Name Ben Belitt | Role Poet | |
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Born May 2, 1911New York City, New York ( 1911-05-02 ) Died August 17, 2003, Bennington, Vermont, United States Education University of Virginia (1934) Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada Nominations National Book Award for Poetry, National Book Award for Translation Books Wilderness stair, This scribe - my hand, The double witness, The Complete Poems of, The Forged Feature: Toward a Similar People Rafael Alberti, Giuseppe Ungaretti, Pablo Neruda, Antonio Machado |
LC Performance. Interview. Creating and Translating Poetry--Ben Belitt and John Frederick Nims
Ben Belitt (May 2, 1911 – August 17, 2003) was an American poet and translator. Besides writing poetry, he also translated several books of poetry by Pablo Neruda and Federico García Lorca from Spanish to English.
Contents
- LC Performance Interview Creating and Translating Poetry Ben Belitt and John Frederick Nims
- Translated Poems Pablo Neruda
- Life
- Career
- Influence
- As author
- As translator
- Recordings
- Awards
- References

Translated Poems/ Pablo Neruda
Life
Belitt was born in New York City. He was educated at the University of Virginia, receiving a B.A. in 1932 and an M.A. in 1934, and he was a doctoral student at that university from 1934 to 1936. By the early 1940s he had taken up an appointment at Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, where he remained, living in a former firehouse in North Bennington, for the rest of his life. A bachelor, he became a good friend of the dancer (and fellow teacher at Bennington) Bill Bales, of his wife, the actress Jo Van Fleet, and of their son, Michael Bales, and regularly spent the important holidays of the year with this family at Bennington or in New York City.
Career
Belitt was the author of eight books of poems; his complete poems, This Scribe, My Hand, was published in 1998 by Louisiana State University Press. He wrote two books of essays and over thirteen books of translations. He taught for many decades at Bennington College. After retiring from Bennington College, he continued to live in North Bennington and held the position of Professor Emeritus of Language and Literature at the college. He died in Bennington on August 17, 2003, at the age of 92 and was buried in Manchester, Vermont.
His papers are held by the University of Virginia.
Influence
The 1962 ballet A Look at Lightning, by the American choreographer Martha Graham, was titled after a poem by Belitt. Errand into the Maze, also by Graham, takes its title from a Belitt poem as well.