Back Roads to Far Towns: Bashō's Travel JournalWhite Pine Press, 2004 - 93 страници 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. |
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Bashō's Travel Journal 松尾芭蕉. 34 In the demesne of Yamagata the mountain temple called Ryūshakuji . Founded by Jikaku Daishi ... temple - doors locked , no sound . Climbed along edges of and crept over boulders , worshipped at temples ...
... temple at Minamidani and he eagerly and cordially welcomed us . The fourth , at main temple building , haikai party . thank you very much for all your perfuming snow Minamidani On the fifth worshipped at Gongen temple . Its founder ...
... temple , young priests came hurrying down the steps after me with paper and ink - slab . At that moment willows in the yard were shedding leaves : sweeping the garden but letting the temple keep the willows ' droppings Sandals already ...