Leaf 319 – Reflections
Last year I went on another of
my poetic pilgrimages in search of the haiku master, Matsuo Bashō.
I have previously visited several sites in different parts of Japan connected
to, or commemorating Bashō, such as Matsushima (see here). But
this was my first time to visit Soka Matsubara, a pleasant paved walkway lined with pine trees on the Ayase River in north-eastern Tokyo, which was created to mark the first stopping point on
Bashō’s
famous route as recorded in his travel diary, ‘Oku no Hosomichi’ (‘Narrow
Road to the Deep North’), in 1689. While Bashō set out in spring, I visited Soka Matsubara at the start of autumn – a reality the following paired-poems reflect, but
also one which is mirrored in the realisation that I am now several years older
than Bashō was when he set out on this, probably his most famous
journey. ‘Matsubara’ means ‘pine grove.’
Soka Matsubara
shading the river
into autumn.
***
Following the ink flow –
Bashō and Sora
travelling north.
The second of these two haiku was originally written and posted on Bluesky in response to a #haikufeels writing prompt: 'travel.'
Photographs by Tim Chamberlain