tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7618037172759094056.post8000809393465947468..comments2024-03-28T22:18:49.598+01:00Comments on One Hundred Mountains: Images and ink (11)Project Hyakumeizanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04260637418886330553noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7618037172759094056.post-17611573278149146102011-11-22T21:53:28.286+01:002011-11-22T21:53:28.286+01:00Sapphire: you "Gaden-Insui" always great...Sapphire: you "Gaden-Insui" always greatly enhances this humble blog. Many thanks for the reference to Kusano's dragon poem - I shall look it up next time I visit the collection of his poems - I say ' visit ' because I discovered the book quite by accident while looking for something else deep in the stacks of the Zurich Central Library. He seems to be the modern poet of Mt Fuji...Project Hyakumeizanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04260637418886330553noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7618037172759094056.post-21301332863976147782011-11-22T09:32:01.918+01:002011-11-22T09:32:01.918+01:00Beautifully translated!! This conveys vividly the ...Beautifully translated!! This conveys vividly the majesty and grandeur of Fuji! <br /><br />I suppose you know well that Kusano Shinpei depicts a sapphire dragon who lives in the sky over Fuji so charmingly in the poem "満月の海に: In a Full Moon Sea" in the Fuji series. The dragon has a ruby dot on its tail. The dragon's sapphire perpendicular line is lovely. I'm glad that Kusano's Fuji has this dragon as well as other dragons(surely metaphors). Oh sorry. My comment must be "Gaden Insui: 我田引水).☆sapphirehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13444996989089740303noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7618037172759094056.post-19107557588341715082011-11-16T23:11:16.142+01:002011-11-16T23:11:16.142+01:00You just touched Mankind's soul. Great job!You just touched Mankind's soul. Great job!Kittie Howardhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07756250649095903317noreply@blogger.com