Basho on Kyoto

A collection of poems from Basho in both English and Japanese.

Country folks about rice
Sing their poems –
Like Kyoto people do

1688, tr. Saito and Nelson  (satobito wa ine ni utayomu miyako kana)

Mt Arashi
Bamboo groves luxuriant –
Furrows of the wind.

1691, tr. Saito and Nelson (arashiyama yabu no shigeriya kaze no suji)

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Jeff Robbins contributes this haibun (his translation)

   Cooling off by the river at Shijo

   is a custom from the time of the evening moon

   till it passes through the dawn sky.

   People line up on a platform over the river to pass

   the night drinking, eating, and having a good time.

   The women’s kimono sashes are extravagant,

   the men’s haori jackets long in the formal style,

   Buddhist priests mingle with old folks, and even

   the blacksmith’s and bucket maker’s apprentices,      

   their faces smiling with leisure, sing loud rowdy songs.

   It is a scene to be expected in Kyoto.

                         River breeze —

                         wearing pale persimmon

                         in evening cool        

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Of Kyoto, weary –
this icy wind
A winter dwelling   (1691)  tr. Saito and Nelson

kyou ni akite kono kogarashiya fuyuzumai

(Jeff Robbins notes the  haiku was written on B’s return to Edo after hanging out in Kansai two years. This is a greeting verse to his host who gave him a place to stay out of the cold wind. Basho is not saying he is tired of Kyoto, but rather that his host is glad to be away from the noisy populous city. So Basho’s focus is on the other person’s experience.  (I did not get this for many years, but only from reading Haruo Shirane’s book on Basho, Traces of Dreams, did I realize that Basho was not a “social recluse” but instead constantly reaching out to other people. )

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The following listing, reproduced with permission, was compiled by Gabi Greve at http://matsuobasho-wkd.blogspot.jp/2012/06/kyoto-miyako.html

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

– – – – – Miyako – – – – –

雁聞きに京の秋に赴かん
kari kiki ni miyako no aki ni omomukan

to listen to the geese
in the autumn of the capital
I will set out

Written in autumn of 1690 元禄3年秋.
It is not clear weather this is a hokku by Basho himself.

In a letter to
Takahashi Dosui 高橋怒誰 .

………………………………………………………………..

都出でて神も旅寝の日数哉
miyako idete kami mo tabine no hikazu kana .
I left the capital

子の日しに都へ行かん友もがな
ne no hi shi ni miyako e ikan tomo mo gana / nenohi.
(New Year) day of the rat. capital Kyoto. no friend

里人は稻に歌詠む都かな
(satobito) sato-bito wa ine ni uta yomu miyako kana .
(summer) rice plant. the local people. to sing. the capital Kyoto

塩にしてもいざ言伝てん都鳥
shio ni shite mo iza kotozuten Miyako-dori .
“bird of the capital”

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

瓜の皮剥いたところや蓮台野
uri no kawa muita tokoro ya Rendaino .

Rendaino was a famous graveyard in Kyoto.
The word is also used for graveyards elsewhere.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

たんだすめ住めば都ぞ今日の月
tanda sume sumeba miyako zo kyoo no tsuki
Tanda sume sumeba miyako zo kyô no tsuki

Only live and let it be clear!
If you live in the capital Kyô,
today’s full moon so clear

Basho played with homonyms: “sume” means “clear” and “live”; “kyô” means “Kyoto” and “today”. His haiku at this time was far from his later work that developed a mental depth that was non-existent in haiku before. The above poem followed the examples by haiku school called Danrin which was quite popular at that time. This school was most characterized by playing with words and humor and lacked mental or emotional substance. Basho’s rhetorical skill at this point in his career is not so excellent, though it was far from mediocre.
His haiku writing was not based on the particulars of reality experienced by himself. Basho was a mere young countryman of poetry imitating the days’ fashion of haiku writing.


The following comes from Gabi Greve’s kigo database:

京までは まだ半空や 雪の雲
Kyoo made wa mada nakazora ya yuki no kumo

until Kyoto
it is just half-way –
clouds with snow

Matsuo Basho, 44 years old, written at Narumi

. . . . .


source : suisai-blog.com

Matsuo Basho stayed at Genjuu-An (幻住庵) in Shiga in the year Genroku 3 (1690), but had been on a visit to Kyoto. The following haiku has the cut marker YA at the end of line two and the name of the bird, hototogisu, as the last line.

京にても 京なつかしや 時鳥
Kyoo ni te mo Kyoo natsukashi ya hototogisu

even when in Kyoto
I long for Kyoto –
hototogisu
– Tr. Gabi Greve

Even in Kyoto —
hearing the cuckoo’s cry —
I long for Kyoto.
– Tr. Robert Hass

Bird of time –
in Kyoto, pining
for Kyoto.
– Tr. Lucien Stryk

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