Authors: Hosai Ozaki, Hiroaki Sato
ISBN-13: 9781880656051, ISBN-10: 1880656051
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
Date Published: July 1998
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Hiroaki Sato is one of the leading translators of Japanese poetry into English, with numerous books and awards. Emi Suzuki works in illustrations and CD graphic design.
One of Japan's most gifted poets, Hosai Ozaki started out as an insurance salesman, but alcohol and despair finally led him to a small Buddhist temple on an island off Shikoku in southern Japan. There he spent his remaining days doing simple chores, subsisting on a diet of toasted rice and water, and writing about loneliness and poverty. Hosai's great gift was his ability to place himself at a slight distance from existence and observe with a razor-sharp awareness the everyday objects that inhabit our world: doorways, shadows, leaves, food containers, the fingers on a hand. The effect is magical and disturbing. Also here are Hosai's prose pieces from "On Entering a Temple House," which meditate on his past, on the workings of his mind, and on the sounds, smells, and views outside his temple window.
Author Biography: Hosai Ozaki (1885-1926) is one of Japan's most gifted poets. His free-form writing helped extend the haiku beyond its traditional language, rhythms, and seasonal imagery.; Hiroaki Sato is also translator of Basho's Narrow Road.
Stone Bridge Press is a leading English-language publisher of Japanese literature in translation. Our ROCK SPRING COLLECTION OF JAPANESE LITERATURE features absorbing and important translations of classical and contemporary Japanese fiction and poetry. We believe that literature is a window into culture and society, and an expression of what is most peculiarly, and universally, human
Foreword | 8 | |
Introduction | 10 | |
On Translating Haiku in One Line | 21 | |
Haiku | ||
Early Haiku | ||
Around 1905 | 24 | |
In Tokyo, around 1908 | 27 | |
The Big Sky | ||
From Tokyo to Seoul, 1916-23 | 30 | |
At Itto-en, Kyoto, 1923-24 | 40 | |
At Suma Temple, Hyogo, 1924-25 | 42 | |
At Joko Temple, Obama, 1925 | 85 | |
In Kyoto, 1925 | 93 | |
At Nango-an, Shodo Island, 1925-26 | 94 | |
Prose | ||
On Entering a Temple House | ||
Until Coming to the Island | 122 | |
The Sea | 125 | |
Bell-Clinker | 128 | |
Stones | 132 | |
Wind | 135 | |
Lights | 139 |