A Japanese Master Captures Spring in Seventeen Syllables
Matsuo Basho (1644–1694, Japan) walked hundreds of miles across Japan, carrying little more than a notebook and a willingness to notice. He turned observation into an art form, finding profundity in the most fleeting moments. Here's his most famous haiku, translated by R.H. Blyth:
The old pond—
A frog jumps in,
The sound of water.
About This Poem
Basho wrote this haiku in 1686 at his cottage near Edo. Before him, poets filled their verses with nightingales and cherry blossoms, the approved subjects of refined poetry. Basho gave them a frog and a splash. The poem changed Japanese literature. It demonstrated that any moment, observed with full attention, could reveal something worth preserving. The frog breaks the silence. Water responds. The pond returns to stillness. Between these three lines, Basho captures movement and stillness, sound and silence, the momentary and the eternal. He asks you to stop and listen.
You can practice Basho's approach this week. Pick a spot where you spend time: your kitchen window, a park bench, the corner where you wait for the bus. Visit it three mornings in a row. Notice what changes and what stays the same. Watch how light shifts, how sounds layer, how small movements interrupt stillness. You don't need to write a haiku, though you could try. The practice itself teaches you something. Attention transforms ordinary moments into something richer.
If You Liked This
Read more haiku by Kobayashi Issa, another Japanese master who found beauty in small creatures and everyday struggles. His frog poems rival Basho's, and his compassion for sparrows, fleas, and snails will make you see your own backyard differently.
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