Ise no Taifu
Ise no Taifu (伊勢大輔), also known as Ise no Tayū or Ise no Ōsuke, was a Japanese poet active in the early 11th century.
She is one of the later Thirty-six Poetry Immortals, and one of her poems is included in the Ogura Hyakunin Isshu. Her contemporaries include Uma no Naishi, Murasaki Shikibu, and Sei Shōnagon. A diptych of her exists in Nihon Meijo Banashi (Stories of Famous Japanese Women), implying that although little of her work exists into modernity, she was considered a critically important figurehead of the waka poetry movement, both as a Poetry Immortal and as a woman of renown.
Her grandfather Ōnakatomi no Yoshinobu was also an important waka poet.
Poetry
Only a few of no Taifu's poems have survived into modernity, translated in part due to Waka poetry anthologies:
Japanese[1][2] | Rōmaji | English[1] |
散り積もる |
Chiritsumoru |
Scattered and drifted are |
One of her poems was included in the Ogura Hyakunin Isshu:
Japanese | Rōmaji | English[3] |
いにしへの |
Inishie no |
The double cherry trees |
Below is another of her poems, translated in the Asia-Pacific Journal:
Japanese | Rōmaji | English[4] |
おき明かし |
Oki akashi |
Peering hour after sleepless hour |
References
- "Ise no Taifu-shū 140 | Waka Poetry". www.wakapoetry.net. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
- A waka anthology. Cranston, Edwin A., 1993-. Stanford, California. ISBN 0804719225. OCLC 25163677.CS1 maint: others (link)
- Motoori, Norinaga (2007). Michael F. Marra (ed.). The Poetics of Motoori Norinaga: A Hermeneutical Journey. University of Hawaii Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-8248-3078-6.
- "Goshūi wakashū, poem 295 by Ise no Taifu". Retrieved 2018-10-22.