Seen and Unseen: Or, Monologues of a Homeless Snail (1897) is a
collection of poems by Yone Noguchi. Written only three years after his
arrival in San Francisco, these poems capture the emotions of a young
man far from home. Fluent in English and adept with the open, flowing
style of free verse, Noguchi remains unique in his vision of earthly
life.
Noguchi's poems are songs of light and shadow, in tune with animals,
seasons, spirits, and complex emotions. His words are leaves, his
thoughts are curtains knocking "with their shadowy hands" upon his door.
His "[p]oetry begins with the tireless songs of the cricket, on the
lean gray haired hill, in sober-faced evening. / And the next page is
Stillness." Alone in a foreign country, he finds solace in the strange
music of nature, hope in the words he can make of it. He envisions
himself asleep in the depths of a canyon, writing letters that will
never arrive, longing for the crickets to sing. "The homeless snail
climbing up the pillow, stares upon the silvered star-tears on my eyes!
[...] Oh, I am alone! Who knows my to-night's feeling!" He asks, the
homeless snail asks, and his reader longs to answer.
With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript,
this edition of Yone Noguchi's Seen and Unseen: Or, Monologues of a
Homeless Snail is a classic of Japanese American literature reimagined
for modern readers.