The poetry of death
Mostly unheard of in Western culture, where the document most commonly associated with death is a will—a binding legal document descriptive of property but little poetry, jisei, or death poetry, is a poem completed near the time of death; a profound, personal epitaph for a once in a lifetime event—suitably fitting farewell to one’s life.
While death as a theme in poetry is not uncommon; witness death as one of the main themes of Emily Dickinson:
More than the Grave is closed to me
More than the Grave is closed to me –
The Grave and that Eternity
To which the Grave adheres –
I cling to nowhere till I fall –
The Crash of nothing, yet of all –
How similar appears –
—Emily Dickinson
or as sublime meditation on the nature of reality:
I and Death
My body saw death
Without fear.
My heart conquered death
With love.
My soul embraced death
With compassion.
I employ death
With no hesitation.
—Sri Chinmoy
—a poem written to mark one’s own death, or more accurately, to uniquely commemorate a life lived, is a practise that reached its eventual refinement in Japan, in Zen Buddhism in particular. It was also common in China until the twentieth century.
Jisei by convention are written in a graceful, natural manner, and never mention death explicitly, using instead metaphoric references to nature, often in the form of sunsets, autumn or falling cherry blossoms:
When autumn winds blow
not one leaf remains
the way it was.
—Togyu
As elsewhere in Japanese art, feelings of bitter-sweetness and impermanence dominate, a feature of the Zen Buddhist informed aesthetic mono no aware (a sensitivity to things), a conception of beauty virtually part of the national character.
While the popular image of jisei is as a part of ceremonial seppuku (Japanese ritual suicide), death poems were also written by Zen monks, haiku poets, and from ancient times literate people on their deathbed.
Poems were not always composed the moment before death; respected poets would sometimes be consulted well in advance for their assistance, and even after death one’s poem could be polished or even rewritten by others—a deed never mentioned lest the deceased’s legacy be tarnished.
Had I not known
that I was dead
already
I would have mourned
the loss of my life.
—Ota Dokan
Normally highly poetic and somewhat oblique, jisei could also contain elements of a traditional will; not the mundane affairs of an estate to be settled, but for example reconciling differences between estranged relatives.
Prominent exponents of jisei include the famous haiku poet Basho; Asano Naganori, the daimyo (fuedal leader) whose forced suicide was avenged by the forty-seven ronin—now almost a national myth; and Yukio Mishima, prominent Japanese writer of the mid-twentieth century who inexplicably committed traditional seppuku in 1970:
Yukio Mishima’s Death Poem
A small night storm blows
Saying ‘falling is the essence of a flower’
Preceding those who hesitate
—Yukio Mishima

Exquisite blog!
;O)
Lyra’s last blog post..Subversão
Thank you Lyra! I am beginning Spanish lessons right now so that I can return an informed compliment about your blog.
Hello again ;O)
It´s ok, you can always start by reading my English post:
http://alinguagemdocaos.blogspot.com/2008/03/fractal-poetry.html
Greetings
Lyra’s last blog post..A vida é…
well said… suitably fitting farewell to one’s life.
savannah’s last blog post..one monday in madrid
I re-published Mishima’s Death Poem in my blog, I hope it’s not a problem. Yours is a very interesting space and I plan to follow it.
___
I don’t think that Mishima committed seppuku “inexplicably”. His mind went through a personal hell during his adolescence and youth; his plays and novels announced a continuous, tiring hunger for destruction and rebirth, a longing for a romantic past that drove him to the dramatic, if not operatic, storming of the military headquarters where he and his favorite pupils committed seppuku.
To me it was perfectly logical and beautiful.
.-= Carlos Mal Pacheco´s last blog ..EL POEMA DE DESPEDIDA DE MISHIMA =-.
Thanks for the comment Carlos, and for reading. You may have inspired another post on the topic, so, selfishly keeping a substantial reply to myself for now, I’ll keep my words and comments brief. Would it be rude of me though to ask for a link back? Believe it or not I did actual offline research to discover Mishima’s death poem—reading books something of a strange concept these internet generated days. I may even publish his second death poem one day…
.-= Jaitra´s last blog ..Short Black Temper =-.
Mr. Jaitra, I supposed you had dug up that death poem from books and actual research, because yours was the only effective result I got after searching for Mishima’s jeisei, and that’s why I asked your authorisation for to publish your finding.
I would love to read more about Mishima, keep it up!
.-= Carlos Mal Pacheco´s last blog ..EL POEMA DE DESPEDIDA DE MISHIMA =-.
Like your poetry. I love reading poetry and writing it. Lately I’ve been posting a lot of love poems on http://www.unitedworldpoets.com. The site is running a free poetry contest this month that has a cash prize I’m hoping to win, wish me luck. Writing poetry is how I release my emotions.
While I have my doubts that you are a real person ilovepoetry, flattery is a sure fire way to publication on this blog, even if said poems are not actually by myself.
.-= Jaitra´s last blog ..The Zen of the Hubble Deep Field =-.
This is very, very interesting – I hadn’t heard of jisei before. I’ve bookmarked the post; Ota Dokan’s statement/poem is something I really need to put in my journal, and the Togyu poem is terribly wonderful.
.-= ashok´s last blog ..Emily Dickinson- “It is an honorable Thought” 946 =-.
Thanks for visiting Ashok. I will keep an interested eye on your fine journal, as I’ve barely even scratched the surface of this particular topic or said poets.