Brian Hancock Posted May 5, 2009 Report Posted May 5, 2009 Hi All, Just recieved a tanto from Aoi-Art and this is the Fuchi that is on it. Could someone give a translation? I think it may be a poem? Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks, Brian. Quote
Markus Posted May 5, 2009 Report Posted May 5, 2009 Hi Brian, This is a poem of Takarai Kikaku, one of the best pupils of Matsuo Bashô. It was intended for praying for rain, and reads: "Yûdachi ya ta o meguri no kami naraba" (夕立や田を三めぐりの神ならば) "If I was just the god responsible for the evening shower and the fields." Quote
Brian Hancock Posted May 5, 2009 Author Report Posted May 5, 2009 Hi Markus, Many thanks. Its a very big help. Regards, Brian Quote
Nobody Posted May 9, 2009 Report Posted May 9, 2009 Markus said: "Yûdachi ya ta o meguri no kami naraba" (夕立や田を三めぐりの神ならば) "If I was just the god responsible for the evening shower and the fields." May I add a little correction? "Yûdachi ya ta o mimeguri no kami naraba" There are other interpretations such as ...... - An evening shower falls. That is natural if you are the god responsible for the fields. - An evening shower falls. That must be the sign of the god watching the fields. BTW, “ya” in the context Yudachi ya (夕立や) does not mean “and”. Quote
Brian Hancock Posted May 9, 2009 Author Report Posted May 9, 2009 Thank you Koichi San. Very much appreciated. Brian. Quote
SteveM Posted May 10, 2009 Report Posted May 10, 2009 Koichi-san, Did you think it was significant that the person used 「三めぐり」, rather than 「見めぐり」, which contains the kanji one would expect to see in this poem? I read this as a kind of pun, replacing "God responsible for the fields" with "God from Mimeguri Shrine". (三囲神社). Or, maybe not a pun, but a kind of invocation of this god. SteveM (getting back into this after a long hiatus away from swords and tosogu) Quote
Nobody Posted May 10, 2009 Report Posted May 10, 2009 Steve, you are absolutely correct. I noticed the pun about 三めぐり and 見めぐり. I omitted the point only because of my lack of English ability. Mimeguri Shrine: http://ocean-geek.ld.infoseek.co.jp/pho ... eguri.html Quote
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