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Motomaro Senge Edit Profile

元麿 千家

poet

Motomaro Senge was a Japanese poet active during the Taishō and Shōwa periods of Japan.

Background

Motomaro Senge was born on June 8, 1888 in Tokyo as the younger son of the Shinto high priest of Izumo-taisha in Shimane Prefecture, who was also a member of the House of Peers.

Education

He studied at Keio University and at one time was a disciple of Koroku Sato in haiku.

Career

He was a member of the Shirakaba ("White Birch") literary circle, and published many of his poems, which were rather naive and humanitarian in their literary magazine. Save for xenophobic poems written during World War II, his poetry reflects the philosophy of humanism with an optimistic perspective on the world. He was a prolific author, publishing as many as 30-40 works per month. His poems tend toward minimalism and describe everyday events and scenes, without resort to excessive sentimentality.

His anthology, Jibun wa mita ("I Saw", 1918), contains the poem Kuruma no oto ("Noise of the Carts"), which often appears in Japanese collections of Taisho period poetry. His longer work, Mukashi no ie ("House of Long Ago", 1929), is autobiographical, describing his aristocratic background.

Connections

Father:
Takatomi