This section contains 1,564 words (approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: An introduction to Ten Thousand Leaves: Love Poems from the “Manyoshu,” The Overlook Press, 1986, pp. 7-11.
In the following excerpt, Wright comments on the prevalence of love poetry in the Manyoshu.
The Manyōshū “needs no apologies,” Donald Keene writes in the introduction to his Anthology of Japanese Literature. “It is one of the world's great collections of poetry.”1 The title of this outstanding work, Manyōshū, translates literally as “A Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves,” but through implication Manyōshū can also mean “A Collection for Myriad Ages.” Compiled in its final form during the eighth century, the anthology contains 4,516 poems arranged in twenty volumes. Embodying strength of feeling, sincerity, and simplicity, these poems have been honored as the purest expression of the early Japanese spirit.
Much of the Manyōshū's richness is derived from the varied backgrounds of its over four hundred known contributors...
This section contains 1,564 words (approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page) |