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Bashô's Narrow Road to the Deep North |
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The Narrow Road to the Deep North is the most famous of Bashô's
travel accounts and details his journey to the then remote reaches of
northern Japan. In this diary, Bashô through his highly accomplished
mixture of poetry and prose not only takes readers through the details
of his actual journey but also takes them on a spiritual journey as well.
Reading
Days and months are travelers of eternity. So are the years that
pass by. Those who steer a boat across the sea, or drive a horse over
the earth till they succumb to the weight of years, spend every
minute of their lives travelling. There are a great number of
ancients, too, who died on the road. I myself have been tempted for a
long time by the cloud-moving wind - filled with a strong desire to
wander.
In this little book of travel is included everything under the sky
- not only that which is hoary and dry but also that which is young
and colorful, not only that which is strong and imposing but also
that which is feeble and ephemeral. As we turn every corner of the
Narrow Road to the Deep North, we sometimes stand up unawares to
applaud and we sometimes fall flat to resist the agonizing pains we
feel in the depths of our hearts. There are also times when we feel
like taking to the road ourselves, seizing the raincoat lying near
by, or times when we feel like sitting down till our legs take root,
enjoying the scene we picture before our eyes.
Yuasa, Nobuyuki, trans., The Narrow Road to the Deep North
and Other Travel Sketches (Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, Ltd.,
1966) pp. 97, 143.
Exercises
1) What is meant by the expression "journey through life"? How
does Bashô use his trip to the north of Japan as a metaphor for
the experience of life?
2) Go on an excursion and write your own travel diary, mixing poetry and prose.
You should not have to go far to find poetic or philosophical inspiration.
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Contemporary Japan: A Teaching Workbook
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