Kambara Ariake

Kambara Ariake (Japanese蒲 原 有 明, actually: Kambara Hayao (蒲 原 隼 雄), born March 15, 1876 in Tokyo, † February 3, 1952 ) was a Japanese poet.

Kambara began writing poetry as a teenager under the influence of the verses of Byron and Heine. After the completion of Kokumin Eigakkai, an English school in Tokyo, he founded with Hayashida Shunchō and Yamagishi Kayō the literary magazine Ochibo Zoshi (落 穂 双 纸). Here is his first novel Aki no Yamazato appeared. With a second novel, Daijihi, he won a prize at the 1898 literary contest of the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun.

After that, Kambara turned not to the lyrics. Under the influence of works by English poets such as John Keats and Dante Gabriel Rossetti poems arose after the Kojiki and the Fudoki, which appeared from 1902 in several collections of poetry. In the Ariake Shū Collection ( Ariakes collection ), he led the European form of a sonnet vierzehnzeiligen in Japanese poetry. He was next to Susukida Kyūkin the most important representative of Symbolism in Japan.

Swell

  • Kamakura City, Kamakura 's Literary Figures - Biography
  • Araka Takeda: exuberance by excess ( PDF; 311 kB) in " summer grass " ( Journal of the German Haiku Society) pp. 14-15
  • Literature (Japanese)
  • Literature ( 20th century)
  • Author
  • Poetry
  • Novel, epic
  • Japanese
  • Man
  • Born 1876
  • Died in 1952
  • Pseudonym
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