Hori Bakusui Explained

Hori Bakusui 堀麦水 (1718-1783) was a major Japanese poet of the Matsuo Bashō revival, writing traditional style haiku poems.[1]

Biography

Little is known of Bakusui's life apart from his poems. He came from Kanazawa in the middle Edo period, and studied under Otsuyu.[2] He is considered romantic by temperament, and he attempted to revive the early style of the classical Haiku poet of the previous century, Matsuo Bashō, from the book Minashiguri. in 1770 he wrote a book of laconic comments on Bashō's hokku, called Jōkyō shōfū kukai densho (Orthodox style of the Jōkyō era: Verses with critical commentary).[3]

Haiku

One of Bakusui's poems, on the popular haiku theme of the dragonfly, runs:

Another version on the same subject is

See also

Notes and References

  1. Crowley, Cheryl. "Collaboration in the 'Back to Bashō' Movement: The Susuki Mitsu Sequence of Buson's Yahantei School," Early Modern Japan, Fall 2003, page 5.
  2. Book: Addiss, Stephen . Haiku: An Anthology of Japanese Poems . 2009 . Shambhala Publications . 978-0-8348-2234-4 . 165.
  3. Book: Ueda, Makoto . Bashō and His Interpreters: Selected Hokku with Commentary . 1995 . Stanford University Press . 978-0-8047-2526-2 . 418.