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  2. Chōyaku Hyakunin isshu: Uta Koi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chōyaku_Hyakunin_isshu...

    Chōyaku Hyakunin Isshu: Uta Koi (超訳百人一首 うた恋い) (English: "One Hundred Poems Super Translation: Love Song") is a Japanese historical Josei manga written and illustrated by Kei Sugita, and published by Media Factory. An anime adaptation by TYO Animations began airing in July 2012.

  3. Sōmon (poetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sōmon_(poetry)

    The majority of these are love poems exchanged between men and women, [2] but they are not all love poems, [3] and the term also covers poems exchanged between friends, [1] parents and children, [3] and siblings. [3] One example of the latter group is the following poem (MYS II : 103) by Princess Ōku about her younger brother Prince Ōtsu: [3]

  4. Lady Kasa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Kasa

    Lady Kasa (笠郎女, Kasa no Iratsume) was a Japanese female waka poet of the early 8th century.. Little is known of her except what is preserved in her 29 surviving poems in the Man'yōshū; all these were love poems addressed to her lover Ōtomo no Yakamochi who compiled the Man'yōshū (and who is known to have had at least 14 other lovers and to have broken up with her).

  5. Ryūka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryūka

    Of these classifications, love poetry is well described in ryūka. Peculiar is the smallpox poetry; the purpose of glorification of smallpox demon is improvement from deadly infection of smallpox. [5] There is a collection of smallpox poetry including 105 poems published in 1805. [6] Ryūka as poems gained a wider audience after the formal ...

  6. Dodoitsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodoitsu

    Dodoitsu (都々逸) is a form of Japanese poetry developed towards the end of the Edo period.Often concerning love or work, and usually comical, Dodoitsu poems consist of four lines with the moraic structure 7-7-7-5 and no rhyme for a total of 26 morae, making it one of the longer Japanese forms.

  7. Midaregami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midaregami

    Midaregami (みだれ髪, Tangled hair) is a collection of tanka (短歌, “Short poem”), written by the Japanese writer Akiko Yosano during the Meiji period in 1901. [1] Although later celebrated for its softly feminist depictions of a woman's sexual freedom , her work suffered heavy criticism at the time of publication for subverting ...

  8. Ame ni mo makezu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ame_ni_mo_makezu

    The poem was popularized by being recorded in "Kaze no Matasaburo", a collection of works for children published in 1939. On April 11, 2011, the poem was read aloud in English by the President of the Cathedral of Samuel Lloyd III at a memorial service was held at the National Cathedral in Washington to mourn the victims of the Great East Japan ...

  9. Omoro Sōshi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omoro_Sōshi

    The Omoro Sōshi (おもろさうし, Okinawan: Umuru U-Sōshi, [1] Northern Ryukyuan: おもろおさうし Omoro O-Saushi) is a compilation of ancient poems and songs from Okinawa and the Amami Islands, collected into 22 volumes and written primarily in hiragana with some simple kanji. There are 1,553 poems in the collection, but many are ...