Kakinomoto Hitomaro

Kakinomoto Hitomaro
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
Kakinomoto
Hitomaro, also called Kakinomoto no Hitomaro (d.
708, Japan), poet venerated by the Japanese since
earliest times. He was also Japan’s first great
literary figure.
Among his surviving
works are poems in the two major Japanese poetic
forms of his day—tanka and chōka. Probably he also
wrote sedōka (“head-repeated poem,” consisting of
two three-line verses of 5, 7, 7 syllables), a
relatively minor song form that seems to have been
first adapted to literary purposes by Hitomaro and
to have barely survived him. All of the poems
accepted as indisputably authored by Hitomaro (61
tanka and 16 chōka), as well as a large number of
others attributed to him, are to be found in the
Man’yōshū (“Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves”), the
first and largest of Japan’s anthologies of native
poetry. These poems, together with notes by the
compilers, are the chief source for information on
his life, about which very little is known.
Hitomaro is
believed to have been born and reared near Nara. He
entered the service of the court in a minor
capacity, serving successively two imperial princes;
imperial activities are celebrated in some of his
most famous poems. Later he became a provincial
official, and he is believed to have died in Iwami
province (now Shimane prefecture). He seems to have
had at least two wives.
Standing on the
threshold of Japan’s emergence from a preliterate to
a literate, civilized society, Hitomaro achieved in
his poems a splendid balance between the homely
qualities of primitive song and the more
sophisticated interests and literary techniques of a
new age. He inherited the stiff techniques, plain
imagery, and restricted range and subject matter—the
traditional “word hoard”—of preliterate song. To
that inheritance he added new subjects, modes, and
concerns, as well as new rhetorical and other
structural techniques (some of which may have been
adapted from Chinese poetry), along with a new
seriousness and importance of treatment and tone.
Many of his longer poems are introduced by a kind of
solemn “overture,” relating the present with the
divine past of the Japanese land and people.
All of Hitomaro’s
poems are suffused with a deep personal lyricism and
with a broad humanity and sense of identity with
others. Outstanding among his works are his poem on
the ruined capital at Ōmi; his celebration of Prince
Karu’s journey to the plains of Aki; two poems each
on the death of his first wife and on parting from
his second; his lament on the death of Prince
Takechi; and his poem composed on finding the body
of a man on the island of Samine.