- The Tales of Ise
is a
Japan ese collection of tanka poems, accompanied by short, prose narratives about the poet,Ariwara no Narihira , which provide a context for the poems. The collection dates from the10th century , during theHeian period .Interestingly, Ariwara no Narihira is never named in the text itself, but is known to be the protagonist through tradition, and because a number of the poems appearing in "The Tales of Ise" are independently identified in separate poetry anthologies as his work.
A well-known section of the "Tales of Ise" describes a trip taken by a minor official and his guests to
Nunobiki Falls , nearKobe . They begin a poetry-writing contest, to which one of the guests, a commander of the guards, contributes::Which, I wonder, is higher-:This waterfall or the fall of my tears:As I wait in vain,:Hoping today or tomorrow:To rise in the world.
The minor official offers his own composition:
:It looks as though someone:Must be unstringing:Those clear cascading gems.:Alas! My sleeves are too narrow:To hold them all. [Translation by Helen McCullough, quoted in Morse, 42.]
ee also
Notes
References
* "Art & Artifice: Japanese Photographs of the Meiji Era – Selections from the Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston", with essays by Sebastian Dobson, Anne Nishimura Morse, and Frederic A. Sharf (Boston: MFA Publications, 2004), 42.
* [http://www.asiasociety.org/arts/japanesescreens/scr11.html Asia Society] . Accessed 11 April 2006.
* Morse, Anne Nishimura. 'Souvenirs of "Old Japan": Meiji-Era Photography and the Meisho Tradition'. In "Art & Artifice: Japanese Photographs of the Meiji Era – Selections from the Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston" (Boston: MFA Publications, 2004).
* [http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/dgkeysearchresult.cfm?keyword=ise+monogatari&submit.x=0&submit.y=0 The New York Public Library, s.v. "Ise monogatari"] . Accessed 11 April 2006.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.