Old Poetry Old Poetry Poetry Poets Essays Forums

Sugawara Takesue no Musume

I lived from 1009-1070. I was from Japan, and am in the Asian category.

This author's name means "daughter of Sugawara no Takasue"; she was born in Kyoto but raised in the east when her father was an assistant governor. In Sarashina nikki she tells her story from age 12 to about age 52. Until she was about 30, she tells us, she did little but read tales like Murasaki Shikibu's "Menji monogatari"; then for about five years she was at court as an attendant to a princess. When she was about 36, she married and had several children. Once married, she was free to travel, and her pleasure in making pilgrimages and seeing natural landscape seems to have taken the place of her earlier escape into tales. When she was about 49, her husband died, and she started to take more seriously the Buddhism she had until then treated lightly. The meaning of the traditional title of Sarashina nikki isn't clear: Sarashina is the name of a province referred to in one of the poems (and the subject of a legend of an old woman abandoned by her relatives), but the word itself is not used in the memoir.

Read full description by GypsyDreamer, OP Research Team...

My poetry

  • Ah, me! Ah, me! My weary doom to labour here in the Palace!
    Seven good wine-jars have I - and three in my province.
    9 lines, 1 comment
  • No sight can be more autumnal
    than that of my garden
    4 lines
  • You gave me words of hope, are they not long delayed?
    The plum-tree is remembered by the Spring,
    3 lines
  • This is the night when in the ancient Past,
    The Herder Star embarked to meet the Weaving One;
    10 lines
  • When from the neighbouring garden the perfume-laden air
    Saturates my soul with memories,
    4 lines
  • Years have passed and only sounds of waters have come to my ears,
    To-day, indeed, I may even count the ripples around the fishing net.
    22 lines
  • I yearn for a tranquil moment
    To be out upon the sea of harmony,
    4 lines
  • Scarce had my mind received with wonder
    The thought of newly fallen snow -
    5 lines
  • In the dead of night, moon-gazing,
    The thought of the deep mountain affrighted,
    4 lines

Start a forum topic about this poet

, Content