Home > Miura Chora > Biography full

Miura Chora

*anese poet

Miura Chora (*anese: 三浦樗良, 23 May 1729 – 4 September 1780) was a *anese poet raised in Ise, in the Mie Prefecture of Shima Province on the island of Honshu, *an. He traveled throughout the country composing poems and helped lead the Matsuo Bashō revival movement of the eighteenth century.

Contents

  • 1 Childhood
  • 2 Adulthood and death
  • 3 Sample poems
  • 4 Adaptations
  • 5 References

Childhood

Miura grew up in Shima province with an older sister and a younger brother. His father left his family during Chora's childhood, so his mother took over control of the family. She never remarried and raised her children by herself. Chora was home-schooled as a child. Being neighbors with the Taniguchi family, Chora was close friends with Yosa Buson. They met when Buson was 20 years old, and both admired Matsuo Bashō and Kobayashi Issa.

Adulthood and death

In an article for the periodical Early Modern *an, Cheryl Crowley wrote, "Chora . . . studied with disciples of Bakurin, a leader of a rural Bashō school. Chora was a successful haikai master with numerous students, although he had a reputation for being irresponsible and profligate in his ways. He spent several years in Kyoto in the early part of the 1770s, and his work frequently appears in sequences composed by Buson and his colleagues around this time." In addition, R.H. Blyth notes that “Ryoto had set up the Ise School, followed by Otsuya and others, but gradually it became worldly. He worked together with poets such as Yosa Buson (1716-1783), Takai Kitô (1741-1789), and Wada Ranzan (d.1773). Chora brought it back to the poetry and simplicity of Matsuo Bashō.”

Chora was struck with serious leukemia and died on September 4, 1780.

Sample poems

Haiku

Watching the stars
through willow branches
makes me feel lonely.

A storm-wind blows
Out from among the gr*es
A full moon grows

at the ancient shrine
tarnished gold-foil... and green leaves
awakening time

insects
scattering in the gr*es—
sound-colours

Kasen Renga

During his life, Chora participated in many collaboratively written poems called haikai no renga, especially the 36-verse form known as kasen. He helped write the following kasen *led "Susuki Mitsu" ("Seeing Micanthus" or "Having Seen Pampas Gr*") along with the poets Buson, Kitô, and Ranzan. It was later published in the *anese anthology Kono hotori--Ichi-ya shi-kasen (この辺り一夜四歌仙).

Adaptations

Ronald Caltabiano (1959-) used one of Chora's haiku in his song "First Dream of Honeysuckle Petals Falling Alone," composed in 1978 for mezzo-soprano and piano.

References