The two great poetry collections of the classical period in Japan are the Manyôshû and Kokinshû. The Manyôshû, compiled in the seventh century, is the earliest existing anthology of poems and includes both long and short forms. The Kokinshû, compiled from the eighth to tenth centuries, was the first collection of poems of the short form, called waka (or tanka), the thirty-one syllable classical poetic form. The Kokinshû provided the standard of poetic knowledge for educated people and waka became the model poetic form for the next 1,000 years.
Reading Poems from the Manyôshû
Waka Poems from the Kokinshû
Notes (3) Ki no Tsurayuki, Kokinshû 297.
Exercises 1) How do the poems from the Manyôshû and Kokinshû compare in length, tone, and subject matter? Write down your observations. 2) Which collection's poems uses language that is more indirect? 3) From your study of waka poetry, what qualities do you think were valued in the aristocratic society of classical Japan? 4) In the Manyôshû poem, the writer compares his wife's love for him to "bending seaweed." How do the metaphors used in Japanese poetry reflect characteristics of Japanese society and geography? Can you think of metaphors used in English that reflect Western society or geography?
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