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Yosa Buson [1716-1784] JAP
Ranked #227 in the top 380 poets
Votes 87%: 173 up, 26 down

Japanese poet and painter of the Edo period. Along with Matsuo Bashō and Kobayashi Issa, Buson is considered among the greatest poets of the Edo Period.

Yosa Buson, also known as Taniguchi Buson was a leading haiku poet of the late 18th century. He was a distinguished BUNJINGA (literati-style) painter, and he perfected haiga ("haiky sketch") as a branch of Japanese pictorial art. His best-known painting disciple, MATSUMURA GOSHUN, also known as Gekkei, founded the Shijo school.

Buson was born near Osaka, as a youth Buson went to Edo (now Tokyo). For five years (1737-42) he belonged to a haikai linked-verse circle, which Hayano Hajin (1676-1742) presided. Here he learned the traditions of the Basho school haikai as transmitted by HATTORI RANSETSU and TAKARAI KIKAKU. After Hajin`s death, Buson spent much time around Yuki, north of edo, where he painted, practiced haikai, and worte Hokuju Rosen wo itamu (Elegy to the old poet Hokuju), the first of his innovative poems that foreshadow modern free verse. Buson also visited places in northeastern Japan famed in Basho`s poetic diary, OKU NO HOSOMICHI (1694; tr The Narrow Road to the Deep North, 1966).

Buson settled in Kyoto in the late 1750s. He was active in Mochizuki Sooku`s (1688-1766) poetry circle, and was also actively painting in the Chinese-inspired bunjinga style. By practicing both poetry and painting, he aspired to the ideals of the bunjin (Ch: wen-ren or wen-jen; literati) of China. One of Buson`s commissions involved collaborating with IKE NO TAIGA on a landscape series based on Chinese poems, Juben jugi (1771, Ten Conveniences and Ten Pleasures), now a National Treasure. In 1770 he took the name of Yahantei the Second (Midnight Hermitage) for his studio. His haikai teacher Hajin was the First Yahantei. In painting, he used the names of Sha Cho-Koh, Shunsei (Spring Star) and others during his earlier years in Kyoto.

Master of Poetry and Painting - Buson found his distinct voice partly from association with two dissimilar poets, TAN TAIGI and Kuroyanagi Shoha (d 1772), both of whom helped him develop his spontaneous and sensual style. Following their passing, Buson emerged as the central figure of a haikai revival known as the "Return to Basho" movement. In 1776 his own poetry group built a clubhouse, the Bashoan (Basho Hut), for their haikai and linked-verse gatherings. Buson also prepared several illustrated scrolls and screens, including the text of Oku no hosomich, which helped canonize Basho as a grand saint of poetry. Although Buson sought to emulate Basho, his own poetry is clearly different and versatile. Buson read classics extensively and studied different styles of Chinese and Japanese paintings. Poetry and painting affected each other in his art. His poems were, diversely enough, rich in imagery, clearly depicting fine movements and sensual appearances of things, dynamic with wider landscapes, lyrical, sensitive to human affairs, romantic with hidden stories, graceful, and longingly time-conscious. Buson completed his own style of painting in his later years when he was using the name of Sha-In. Freed from the influence of China, he created genuine Japanese landscapes.

Haiku



WorkLangRating
White blossoms of the pear
eng
38
His Holiness the Abbot
eng
13
Coolness
eng
6
Before the white chrysanthemum
eng
5
Calligraphy of geese
eng
5
He`s on the porch
eng
4
Hokku Poems in Four Seasons
eng
3
A bat flits
eng
2
Blow of an ax
eng
2
Elegy to the Old Man Hokuju
eng
2
Harvest moon
eng
2
The old man
eng
2
Dawn
eng
1
Evening wind
eng
1
Listening to the moon
eng
1
Not quite dark yet
eng
1
Washing the hoe
eng
1
A camellia drops
eng
0
a rat approaches
eng
0
Blown from the west
eng
0
Buying leeks
eng
0
Delight
eng
0
Early summer rain
eng
0
Haiku
eng
0
light of the moon
eng
0
Lighting one candle
eng
0
My arm for a pillow
eng
0
Old well
eng
0
Ploughing the land
eng
0
Running out of the nets
eng
0
Sparrow singing
eng
0
Spring rain
eng
0
Straw sandal half sunk
eng
0
The behavior of the pigeon
eng
0
The end of spring
eng
0
The spring sea rising
eng
0
The willow leaves fallen
eng
0
They end their flight
eng
0
Variations on `The short night--`
eng
0

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