FIVE POEMS BY ELIOT WEINBERGER

by - mayo 06, 2026

Ma Yuanyu, Blue Gentiana and Red Lychnis (1690) 



These days I’m already sad before I get drunk and drunk I have no place to go.
I tug at my robe but it still won’t cover my shins.

They say immortals eat cloud-seed rice, which is shattered mica.

I thought of Wang Hsien-chi. When thieves broke into his house, he asked them not to take his tattered green rug.



*

An abandoned courtyard: an old tree:
A temple bell lying on its side:
The world I live in.

They win and we lose; we lose and they win.
Vines wrap around the rotting bones.

She knows he won’t come back from the army, but patches the clothes he left just in case.



*

In the street a woman is weeping.
A boy walks by whistling.
An officer changes his horse.
The clouds are brown and unmoving.
The wind picks up.

All things do what they do:
Birds swoop to catch an insect.
Moonlight breaks through the forest leaves.
Soldiers guard the border.
I am trapped in this body.



*

Trees barely visible in the fog; only the sound of  the garrison drums.
Impossible to know if the news is just rumor:
Officials, they say, are disguising themselves as fisherman and butchers.
Rebels ride the horses of ghosts.
Why do they always burn things down?
I thought of that Immortal who lived in a world inside a clay pot.



*

The world is damp and dry, damp or dry.
Two swallows suddenly came into my room.
They were raised in dust and wind.
It took them a long time to get here,
escaping the damp and dry of the world like me.







Eliot Weinberger (1949). From "The Life of Tu Fu". Chicago: Poetry Foundation.

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