Back Roads to Far Towns: Bashō's Travel JournalWhite Pine Press, 2004 - 93 pàgines Basho (1644-1694) is the most famous Haiku poet of Japan. He made his living as a teacher and writer of Haiku and is celebrated for his many travels around Japan, which he recorded in travel journals. This translation of his most mature journal, Oku-No-Hosomichi, details the most arduous part of a nine-month journey with his friend and disciple, Sora, through the backlands north of the capital, west to the Japan Sea and back toward Kyoto. More than a record of the journey, Basho's journal is a poetic sequence that has become a center of the Japanese mind/heart. Ten illustrations by Hide Oshiro illuminate the text. Cid Corman was well-known as a poet, translator and editor of Origin, the ground-breaking poetry magazine. |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
Alluding allusion autumn winds bamboo Bashō blossoms boat Bosatsu brush Buddha Buddhist China Chinese poetry Chōkai Chuang-tzu Cid Corman climbed clouds crossing Daishi Date Masamune disciple Eliot Emperor Chuai Emperor Kazan Emperor Shōmu eyes famed famous feeling furyu Gassan Genji hagi hahakigi haikai Haikai and Haiku Haiku Heian Heike Heike Monogatari hikarido horse hototogisu images Japan Japanese journey Kamakura kanji Kasashima katsumi Kisakata kokushu Kurokami Kurozuka Kyoto Literally lived Manyōshu Matsushima Minamoto mind Mogamigawa Monogatari moon mountain night Nōh play Obanazawa Oku-no-hosomichi old calendar pen-name pilgrims pillows pine place called place-names poet post town priest province rain refers renka road rock Sakata Sampu sect Seishi Sesshōseki shaku Shinkokinshu Shiogama Shiogoshi Shirakawa Barrier shrine Sora spring summer Takadachi tears Teitoku temple Tendai Translated TRAVEL JOURNAL tree unohana visited waka waki wandering warrior word yamabushi Yoshitsune Yoshitsune's Yudono