Selected Odes of Pablo Neruda

Selected Odes of Pablo Neruda by Pablo Neruda is a collection published by Univ of California Press in 1990, featuring 375 pages in English. This edition presents a selection of Neruda’s odes, originally written in Spanish, with the original texts printed alongside their English translations by Margaret Sayers Peden. The odes explore everyday elements of human experience, such as love and nature, through Neruda’s distinctive and translucent language.
Readers will find a rich tapestry of themes that connect the poet to the world around him, including reflections on the animal, mineral, and vegetable realms. The arrangement of the odes in flowing lines emphasizes the interconnectedness of life and history. Peden’s introduction provides context for the poems, highlighting Neruda’s conscious effort to write about simple things, influenced by his experiences and the cultural landscape of Latin America. This edition serves as a comprehensive exploration of Neruda’s vision, making it a significant contribution to the understanding of his poetic legacy.
Official synopsis Publisher
The atom, a tuna, laziness, love—the everyday elements and essences of human experience glow in the translucent language of Neruda’s odes. Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (1904-1973) wrote three books of odes during his lifetime. Odas elementales was published in 1954, followed in subsequent years by Nuevas odas elementales and Tercer libro de las odas. Margaret Sayers Peden’s selection of odes from all three volumes, printed with the Spanish originals on facing pages, is by far the most extensive yet to appear in English. She vividly conveys the poet’s vision of the realities of day-to-day life in her translations, while her brief introduction describes the genesis of the poems.
To write simply of simple things was a task the poet undertook consciously, following his experiences in the Spanish Civil War, the “social conversion” that resulted from a visit to Macchu Picchu, and the writing of his epic Canto general (California, forthcoming). The odes are arranged in brief, sinuous lines that flow down the page and connect the poet to the animal, mineral, and vegetable world, to people and objects, and to the landscape of history. “Chile,” Neruda once said in reference to the work of sixteenth-century poet Alonso de Ercilla, “was invented by a poet.” In accepting the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971, he declared that “We [writers from the vast expanse of America] are called upon to fill with words the confines of a mute continent, and we become drunk with the task of telling and naming.” The odes reflect what Neruda saw as both an obligation and a privilege—the naming and defining of his world.
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