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Picture
Front Cover
Picture
Back Cover
Walking Into the Wind
a sweep of poems by Santōka
versions of Cid Corman


front & back cover illustration by Alan Chong Lau
Introduction by Cid Corman


First edition 1990
140 pages, 4" x 5½"
ISBN 0-932274-13-7​

$20.00

​Letterpress printing at the Enderby Press; Mohawk Superfine text and cover stock.

From the Introduction
The photographs we have of Santoka show an intense face, eyes behind thick glasses, a wisp of a beard, and under the straw hat and lost in the bedraggled dark robes a look that goes nowhere even as it sees everywhere and could be smiling or in tears.

Corman shows why we ought consider Santoka the last of the itinerant monk haiku poets in Japan—that line which includes Basho and Issa and Ryokan. He was born Shoichi Tandeam in 1892 and died in 1940; the pen name Santoka was adopted from Chinese literature and literally means Mountain-Head-Fire.
​
In the spring of 1926 the wandering life began, a sequence of pilgramages, often over ways travelled by his most revered predecessors, keeping a journal, travelling light, eating light, drinking when he could. . . . And haiku began to tell and be his life. . . .

Santoka's poems need no explication—they are as clear as breath—are his life . . . and this selection out of over 800 pieces tries to show him at that best—goes beyond mere sentimentality to where feeling and perception have become and keep becoming in the access of language reached a touching and enduring poetry.
— Cid Corman

in the iron bowl
also
hailstones

*
no more houses
to beg from now
in the mountains
clouds

*
this the way to die
finishing maybe
I don't know
lying on the ground
Cadmus Editions
jeffcadmus@aol.com
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