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Archive for the 'haiku' Category

One of the weirdest Shinkansen stations is without a doubt Shinkobe. The station building hangs on the side of Mt Rokko, above the city, with only a green mountain at the back. The trains arrive and depart via long tunnels bored in that same mountain. Right under the station a river comes cascading down the […]

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The haiku-poet Kobayashi Issa was born in Kashiwabara, in the northern part of Nagano Prefecture, and after a life as wandering poet, he lived there again during his last years. As a devout Pure Land Buddhist Issa often visited Zenkoji, and he wrote numerous poems in which the temple figures. The City of Nagano has […]

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Basho was born in the castle town of Iga-Ueno, in the Kansai area, but at a young age settled in Edo. He made several trips back to western Japan and then also often visited the Nara area or Yamatoji as it is called in Japanese. In 1684 he visited Yoshino and the next year he […]

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We are with Basho on (almost) the last leg of his Narrow Road and enter Toyama from Niigata.

fragrance of rice
wading into it
on my right the Rough Sea
wase no ka ya | wakeiru migi wa | Ariso Umi

This is the only haiku Basho wrote in Toyama. Ariso no Umi, the Rough Sea, is is an utamakura […]

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passing through this world
is like taking shelter
for a winter drizzle
yo ni furu wa | sara ni shigure no | yadori ka na
Sogi (1421-1502)
Hakone Yumoto is the oldest part of Hakone. Already in the Kamakura period it had developed into a spa town and that is still its major characteristic. Conveniently, it is also a traffic […]

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Several of the haiku Basho wrote on the Sumida River have been printed on text boards standing along a path skirting the river in Tokyo’s Koto Ward. This is the part of Tokyo where Basho lived since 1680, a fact commemorated in the Basho Museum, which also stands here. Thanks to the Oedo line, access […]

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Issa (1763-1828) was born in Kashiwabara, in the snow country in the north of present-day Nagano and was a devout follower of Jodo Shinshu Buddhism. He led a life full of misfortunes and poverty, but his haiku often describe the simple joys he also found. Issa is famous for his empathy with small animals, even […]

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fallen kaki leaves
under my feet
I visit Entsuji
kaki rakuba | fumite tazunenu | Entsuji
Kyoshi
Entsuji Temple boasts one of the most secluded and fine gardens of Kyoto, and the strict priest keeps photographers and loud groups of sightseers at a distance.

[Kaki tree in Ueda, Nagano]
The modern haiku poet Kyoshi also visited Entsuji, in autumn, when the area […]

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moon, look sad,
as I will tell the story
of Akechi’s wife
tsuki sabiyo | Akechi ga tsuma no | hanashisen
Basho

Basho admired the wife of one Yugen of Ise, with whom he once lodged. The haiku master was very well taken care of during his stay and he used this haiku to praise Yugen’s wife. The poem refers […]

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When you say Kyoto, you say Gion, the traditional pleasure quarter at the foot of the Yasaka Shrine. Although Hanamikoji, the street south of Shijodori starting with the Ichiriki Teahouse, may be most the most famous part of Gion, there is also a nice section north of Shijodori, along the Shirakawa Canal. Here the protruding […]

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