14/11/2012

Oku Station 34 - Ichiburi

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- Oku no Hosomichi - 奥の細道 - おくのほそ道
The Narrow Road to the Deep North -


. Oku no Hosomichi - 奥の細道 - Introduction .


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- - - Station 34 - Ichiburi 市振 - - -


Exhausted by the labor of crossing many dangerous places by the sea with such horrible names as Children-desert-parents or Parents- desert-children, Dog-denying or Horse-repelling, I went to bed early when I reached the barrier-gate of Ichiburi. The voices of two young women whispering in the next room, however, came creeping into my ears. They were talking to an elderly man, and I gathered from their whispers that they were concubines from Niigata in the province of Echigo, and that the old man, having accompanied them on their way to the Ise Shrine, was going home the next day with their messages to their relatives and friends.

I sympathized with them, for as they said themselves among their whispers, their life was such that they had to drift along even as the white froth of waters that beat on the shore, and having been forced to find a new companion each night, they had to renew their pledge of love at every turn, thus proving each time the fatal sinfulness of their nature. I listened to their whispers till fatigue lulled me to sleep.

When, on the following morning, I stepped into the road, I met these women again. They approached me and said with some tears in their eyes, 'We are forlorn travellers, complete strangers on this road. Will you be kind enough at least to let us follow you? If you are a priest as your black robe tells us, have mercy on us and help us to learn the great love of our Savior.' 'I am greatly touched by your words,' I said in reply after a moment's thought, 'but we have so many places to stop at on the way that we cannot help you. Go as other travellers go. If you have trust in the Savior, you will never lack His divine protection.' As I stepped away from them, however, my heart was filled with persisting pity.

Under the same roof
We all slept together,
Concubines and I -
Bush-clovers and the moon.

As I recited this poem to Sora, he immediately put it down on his notebook.

Crossing the so-called forty-eight rapids of the Kurobe River and countless other streams, I came to the village of Nago, where I inquired after the famous wisteria vines of Tako, for I wanted to see them in their early autumn colors though their flowering season was spring. The villagers answered me, however, that they were beyond the mountain in the distance about five miles away along the coastline, completely isolated from human abode, so that not a single fisherman's hut was likely to be found to give me a night's lodging. Terrified by these words, I walked straight into the province of Kaga.

I walked into the fumes
Of early-ripening rice,
On the right below me
The waters of the Angry Sea.


Tr. by Nobuyuki Yuasa
source : terebess.hu/english


今日は親しらず子しらず犬もどり駒返しなど云北国一の難所を越てつかれ侍れば、枕引よせて寝たるに、一間隔て面の方に若き女の声二人計ときこゆ。年老たるおのこの声も交て物語するをきけば、越後の国新潟と云所の遊女成し。伊勢参宮するとて、此関までおのこの送りて、あすは古郷にかへす文したゝめてはかなき言伝などしやる也。白浪のよする汀に身をはふらかし、あまのこの世をあさましう下りて、定めなき契、日々の業因いかにつたなしと、物云をきく/\寝入て、あした旅立に、我々にむかひて、行衛しらぬ旅路のうさ、あまり覚束なう悲しく侍れば、見えがくれにも御跡をしたひ侍ん。衣の上の御情に大慈のめぐみをたれて結縁せさせ給へと泪を落す。不便の事には侍れども、我/\は所〃にてとゞまる方おほし。只人の行にまかせて行べし。神明の加護かならず恙なかるべしと云捨て出つゝ、哀さしばらくやまざりけらし。

一家に遊女もねたり萩と月 - hitotsuya ni juujo mo netari hagi to tsuki

曾良にかたれば、書とゞめ侍る。


黒部 Kurobe
くろべ四十八が瀬とかや、数しらぬ川をわたりて、那古と云浦に出。 擔篭の藤浪は春ならずとも、初秋の哀とふべきものをと人に尋れば、是より五里いそ伝ひして、むかふの山陰にいり、蜑の苫ぶきかすかなれば、蘆の一夜の宿かすものあるまじといひをどされて、かゞの国に入。

わせの香や分入右は有磯海 / 早稲の香や分け入る右は有磯海 - wase no ka ya

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一家に遊女もねたり萩と月
hitotsu ya ni yuujo mo netari hagi to tsuki

in the same house
prostitutes, too, slept:
bush clover and moon

Tr. Barnhill

Barnhill's literal translation of 'yuujo' is "play-girls."


Robert Hass, in his discussion of this hokku in "The Essential Haiku," says in part:

"The courtesans, or prostitutes, are 'yuujo 遊女'. And it is hard to know how to translate the word. For an account of the distinctions between 'maiko' (apprentice geishas), 'geisha', and 'yuujo', see Liza dalby, 'Geisha', Berkeley; University of California Press, 1983.

Geishas were trained in the arts and in social graces, 'yuujo' in 'toko no higi 床の秘儀', the techniques of sexual pleasures."


And here is an exerpt from a discussion (the whole discussion is wellworth reading!) of this hokku as being on the topic of love:

"If Basho is developing his narrative [of The Narrow Road...] along the lines of a linked verse sequence, he may have wanted to insert an episode dealing with love here. A linked verse sequence would be expected to have such an episode.

Basho shifts his scenes from mountains to rivers to valleys to forests and we would also expect him to insert episodes dealing with love, flowers, the moon, etc.
Basho describes for us a variety of natural settings and intersperses certain human encounters.

At Nasuno it was a charming and innocent little girl, at Kisagata it was lady Seishi he is reminded of to enrich the mood of his narrative. It is not surprising then that along the Echigo Road he chooses to include an encounter with courtesans.

The element of love is also in play here in his earlier references to Lady Seishi and then to the Tanabata festival, and now he speaks of commercial love. This is reinforced by his allusions to The Tale of Genji and to the Wakan Roei Shu and to Eguchi Yujo.
Indeed, Basho seems to be parodying Saigyo's experience with the courtesans at Eguchi."
quote from uoregon.edu-kohl

Here is an account given by the commentator Yamamoto of Saigyo's experience with the courtesans of Eguchi,
translated by Ueda in his book, "Basho and His Interpreters:"

One day the monk Saigyo, having encountered a sudden shower in the village of Eguchi, asked for shelter at a nearby house but was denied by its mistress, a courtesan. Thereupon he sang out:

yo no naka o itou made koso katakarame
kari no yadori o oshimu kimi kana

You'd never bring yourself
to hate and foresake this world
no matter how I plead...
Yet, how can you begrudge
to lend a temporary shelter?


The mistress responded with the waka:

yo o itou hito to shi kikeba kari no yado ni
kokoro tomuna to omou bakari zo

Knowing you are someone
who has forsaken this world,
I naturally thought
you would not be concerned
with this temporary shelter.


This legend was recorded in 'Senjuushoo' [Selected tales, 13th c.] and was also made into a noo play, 'Eguchi'. Basho drew upon the legend in writing this hokku.

The bush clover stands for the courtesans, the moon is Basho.
Koseki
source : Ueda, books.google.co.jp

compiled by Larry Bole



Under one roof, prostitute and priest,
we all sleep together:
moon in a field of clover

Tr. Hamill


Under the same roof
Prostitutes were sleeping --
The moon and clover.

Tr. Keene


Under the same roof
Courtesans, too, are asleep--
Bush clover and the moon.

Tr. Ueda


. WKD : yuujo 遊女 courtesans, harlots, prostitutes .


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source : koushinetsu/niigata
松尾芭蕉も見た市振宿の海道の松 - The Pine Basho might have seen at Ichiburi . . .



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