4/26/2011

Haiku Lessons

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Haiku Lessons

There is now a great difference in the concept of traditional Japanese haiku and haiku written in other languages, especially in the so-called ELH (English language haiku).

This might be confusing for a beginner.
Here I try to concentrate on the "parent",
the traditional Japanese haiku.


My advise for beginners :

keep the three lines : short long short
use one season word (kigo)
use one cut marker (kireji)


Write about a personal experience,
not a philosophical thought or idea.
Try to pay attention to the small things in life with all their details,
the seasonal changes of your daily human life.
Every moment of your life counts!
Be Here and Now !





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. Definition of HAIKU .   


. 5 7 5 and short/long/short .   


. Kigo - the season word .   


. Cut (kire), cutting word (kireji), cut marker .   



. Basic haiku theories .   


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Study KIGO with me !

. WKD : Kigo Hotline .   



Ask about translations !

. WKD : Translating Haiku .   


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4/20/2011

Uchida Hyakken

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Uchida Hyakken Memorial Day

***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Late Spring
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation


Uchida Hyakken 内田 百間
May 29, 1889 — April 20, 1971

CLICK for more photos

Uchida Hyakken Memorial Day
Hyakken Ki 百閒忌 (ひゃっけんき)
Hyakki-En Ki 百鬼園忌(ひゃっきえんき)
(the title of one of his works and his poet name)
Mokuren Ki 木蓮忌(もくれんき)

The name HYAKKEN (in Chinese characters written with the MOON, not the Sun in the KEN 間) derives from the river Hyakken 百間川 in Okayama.
. . . CLICK here for Photos of river Hyakkengawa!


quote
He was a Japanese author and academic. He was born in Okayama, to a family of sake brewers whose business later went bankrupt. His real name is Eizo Uchida (内田栄造 Uchida Eizo).
He became a pupil of Natsume Sōseki in 1911. He graduated from Tokyo University (Tokyo Imperial University) in 1914. He became professor of German at Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1916. He later taught at Hosei University (Tokyo). He is the main subject of Akira Kurosawa's last film, Madadayo.
His novel, Disk of Sarasate (サラサーテの盤 Sarasāte no ban) is the inspiration for the film, Zigeunerweisen.
He is the author of more than fifteen volumes of writings including I am a Cat: The Fake Version, and Gates Close at Dusk.
In Japan he is well known as a passionate railfan and he made some works on railway travel. A great literary figure in Japan, he has but one book translated into English: Realm of the Dead, a collection of short stories whose title work is perhaps his most well known.
A translated excerpt from another collection, Hyakkien Zuihitsu [Jottings from the Goblins' Garden], appeared in the JAL inflight magazine Skyward, January, 2006: "Small Round Things."
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



阿房列車 Ahoo Ressha Train


Reference


Some of his work and about him
「全輯百間随筆」全6巻(版畫荘、昭11)
「内田百間全集」全10巻(講談社、昭46~48)
「私の「漱石」と「龍之介」」(筑摩書房、昭40)
「百鬼園戦後日記」上下<昭20~24>(小沢書店、昭57)
「百鬼園日記帳」(論創社、昭56)<昭10~11発行の正続合わせての復刻>
「百鬼園先生雑記帳」(三笠書房、昭44)
「回想内田百間」(津軽書房、昭50)
「詩琴酒の人」(小沢書店、昭59)
「實歴阿房列車先生」(朝日新聞社、昭40)
「阿房列車物語」(論創社、昭56)
「内田百間論」(川村二郎著、福武書店、昭58)
「百鬼園寫眞帖」(旺文社編・刊、昭59)
「内田百間」日本文学研究資料新集22(酒井英行編、有精堂、昭61)
「百鬼園残夢」(伊藤隆史・坂本弘子共著、朝日新聞社、昭60)
source : xwww.libnet.pref.okayama.jp

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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


鯛網や浜街道は山に入り  
tai-ami ya hama-kaidoo wa yama ni iri

net for sea breams -
the old beach road leads
into the mountains
         
Uchida Hyakken
Tr. Gabi Greve

Hamakaido is one of the old trading roads from Edo via Mito toward Iwanuma in Northern Japan, along the Sanriku Beach 三陸浜街道.

Haiku with SEA BREAM


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Related words

***** ***** Introducing Japanese Haiku Poets

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http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

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4/02/2011

Enomoto Kikaku

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Kikaku Takarai Kikaku 宝井其角
Enomoto Kikaku (1661-1707)
寛文元年7月17日(1661年8月11日) -
宝永4年2月30日( 一説には2月29日)(1707年4月2日))

a Japanese haikai poet and among the most accomplished disciples of Matsuo Bashō. His father was an Edo doctor, but Kikaku chose to become a professional haikai poet rather than follow in his footsteps.

One day, Kikaku composed a haiku,

Red dragonfly / break off it wings / Sour cherry

which Bashō changed to,

Sour cherry / add wings to it / Red dragonfly


鐘ひとつ賣れぬ日はなし江戸の春
kane hitotsu urenu hi wa nashi Edo no haru

Springtime in Edo,
Not a day passes without
A temple bell sold.


© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


. Enomoto Kikaku Takarai ... MAIN ENTRY


for 是橘 Zekitsu, see below.
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.................. Original Japanese



「我が雪と思えば軽し笠の上」 
waga yuki to omoeba karushi kasa no ue

其角は
「我がものと思えば軽し傘の雪」
waga mono to omoeba karushi kasa no yuki

と2つ詠んだそうです。

Kikaku wrote these two versions.
http://araraoasys.web.infoseek.co.jp/oashp/youtisyodoukan.htm

ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo

わが雪と思えばよろし傘の上
waga yuki to omoeba yoroshi kasa no ue

其角 Kikaku

http://naojiro.at.webry.info/200512/article_1.html
http://www.tsukiji.or.jp/nikki/9907/9907.html



我が雪と思えば軽し笠のうへ

宝井其角 Takarai Kikaku
blog.livedoor.jp/kokorozawazawa/


waga yuki to omoeba karushi kasa no ue

Kikaku Takarai (1661-1705)
www.mcedit.com/archive/Wingspan/2004/December/CSP.html

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"It's mine," I think . . .
and the snow seems lighter
on my straw hat.


waga yuki to / omoeba karoshi / kasa no ue

by Mukai Kyorai
Translated by Steven D. Carter

ooo ooo ooo

This snow is mine
thinking that way it seems lighter
on your sedge hat


Kikaku (1661-1707)

Translated by Michael K. Bourdaghs

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/simply_haiku/message/14454

ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo

In Russian

Это мой собственный снег!
Каким он кажется легким
На плетеной шляпе моей!

This translation of Kikaku is published in
Matsuo Basho : The great in the small,
St. Petersburg "Tertsiia" 1999.

............... and this version

from: One Hundred Famous HAIKU

Selected and translated into English by Daniel C. Buchanan
Japan Publications, INC
Tokyo and San Francisco 1973
ISBN 0-87040-222-6

page 115

Waga yuki to
Omoeba, karoshi
Kasa no ue.

--Kikaku

When I think of it
As my snow, how light it is
On my bamboo hat.


Composed by the poet on seeing a picture of Su Tong P'o, a famous Chinese literary figure, wearing a large hat covered with snow.
The general meaning -- what is our own never seems burdensome.




In the above text, the kanji for 軽し is read KAROSHI .

(Contributed by Natalia Rudychev)

ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo

if I think the snow mine
my hat
becomes light


Enomoto Kikaku (1661-1707)

Tr. by DR. MICHAEL HALDANE
http://www.michaelhaldane.com/HaikuNonJapanese.htm

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More English versions, collected by Larry


When I think it is my snow
On my hat,
It seems light.

--Blyth, (Haiku, Vol. 4, pp. 250-51)

Blyth then makes a tedious comparison to a Chekov story about a stray dog. He sums up his comments with an unattributed quote from Milton:

The mind is its own place, and in itself
Can make a heavan of hell, a hell of heaven.

Blyth then says:

"Shiki rightly says that it must be [written Japanese] 'When I think it is my snow.'

"As a haiku, the poetry lies in the intimate feeling of ownership by the poet of the snow which is on his own umbrella, but the verse lends itself to generalization so easily that it cannot be called a good one."

..... ..... .....


This snow is mine
thinking that way it seems lighter
on your sedge hat

Tr. Bourdaghs


"It's mine," I think . . .
and the snow seems lighter
on my straw hat.

Tr. Carter


if I think the snow mine
my hat
becomes light

Tr. Haldane


Waga yuki to omoeba karushi kasa-no ue
My snow thus when-think is-light straw-hat's top

"My snow!"--when I think that,
it weighs almost nothing
on my umbrella-hat!

Tr. Henderson "An Introduction to Haiku."



"It's my snow"
I think
And the weight on my hat lightens

Tr. Kerr, "Lost Japan."



Think it's your snow, and it's light on your hat
Tr. Sato, "From the Country of Eight Islands."


Collected by Larry

And more is here
With Annotations, collected by Larry


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Here are my attempts to express the haiku's idea.

Think of the snow on your hat
as a belonging,
and it'll feel weightless.

When I think the snow
on my hat is my belonging,
it seems weightless.

Zhanna P. Rader
translatinghaiku/message/135

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it's quite light
when I think it's mine --
snow on my hat


Grzegorz Sionkowski"
translatinghaiku/message/198

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The conical shape of the Japanese straw hat calls to mind a mountain, thus the hat covered with snow looks like a mountain covered with snow, which enhances the feeling of burden to the person wearing it.
So when they think of it as their own hat, that helps to lighten their burden, but if they think of the 'mountain' of the imagery as belonging to them, then they must feel like a lord!

The verse below is not really a translation, but a verse that expresses the feeling I get from this poem.

my own mountain!
this snow-covered hat


~ translatinghaiku/Kei~

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Renku from Sakuo Nakamura

雪が金なら 重さも楽し
yuki ga kane nara omosa mo tanoshi

if the snow were money
the weight becomes my pleasure




ISSA Haiga by Nakamura Sakuo

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傘の雪 Kasa no Yuki, snow on the Umbrella, in Old Edo

江戸言葉で自分の物にしたいことを”傘の雪”と言う.

In the language of Old Edo, the expression "kasa no yuki" "snow on my umbrella" was used to indicate something that you would like to have, to posess.

http://www15.tok2.com/home/waon/hauta/hauta22.htm



我がものと思えば軽し 笠の雪
これは宝井其角という俳人の句だが、彼の詠むとおり、俳諧というのも笠の上の雪に同じ。
http://www003.upp.so-net.ne.jp/p-para/gehou/gehou10_11.htm


蓑は、まだ着てみたためしはありませんが、 は、着けて歩いたためしはあります。
思っているより笠の直径って大きく出来ていて、肩のあたりまで屋根をつくってくれるので、雨とかは結構だいじょぶでした。

ただ、雪の場合、笠の上に雪がつもってくると、歌沢ぶしの「わがものと思えば軽き傘の雪」とは違って 直接頭に重みかかってくるだけに、重たいですけどね…。
A straw hat was rather large and covered also the shoulders, so if snow piled up on it, it must have been quite heavy、since it was right on your head. On an umbrella, it might feel different.
http://www.kwai.org/modules/weblog/details.php?blog_id=90

.. .. ..

市人よこの笠売らう雪の傘
ichibito yo kono kasa uroo yuki no kasa

market-shoppers!
let me sell you this hat
full of snow

Tr. Shirane


Read more on our discussion about the snow on my hat !


MORE Hokku about his hat :
. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .


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Various Questions arise from the above:

Who wrote this haiku ?

Writing in Romaji:
Is the original KAROSHI or KARUSHI or YOROSHI ?

If the original is YOROSHI, why translate it as LIGHT ?


KASA : 
1  straw hat, sedge hat, bamboo hat
2 ..: umbrella (made from oiled paper in the Edo Period)



Umbrella, a kigo


KASA the straw hat of this discussion,
with illustrations in detail


Read more about this problem here:
Translating Haiku # 122


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Su Tung Po (Su Dong Po, Su Tong Po) 蘇東坡
1037 - 1101 (1036-1100) , China
He he wrote very simple poems based on Buddhist Philosophy.



Painting by Chi Un-Yeong (1853-1936) of the famous 11th-century
Chinese scholar-poet Su Dong-Po, in straw hat and wooden shoes.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/archives/vol21/vol21_iss29/record2129.23.html


......................................... Remembrance

To what can our life on earth be likened?
To a flock of geese,
alighting on the snow.
Sometimes leaving a trace of their passage.

www.poemhunter.com/su-tung-po/poet-38991/

His famous poem, Battle of Red Cliff
www.poemhunter.com/su-tung-po/poet-38991/

Read an amusing koan about BUDDHA AND COW DUNG
http://www.purifymind.com/CowDung.htm

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Matsuo Basho at the New Year haikai meeting with Kikaku
in 1686 貞亨3年

月雪とのさばりけらし年の暮
tsuki yuki to nosabari kerashi toshi no kure

“moon and snow”:
so I’ve indulged myself
to the end of the year


nosabaru implies an arrogant indifference to others, making this one of Basho's periodic self-depracations.
Tr. and comment Barnhill


Kikaku had written this hokku

気晴ては虹立空かよもの春


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Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶

29th day - rain
requiem for Kikaku on the hundredth anniversary of his death

春の風草にも酒を呑すべし
haru no kaze kusa ni mo sake o nomasubeshi

spring wind --
let us share our sake
with the grass


This hokku was written in Edo on 2/29 (early April) in 1806 and is immediately preceded in Issa's diary by the diary note translated above the hokku. Takarai Kikaku was one of the leading hokku and renku poets of the 17th century. He was the most talented of Basho's followers -- so talented that he struck out on his own path after a few years. He was born in Edo, had an urban sensibility, and wrote very worldly and often warmly humorous hokku that are still widely read today. He was very popular in Edo because of his love for the common things of the floating world, and during his life he was probably more popular there than Basho, who spent a lot of his time away from Edo. Kikaku was also famous as a heavy drinker, and he eventually killed himself with his drinking, dying at age 47 in 1707.
He died on 2/29 (some say 2/30), and his last hokku, which began a renku sequence, was written on 2/23:

uguisu no akatsuki samushi kirigirisu

bush warbler
cold at dawn --
a cricket


Although it is spring in the hokku, some of the dawns, such as this one, are still cold. The bush warbler's songs also seem cold, a coldness accentuated by the weak cry of an autumn cricket which has managed to survive the winter but which now sounds very feeble. This hokku is often said to express Kikaku's feeling that he was about to die, as if he were here comparing himself to the weak cricket. Certainly he is sympathizing with the cricket.

Issa, who learned haikai in Edo, deeply respected Kikaku, wrote about him, and regarded him as a poet next only to Basho in ability, and he must have taken the hundredth anniversary of Kikaku's death very seriously. It is also an important anniversary in Buddhism, so Issa must have made a prayer for Kikaku's soul on 2/29. In fact, the diary entry at the head of the hokku may mean that Issa visited Shououin Temple in Asakusa, a Pure Land temple within which Kikaku's grave was located, in order to attend the hundredth-year requiem there. Issa often visited Asakusa, and, given his respect for Kikaku, he is likely to have attended the requiem service.

Asakusa has many places to eat and drink, and perhaps Issa later joined a post-requiem drinking get-together/memorial wake. Since it rained on this day, the grass was probably wet, so the drinking was likely inside. Perhaps Issa's hokku was a suggestion to those thinking of Kikaku at that time that they share their sake with the grass and symbolically with sake-loving Kikaku's soul. A warm spring wind was blowing, probably making some long grass nearby bend and sway, so perhaps Issa felt as if Kikaku's spirit might almost be about to appear. Or at least that might have been his wish.

The requiem is only 99 years after Kikaku's death by western counting, but in Japanese Buddhism the year of death was and still is counted as one year, so 1806 was the hundredth anniversary year for someone who had died in 1707.

Chris Drake


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Related words

***** Hat (kasa) 笠いろいろ 

***** . Enomoto Shidoo 槐本之道 Shido .
Tookoo - 東湖 - Toko "East Lake"
(1659?−1708)

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Zekitsu 是橘
He was a hokku disciple of Kikaku since about 1689, and then choose to become a doctor and study with the father of Kikaku. On that day he had his hair cut.
His name was Choosuke 長助 Chosuke, but many called him Korekichi 是吉.
He later became a surgeon and called himself Uzawa Chooan 鵜沢長庵 Uzawa Choan.
Uzawa Zekitsu 鵜沢是橘 (うざわ ぜきつ)


Basho wrote this auspicious hokku for him.

初午に狐の剃りし頭哉
はつむまに 狐のそりし 頭哉
hatsu-uma ni kitsune no sorishi atama kana
hatsumuma ni

on the first day of the horse
a fox has shaved
your head, it seems  . . .


Written in 元禄6年, Basho age 50.
This hokku is full of gentle humour and also auspicious for the occasion.
The cut marker KANA is at the end of line 3.


. WKD : first day of the horse, hatsu uma 初午 .
a festive day at the Inari Fox Shrines of Edo. Farmers prayed for a good harvest on this festival, later the merchants prayed for good business.
The first day of the horse in the second lunar month.



source : turbobf1516


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