine; and at home most evenings I do my own work. But I am not satisfied with my life, because I seem to waste too much time--which I do because I am not satisfied. Probably people in Japan get into this kind of tangle also. One reason why I want to spend several weeks in Japan and Asia is because I want to create a kind of distance between myself and my present life. . . ." 10 September 1958: ". . . I have been entirely taken up with Mary Stuart--the Schiller play which I translated and which is now running at the Edinburgh Festival. Fortunately it has gone very well. "I am very glad that your translations of my poems have been praised. "I like also your translation of Shinzue Ueda's poem The Sea. The more I think about you, dearest Shozo, the more I see that you really are a poet in all your feelings, and your sensibility. . . . ". . . My stupid remarks about Wordsworth: What I meant was to draw a contrast between the Japanese attitude toward poetry, which I take to be that poetry is a matter of the poetic form and language coinciding with the poetic moment in experience--and on no account going outside this--and the English attitude, that poetry can essentially be about the whole of life, and that a poem which covers a lot of ideas or experiences, does not have to be good poetry all the time, in fact it rises to poetry. So what I really meant in saying that Wordsworth sometimes writes poetry that is not poetry at all, is that sometimes he simply writes a kind of chopped up rambling prose--although he also rises to occasions when he writes some of the greatest poetry in the English language. . . . ". . . My stupid remarks about Ezra Pound and the imagists: The imagists--who were influenced by their ideas about Japanese Haiku--thought that poetry should consist of nothing except images. Form and music left them indifferent . . . . What I care for in poetry is that it should become part of my central experience of living: and delight in imagery seems to me rather peripheral. . . ." 27 March 1959: ". . . I am doing a series of lectures here on the theme of the Obsession of Modern Writers with the Modern World. They have been quite successful. They will be rewritten before they are published and then I shall send you a copy in case you care to translate it. . . ." 8 May 1961: ". . . I am writing about thirty or forty or fifty poems all at once. When I am away, abroad, I manage to do a lot, however much I have to bore audiences with my lectures . . . . But when I am in London and go to the office every day, and have to see so many people, and worry about all the bills that come in, and write articles, it is more difficult. In fact I haven't written any poetry for about two weeks, which is the first gap this year. . . . I am writing a long essay on Shakespeare's sonnets . Seller Inventory # 318171
Bibliographic Details
Title: Archive of 68 ALSs and TLSs addressed to his...
Publisher: vp
Publication Date: 1957
Binding: Soft cover
Condition: Generally very good to fine
Signed: Signed by Author(s)
Store Description
All items, as usual, are guaranteed as described and are returnable within 30 days. All
books are shipped UPS (please provide a street address) unless otherwise requested.
Overseas orders should specify shipping preference.
All postage is extra.
New clients are requested to send remittance with your orders. Libraries may apply for
deferred billing. All New York and New Jersey residents must add appropriate sales tax.
We accept American Express, Master Card and Visa.
All items are subject to prio...
Shipping costs are based on books weighing 2.2 LB, or 1 KG. If your book order is heavy or oversized, we may contact you to let you know extra shipping is required.
Payment Methods
accepted by seller