The Sound of an Axe

Written in the 8th year of Enpo (延宝8年), 1680,
Basho age 37.

The following two haiku were likely written in Edo at a tea ceremony where charcoal is use to heat the tea and charcoal is also use to write down the poems by the participants in a renga party. Multiple puns are employed.

消炭に薪割る音かをのの奥  

keshi-zumi | making charcoal
ni maki waru oto ka | by splitting wood, the sound of
Ono no oku | the back alleys of Ono?
(the back of an axe)

Matsuo Basho, Winter 1680

keshi-zumi (making coal) ni (by) maki (firewood, compare makiware, an axe for wood cutting) waru (splitting) oto (sound) ka (?) Ono no oku (may refer to Ono 小野, a suburb of Kyoto, Japan, known for its charcoal used in tea ceremonies. Ono is also a homophone for ono 斧, an ax). Oku 奥, back, or deep, as in Oku no hosomichi 奥の細道, the title of Basho’s best known book.

Makiwari, an axe for the wood-chopping.

Maki has two other meanings, other than firewood. In sushi preparation, it can refer to a small segment cut off from a long roll. The charcoal is made from slender oak trees cut into small segments to be used in heating the tea. Maki 槇 may also mean the tip of tree.

Note. Charcoal is made by heating wood in an oxygen starved environment.

Matsuo Basho would follow up this haiku with another haiku about Ono.

小野炭や手習ふ人の灰ぜせり 

Ono-zumi ya | with charcoal from Ono!
tenarau hito | one learns by to write
no hai zeseri | and correct in ashes
(gray)

Matsuo Basho, Winter 1680

hai (ashes, but also the color gray) zeseri (correct, one can not only practice writing but correct one’s mistakes). The point of the haiku — one learns by practice. And secondly, that nothing is “black and white.”

Sound of…

Six years later, Matsuo would again use the idea of the “sound of” creating a haiku. This one being about a frog jumping into an old pond, making the sound of water.

古池や蛙飛こむ水のをと

Furu ike ya | an old pond
kawazu tobikomu | a frog jumps in
mizu no oto | the sound of water

Matsuo Basho, Summer 1686
keshi-zumi | making charcoal, making tea, practice writing and writing poems

You Had to Be There

I confess to reading other translations of Basho’s haiku. This practice provides insight and joy, as variations occur in interpreting the meaning of the phrases Basho uses. In this pair of haiku, I particularly liked Basho’s use of hai, a word that means both ashes and gray. A double meaning reminding us to practice, it can be messy, and remember that not everything is clear.

The Darum Museum Gallery provides a detailed explanation of Matsuo Basho’s haiku. It also reference other uses of the word Ono. For example, Ono no Takamura 小野篁 (802 – 852), a scholar and poet, who practiced his calligraphy in the ashes of his stove.

Another site, Yamanishi-ken gives a concise explanation in Japanese.

There is a saying, “you had to be there,” which is used when telling a story and the one hearing the story doesn’t quite get it. I imagine that is true for many of Basho’s haiku. So here I imagined Basho and his disciples gathering at a tea house in Edo, the capital, watching the tea being prepared in a pot heated with charcoal, the pellets of which might have looked like sushi, or reminded Basho of his younger days in Kyoto (something he like to reminisce about). And being instructive, Confucius-like, he reminded his disciples to practice, practice, practice, as the old joke about Carnegie Hall goes.

Me, I wasn’t there at the tea ceremony, but reading Basho’s haiku gives me a glimmer of what it must have been like.

Tanoshimu!

Enjoy!

So, what was he?

Buddhist, Shinto, Tao — the question often asked is, what religion did Matsuo Basho follow?

Matsuo Basho studied Buddhism and Buddhist like to claim him for their own, saying he studied under Butcho. And Basho emulated the Buddhist monk Saiygo in his travel and reclusive lifestyle. But that is not to say that he was curious about the world about him. Often he visited Shinto shrines as well as Buddhist ones.

古人の跡をもと めず、古人の求たる所を.もとめよ
kojin no ato wo motomezu, kozjin no motometaru tokoro wo motomeyo

“Don’t follow in the footsteps of the old masters’ footsteps,
seek what they sought.” Basho said.

Funny thing, it appears Basho borrowed this from an older friend, Kōbō-Daishi (774-835), and (in 1693) imparted it to his disciple Kyoriku, in what has come down to us as “Words of Farewell to Kyoriku.” All this is out there, in books and online.

This makes it more Confucian like, for one needs to learn. Basho’s advice on how to learn might go like this:

Travel widely,
While carrying as little as you can
Write down a word or two

Bashō no yōna, 2024

And then go back.

Leaving us back at the beginning of the circle, Tao-like. Finding, that if you walk long enough, one day, to your surprise, you’ll find yourself among the very wise. And even if you don’t, you’ll have fun from the beginning to the end.

One can find many of these ideas expressed in Toshiharu Oseko’s book, Basho’s Haiku.

Note. It was Kyoriku who provided the cottage on Lake Biwa for Basho’s retreat after Oku no Hosomichi, the Journey into the Northern Interior. In that, there is another lesson.

“Step back to see what is close to you.”

Making Love

Out of the blue, a lovely comment from Maria:

Fine di un amore —
andando verso un nuovo
batticuore

a finished love —
on the way to a new heartbeat

Maria, 2024

Making love, Maria reminds one, is sometimes about something more.

A lovely thought,
Making love, a mother’s thought
Of the future

Bashō no yōna, February, 2024
Fine di un amore —
andando verso un nuovo
batticuore

Happy New Year

a stack of hats

The Year of the Dragon

New Year, 1685

From the Nozarashi kiko (1684-1685), the year after his mother died. From Edo, along the Tokaido Road, home to Iga, then to Nagoya, on the road to Nara, Basho chanted verse to himself, as we all like to do when we walk alone.

年暮れぬ . 笠きて草鞋 . はきながら
Toshi kurenu . kasa kite waraji . haki nagara
The year is fading,
wearing a hat and straw sandals,
while aspiring to keep it together

Matsuo Basho, Nozarashi kikō, New Year, 1685

toshi (year) kurenu (getting dark, fading) kasa (covering hat, often made of bamboo) kite waraji (straw sandals) haki (can mean drive or ambition) nagara (while, simultaneously)

Maybe Basho’s student is aspiring to find a little more meaning in an otherwise straight forward haiku. Most transalators do no better than to say,

“Another year is gone, and I still wear a bamboo hat and straw sandals.”

Americans have a saying “squeeze the lemon” which can mean getting the last ounce of goodness out of something. A pejorative twist is to get everything you can from another person, for good or bad. And then sometimes, when you squeeze a lemon all you get is lemon juice, meaning “that’s it.”

Bashō no yōna often thinks there is more to a haiku, and there isn’t.

The Lunar New Year this year comes February the 10th. It will be the year of the dragon, which I suppose is something. And if you are born this year then you are naturally lucky and gifted.

Squeeze the lemon
All you get
is lemon juice
.
easy peasy
lemon squeezy
that was easy
.
mi kasa
y su kasa
make two kasa

Bashō no yōna
Toshi kurenu . kasa kite waraji . haki nagara

Spring

Spring has Sprung

Matsuo Munefusa, as he was then known, wrote this haiku when he was only nineteen.

It is only the twenty ninth (of January), yet Spring has sprung (Risshun, 立春).

春や来し年や行きけん小晦日

haru ya koshi | oh spring, has sprung
toshi ya yukiken | year after year is gone,
kotsugomori | it’s New Year’s Eve

Matsuo Chūemon Munefusa, Matsuo Basho, Spring, 1663

If it was still January, then Spring was early for the budding poet. For the Lunar New Year took place on February the 8th.

This haiku, like many others that I have translated, comes back again and again, year after year, like Spring, then gone.

This is the first known haiku by the poet who would one day become Matsuo Basho. It was written in the Spring of 1663. The young poet was then a servant to his samurai master, Tōdō Yoshitada.

One has to ask …

The Japanese, like the Chinese (and not unlike the ancient Egyptians), used a lunar calendar to calculate when to plant, harvest, and celebrate the cycles of the year. Already, the young poet who would become Matsuo Basho was

Spring, by Oriental reckoning, begins in February when it is still very cold, but the first signs of Spring can be seen in a few blades of green grass that sprout, the swelling buds on trees, and a warm breeze.

haru ya koshi | oh spring, has sprung

Lunar Calendar

coffee cup, glasses, and calendar

Shin’nen’omedetō 新年おめでとう,

Happy New Year!” Matsuo Basho and Bashō no yōna send you greetings, wishing you and yours peace and harmony throughout the year.

Japanese Lunar Calendar

The Roman calendar had the two-faced god Janus looking backwards and forwards. So, it is not surprising that the Japanese lunar calendar should start with February, not January. For an agricultural society whose lives revolved around the moon it is perfectly logical to want to begin a new year one month after the Winter Solstice (December 21st).

That was, after all, the shortest day of the year.

Thus, the Japanese lunar year often begins in the month we call February. But beware! Because the Gregorian Calendar has been adopted in Japan, one will often see Shiwasu (January) as December, presumably on the theory that shoppers are scurrying to buy presents and celebrate the end of the year as December 31st.

Here are the names of the Japanese lunar months.

February Mutsuki    睦月Month of Peace and Harmony
MarchKisaragi   如月Month to Change Clothing
AprilYayoi    弥生   Plants Begin to Grow
May Uzuki   卯月     Month of Deutzia (Flower Blossoms)
JuneSatsuki   皐月 Month to Plant Rice
JulyMinazuki   水無月Month of Water, Flooding
AugustFumizuki  文月Month of Literature, Arts
SeptemberHazuki   葉月Month of Leaves, Leaves Turning Color
OctoberNagatsuki   長月Long Month*
NovemberKannazuki  神無月Month of no Gods
DecemberShimotsuki  霜月Month of Frost
JanuaryShiwasu  師走    Month of Running Priests
Traditional Japanese Lunar Calendar

Notes

February, it is too cold to fight. Isn’t it sweet to begin a New Year not running around but in peace and harmony.

March, the weather keeps changing from cold to warm and back again. And so do the clothes.

April, Spring is in the air, the earth turns green.

May, Cherry trees blossom.

June, plant rice because the summer monsoon rains will soon begin.

July, the rice paddies are flooded.

August, in between the planting and harvesting there is time to read and write.

September, the leaves on the trees turn glorious colors.

October, long because the farmer is harvesting the crops.

November, godless because the gods are off somewhere. The leaves from the tree fallen, brown and black, the earth being bitter and cold.

January, running priest, hurrying to get ready for Lunar New Year.

Japanese lunar calendar