Tag Archives: dozing

Sumiyoshi-sha uta’awase kaō ni-nen 43

Round Eighteen

Left (Tie)

なにはがたあしのまろやのたびねにはしぐれはのきのしづくにぞしる

naniwagata
ashi no maroya no
tabine ni wa
shigure wa noki no
shizuku ni zo shiru
In Naniwa’s tidelands,
In a reed-roofed hut,
Dozing on my travels—
A shower by the eaves
Dripping droplets is revealed!

Lord Tsunemori
85

Right

つのくにのこやのたびねにしぐれしてなにかはもらむあしのやへぶき

tsu no kuni no
koya no tabine ni
shigureshite
nani ka wa moramu
ashi no yaebuki
In the land of Tsu
In Koya, in a hut dozing on my travels
During a shower—
Will anything drip through
My roof’s eightfold thatch?

Lord Yorisuke
86

Both Left and Right are set in a traveller’s lodge in Sesshū province, but the Left appears to lack configuration and conception, it has long been said that using four of the character in a poem in a poetry match is a fault, but it does not sound to me as if the four uses of no here are a particular problem. With that being said, starting with ‘dozing on my travels’ [tabine ni wa]and then having ‘a shower by the eaves’ [shigure ni wa] uses wa twice and this seems to sound a bit discordant. The Right, while it refers to the same sort of shower from a cloudless sky, starts with ‘during a shower’ and follows this with ‘will anything drip through?’, which seems to sound a bit contradictory. I can’t help but feel it would have been better had it been ‘even though it showers’ and then had ‘will anything’. However, both poems are about reed roofed huts during a shower and it really is difficult to distinguish between them. Thus, I make this a tie.

Sumiyoshi-sha uta’awase kaō ni-nen 41

Round Sixteen

Left

くさまくらたびねさびしきやまかげにこのはさそひてしぐれふるなり

kusamakura
tabine sabishiki
yamakage ni
ko no ha sasoite
shigure furunari
On a grassy pillow,
Dozing on my travels, lonely
In a mountain’s shade,
The rustling of the leaves invites
A shower to fall.

Hyōenosuke
81

Right (Win)

すみのえのまつがはひねをまくらにてなみうちそふるしぐれをぞきく

suminoe no
matsu ga haine o
makura nite
nami uchisouru
shigure o zo kiku
At Suminoe
Upon the crawling pine roots
Have I made my pillow, while
Laced with the breaking waves
I listen to the showers.

Lord Naganori
82

The Left’s configuration of ‘the rustling of the leaves invites’, while dozing on one’s journey in the shadow of a mountain, sounds pleasant. While I do wonder about the Right’s diction—concluding with ‘listen to the showers’—in addition to ‘laced with the breaking waves’ sounding pleasant, it also adds the conception of waves beneath ‘the pines of Suminoe’, doesn’t it. I make the Right the winner.