4384339A Hundred Verses from Old Japan — Poem 98William Ninnis PorterFujiwara no Ietaka

98


JŪNII IYE-TAKA

Kaze soyogu
Nara no ogawa no
Yūgure wa
Misogi zo natsu no
Shirushi nari keri.


THE OFFICIAL IYE-TAKA

The twilight dim, the gentle breeze
By Nara’s little stream,
The splash of worshippers who wash
Before the shrine, all seem
A perfect summer’s dream.


Iye-taka was another of the great Fujiwara family; he died in the year 1237.

The word misogi means the Shinto ceremony of purifying the body before worship by washing or sprinkling with water. This verse is said to have been inscribed on a screen in the apartments of the Empress at Nara.