Though I go to youThe poem appeares as No. 658 in the Kokin Wakashu, an old anthology of poems from the 12th century. Komachi was a classic even at that time: she lived in the 9th century.
ceaselessly along dream paths,
the sum of those trysts
is less than a single glimpse
granted in the waking world.
|
|
in [my] dreams / along dream pathskayoedomo is from kayou "to commute", "to come and go". kayoe is the izenkei form; domo is a suffix like keredo, meaning "although...". hitome means "a glimpse". Usually it is written as 一目, but hito also means "a person", so hitome implies by this ambiguity that its a glimpse of a person, and a loved one. Anyway, this is a love poem...
without resting my legs
[I] go often [to you]
in the real world, a single glimpse
is different.
mishi is the rentaikei of miki, the past tense of miru, "to see". In modern Japanese, it would be mita.
arazu means "there is no" (arimasen in modern Japanese), and "it is not, it is different" (de wa nai).
Actually, somewhere I read another translation of this poem, I cant recall it exactly, but something like this:
"I go often to you in my dreams, but I never see you in the real world."
In a way, this is a possible translation too, but then, where is the poesie?
BITCOIN Donations are welcome!
1BzSWA5mN7r2ZDn61VTvHzzUePqGrFEMmg
WORD OF THE DAY!
JAPAN!
Very nice. My heart goes out to Japan. What a tragedy.
ReplyDeleteI hope the worst is behind them.
ReplyDeleteNice. Heart goes out to Japan
ReplyDeletei am certainly praying for japan every morning and night.
ReplyDeletemother nature can be as bad as terrorist sometime!
Nice bro. Thoughts going out to Japan.
ReplyDeleteawesome poem!
ReplyDeleteCool poem
ReplyDeletedefinitely praying for japan, im going to send some money when i get a chance
ReplyDeleteBeautiful
ReplyDeleteI have to say that one of the coolest things to happen this year, is the way that the world seems to be all coming together for Japan. It's an excellent sign that human beings are becoming more empathic as our technology connects us more...
ReplyDeletereally beautiful...
ReplyDeleteIs that japanese poem about meeting a porn star in real life?
ReplyDeletehey poetry. i see you're still keepin it real. good stuff
ReplyDelete