The Priest and the Willow

The Priest and the Willow (遊行柳, Yugyō yanagi) is a Noh play based on the experiences of the 12th-century poet and travelling-monk Saigyō.[1]

Scene from Yugyō yanagi; woodblock print by Kōgyo Tsukioka from the series Nōgaku zue or Pictures of Noh Plays

Original kernel edit

Saigyō was travelling to North Japan, when he sat in the shade of a willow-tree, later identified by Bashō as being close to the village of Ashino,[2] and wrote a waka: " ‘Just a brief stop,’/ I said when stepping off the road/into a willow's shade/where a bubbling stream flows by,/as has time since my ‘brief stop’ began".[3]

Main theme edit

A wandering priest, Yugyō Shonin, is given directions by an old man who recites Saigyō's poem before vanishing: the priest then realises it was the spirit of the willow tree.[4] By reciting a prayer to Amida Buddha, he enables the spirit to attain Buddhahood, for which the willow spirit thanks him in a dance sequence.[5]

Later developments edit

Buson wrote a haiku on rocks and willows underneath the Pilgrim's Willow Tree, alluding to the Noh play.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ L Zolbrod, Haiku Painting (Tokyo 1982) p. 14
  2. ^ Basho, The Narrow Road to the Deep North (Penguin 1983) p. 105
  3. ^ W LaFleur trans, Awesome Nightfall (Boston 2003) p. 143
  4. ^ Summary and Highlights of Yugyō yanagi
  5. ^ Summary and Highlights of Yugyō yanagi
  6. ^ L Zolbrod, Haiku Painting (Tokyo 1982) p. 12

External links edit