Basho's thoughts on...
Matsuo Basho 1644~1694
The only substantial
collection in English
of Basho's renku, tanka,
letters and spoken word
along with his haiku, travel
journals, and essays.
The only poet in old-time
literature who paid attention with praise
to ordinary women, children, and teenagers
in hundreds of poems
Hundreds upon hundreds of Basho works
(mostly renku)about women, children,
teenagers, friendship, compassion, love.
These are resources we can use to better
understand ourselves and humanity.
Interesting and heartfelt
(not scholarly and boring)
for anyone concerned with
humanity.
“An astonishing range of
social subject matter and
compassionate intuition”
"The primordial power
of the feminine emanating
from Basho's poetry"
Hopeful, life-affirming
messages from one of
the greatest minds ever.
Through his letters,
we travel through his mind
and discover Basho's
gentleness and humanity.
I plead for your help in
finding a person or group
to take over my 3000 pages of Basho material,
to edit and improve the material, to receive 100%
of royalties, to spread Basho’s wisdom worldwide
and preserve for future generations.
Quotations from Basho Prose
The days and months are
guests passing through eternity.
The years that go by
also are travelers.
The mountains in silence
nurture the spirit;
the water with movement
calms the emotions.
All the more joyful,
all the more caring
Seek not the traces
of the ancients;
seek rather the
places they sought.
basho4humanity
@gmail.com
Plea for Affiliation
Plea For Affiliation
I pray for your help
in finding someone
- individual, university,
or foundation -
to take over my
3000 pages of material,
to cooperate with me
to edit the material,
to receive all royalties
from sales, to spread
Basho’s wisdom worldwide,
and preserve for
future generations.
basho4humanity
@gmail.com
Article Search
Searched for ' ' : 287 articles found
101 - 150 of 287 :
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 |
Basho Prose
If Basho poems are snapshots of reality, then his prose is the video. The images flow along, like water, always pressing forward, light and active, full of specific verbs giving life to the sentence. ...
▶ Basho Himself
E-07
Basho Spoken Word
45 Passages of Basho Speech recorded by his followers reveal his thoughts about life and poetry.
On the Internet in English you will find various lists of “Basho quotations," h ...
▶ Basho Himself
E-08
Five Final Haiku
Each one fulfills a major theme of Basho poetry: 1) Praise for women 2) support for children
3) Caring for neighbors 4) Existential loneliness 5) Lightness and li ...
▶ Basho Himself
E-09
Dying with a Smile
In his letters, we learn how Basho lived. Here we learn how he died: his final letter to his older brother, three sections from his will, two bits of speech in his last days, ...
▶ Basho Himself
E-10
Basho on How to Write Haiku
From his letters to followers and spoken word recorded by followers, I have culled 17 Basho statements on how to create a haiku, advice from the greatest of haiku poets to you writing haiku today. Thr ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-11
My First Renku Journeys
This is the story of the first three renku stanzas – one single stanza and a stanza pair, all by Basho -- which six years go made the connections in my mind to draw me into the renku universe.&n ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-12
The Flow of Renku
Renku in Basho4Humanity are mostly stana-pairs isolated from the long sequences in which they were written. These quintets provide more of a flow yet still focus on the links.
When li ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-13
Boncho, Basho, Kyorai
Among Basho’s circle in Kyoto two men stand out: his beloved friend Kyorai and Boncho, a doctor married to Uko. In 1690, Basho wrote a letter to her:
Recently Old Boncho and Kyorai ca ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-14
Tanka Equivilants
Two renku stanzas both by Basho written in succession, a triplet of 17 sound-units then a couplet of 14, with continuity of theme between the two: the form of a tanka -- although not a tanka. Th ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-15
Basho’s Zen Poetry
Here are poems written while Basho was studying with a Zen priest, or about Zen monks, or about the practice of Zen meditation. (For prose and letters, see Article E-5 FRIENDS IN ZEN).& ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-16
Poetry in Basho Letters:
Poem: “an arrangement of words in verse, expressing facts, ideas, or emotions in a style more concentrated, imaginative, and powerful than that of ordinary speech.”&nb ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-17
Ride the Energy
Basho told Doho:
Make renku ride the Energy.
俳諧は気にのせてすべし. Haikai wa ki ni nosete subeshi.
Ki is the Energy of Oriental medicine and martial arts, the "life force" ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-18
Music and Song
15 Basho poems on music and song reveal a consciousness of profound effects on the brain. Let the music in his verses take you to another place. Daniel Levitin in This is your Brain on Music ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-19
Shiki’s MisDirection:
“The haiku is literature. Renku is not literature and for this reason
need not be discussed.” Masaoka Shiki (1867 – 1902)
translated by Donald Keene in his bio ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-20
Green Dragon's Ears
The words for “green,” aoi or midori, appear so frequently in Basho poetry (with white also frequent). The green of plants, more than just a color to Basho, is a force of nature which ...
▶ Poetry and Music
E-21
Faces
In my continuing efforts to undermine the “Basho-image” of a impersonal, austere poet-saint, I offer you 30 of Basho's word-portraits of a most personal part of us: the face.
De ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-01
Hands
Hands evolved to do work, and Basho paid profound attention to women's hands at work. May his poems deepen your exerience of these products of millions of years of evolution. Here ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-02
Long Black Hair
Fascination with women’s hair enriches Japanese poetry from the most ancient, and Basho invested much attention into the beauty, grace, and sensuality of long black hair. & ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-03
Sing the Body Electric
Walt Whitman sang of:
"The womb, the teats, nipples, breast-milk, tears, laughter,
weeping, love-looks, love-perturbations and risings"
Basho also writes of intimate body parts most ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-04
Sickness and Health
Basho, the poet of Humanity, portrays human sickness in his renku, haiku, and letters; for instance,
here he focuses not on people dying from measles but rather them recovering.
“Ho ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-05
Breath
For inhalation Basho speaks of "fragrance" entering the nose, and for exhalation of voice accompanying the air. Since these 12 verses are all about breath, we can practice them as a form of Yoga, ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-06
Diagram of a Snore
A cartoon by Basho?! He drew this nonsense in 1688 on the road with his buddy Tokoku going by the alias Mangiku, and sent it with a letter to Ensui. Let's have fun with Basho!
& ...
▶ The Physical Body
F-07
Fire for Life
Basho never mentions the destructive fires other authors emphasize: he focuses on fire for warmth, light, cooking, incense, tea ceremony, cremation, and to guide spirits of the dead.
...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-08
Rice to Eat
Rice is the staple food of over half the world's population and provides 20% of the world’s diet: in Basho’s era, rice was boiled on a wood-burning stove for over one hour until soft, ...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-09
Besides Rice
Here are lots of fish and lots of soups, sweet juicy fruits, miso, carrots, daikon radish, seaweed, noodles, tofu, yams, and much else Japanese eat along with their staple grain (see ...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-10
Menu for Moon-Viewing
Among the few actual “traces” we have of Basho is his Menu for Moon-Viewing (月見の献立、Tsukimi no Kondate), a list of foods served at a party he gave for his hometown friends and followers ...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-11
High on Sake
Basho records his perceptions, his feeling of being "high," on sake, and he portrays other people - women, old men, warriors, sages - under the influence. Let's have fun with Basho.
S ...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-12
Ganja Basho
From ancient times Japanese smoked cannabis for both medicine and recreation. Basho, in the 17th century, records the use of hemp for clothing fabric as well as shrine offerings. He left a few intrigu ...
▶ Food, Drink, and Fire
F-13
Deer Alive
Basho writes not about hunting, venison, or buckskin, but rather deer alive, moving, growing, calling, copulating. Deer combine soft, gentle qualities with strength and determination. ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-14
Cats and Dogs
The lives of cats and dogs have forever been woven into human life. 18 Basho haiku and renku on cats and dogs reveal how people in Japan 330 years ago experienced these two mammals.
Charles J. ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-15
Horses on the Go
If you love horses, explore how Basho in poetry uses the horse image to make an ordinary human subject more interesting. This is Basho’s art: to make his words stand out wit ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-16
Other Mammals
Just as Basho was an anthropologist observing humanity, he also studied the nature and activity of our mammalian cousins, and we can learn much about humanity from his sketches of animals. ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-17
So Many Birds
On his death bed Basho summarized his life in this way: "awake I was astonished at the voices of mountain streams and wild birds" and the 40 poems about birds in this article express that astonishment ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-18
Life Underwater
The sea produces some mighty strange creatures, and Basho takes us to visit them in their natural habitat alive or soon after death. (Sea animals as food appear in the article F-10 BESI ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-19
Ode to a Crow
If we think Basho is serious in the following, we would get a heavy feeling from this tirade – however realize that he is having fun with your mind, and wants you to be amused.
&n ...
▶ Animals in Basho
F-20
Daybreak to Sunrise
Arising to blow on embers /
the wife of a bell-ringer.
Last night she banked the fire, covering coals with ashes to stay alive till dawn when she awakens them with her breath.&n ...
▶ Space and Time
G-01
New Years
New Year's Day/ sunlight on every field/is beloved.
Rice fields now barren expanses of mud and frost with row after row of cut-off stubble; Sun (Goddess) weak and cold yet She sh ...
▶ Space and Time
G-02
Mount Fuji
Sun hits Her forehead / on peak of Mount Fuji. 日に額をうつ / 富士の 峰 上げ / Hi ni gaku o utsu / fuji no mine age. The Rising Sun has a female face, and She bumps Head on the stony peak. ...
▶ Space and Time
G-03
Water with Movement
"The mountains in silence nurture the spirit;
The water with movement calms the emotions."
said Basho in Spring of 1690
For a while raftsman
at rest on the bank
Pilgrim-robedheart o ...
▶ Space and Time
G-04
On a Journey
Three whole years /
on a journey from a journey /
to a journey.
Here are poems, prose passages, and letters about leaving home, traveling, or returning.
One of Basho's earliest renku stanz ...
▶ Space and Time
G-05
Kyoto in Basho
Basho tells the feeling of life in Kyoto, the ancient Capital of Japan, and home of many unconventional people.
Though in Kyoto /longing for Kyoto /ho toto GI su.
Kyoto ...
▶ Space and Time
G-06
Iga Ninja – Three Prologues
Basho’s birthplace, Iga (Mie-ken, east of Nara) was also home to Japan’s leading school of ninjitsu, the techniques of hiding, infiltration and attack by those mysterious undercover agents ...
▶ Space and Time
G-07
Basho in Saga
Basho’s follower Kyorai, the second son of a doctor of Chinese medicine in Kyoto, had a cottage in Saga on the western outskirts. Basho, here for 16 days in 1691, wrote this haibun:
...
▶ Space and Time
G-08
Zeze: Resting Place for his Spirit
Zeze, in Otsu, just across the mountains east of Kyoto, was sacred to Basho: He wrote
"The mountains in silence nurture the spirit; the water with movement calms the emotions."
He s ...
▶ Space and Time
G-09
Transcending Space, Time, and Life
"Days and months are guests passing through Eternity, the years that go by also are travelers."
So Basho seeks to transcend the barriers of Time - and those of space and life. ...
▶ Space and Time
G-10
Basho Letters of 1681 – 87
Basho left his hometown Iga in 1672, moving to Edo where he found a municipal job while he composed linked verse with other poets, wrote haiku, and gathered followers. In winter of 1680 Ba ...
▶ Letters Year by Year
G-11
Basho Letters of 1688 – 89
For 1688 we have letters to Sampu and Ensui, and for 1689 to Ranran, Ensui, Somu, and Sampu;
the final of these gives an account of Basho on his world-famous journey to the Deep North.
Basho le ...
▶ Letters Year by Year
G-12
Letters of 1690:
Basho came down from his journey to the Deep North in autumn of 1689; for that winter, all of 1690. and most of 1691, he hung out in the Kansai, dividing his time among his hometown Iga ...
▶ Letters Year by Year
G-13
Letters of 1691
Basho’s sojourn in the Kansai area continues into this year with these friendly letters
He began the year ( January 29, 1691, by the Western calender) in Otsu, but then returned to his hometown ...
▶ Letters Year by Year
G-14
Letters of 1692
Basho Letters to Kyokusui, Kyorai, Chigetsu, and Ensui, including the full text of the longest letter he wrote, on a scroll 3.46 meters (more than 11 feet) long
In the winter of 1691 Basho ...
▶ Letters Year by Year
G-15
101 - 150 of 287 :
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Basho's thoughts on...
Matsuo Basho 1644~1694
The only substantial
collection in English
of Basho's renku, tanka,
letters and spoken word
along with his haiku, travel
journals, and essays.
The only poet in old-time
literature who paid attention with praise
to ordinary women, children, and teenagers
in hundreds of poems
Hundreds upon hundreds of Basho works
(mostly renku)about women, children,
teenagers, friendship, compassion, love.
These are resources we can use to better
understand ourselves and humanity.
Interesting and heartfelt
(not scholarly and boring)
for anyone concerned with
humanity.
“An astonishing range of
social subject matter and
compassionate intuition”
"The primordial power
of the feminine emanating
from Basho's poetry"
Hopeful, life-affirming
messages from one of
the greatest minds ever.
Through his letters,
we travel through his mind
and discover Basho's
gentleness and humanity.
I plead for your help in
finding a person or group
to take over my 3000 pages of Basho material,
to edit and improve the material, to receive 100%
of royalties, to spread Basho’s wisdom worldwide
and preserve for future generations.
Quotations from Basho Prose
The days and months are
guests passing through eternity.
The years that go by
also are travelers.
The mountains in silence
nurture the spirit;
the water with movement
calms the emotions.
All the more joyful,
all the more caring
Seek not the traces
of the ancients;
seek rather the
places they sought.
basho4humanity
@gmail.com
Plea for Affiliation
Plea For Affiliation
I pray for your help
in finding someone
- individual, university,
or foundation -
to take over my
3000 pages of material,
to cooperate with me
to edit the material,
to receive all royalties
from sales, to spread
Basho’s wisdom worldwide,
and preserve for
future generations.
basho4humanity
@gmail.com