Despite the fact that the two authors, Kino Turayuki and Matsuo Bash lived in different eras, they also made a wonderful travel diary. Tosa diary is the first well-written travel diary in Japan and shows you how to write a diary. The back street is developed from the first Dijoniki diary style. In this article, I would like to talk about the life of "Tree no Yuki" and "Matsuo Basho". Then I will show you how their diaries differ. These diaries are very different, but they are all written to help people in Japan.
The origin of Kiko and travel literature in Japan has been over 1000 years. One of the earliest examples of Kiko is Endo Nikki, the most probable diary written in 935 in the Heian period of Japan, Tsurugi Tree. Another important example of Kiko is that it is very similar to Tosanikki Kiso Tsuruyuki as one of the reasons that it has been separated in composition for years. A narrow northern narrow road, this is a description of the Edo period in the late 17th century.
Tosa diary is a poetic diary written anonymously by Tsukiyuki Tree of the 10th century Japanese poet. This article explains the details of the journey back to Kyoto over 55 days from Tosa in 935. The record of the prose of the trip was interrupted by Japanese poetry, and where it was reported it was written on the spot on the spot. Tosa diary is the first remarkable example of a Japanese diary as a literature. Until that time, the word "Nikki" represented a dry official record of the government and housework written by the Chinese. On the other hand, Tosa diary is written in Japanese using a phonetic. The characters in this era used pseudonyms and Chinese sentences, but females are usually not taught by the latter but are limited to literature of pseudonyms.
TOSA DIARY was written in 935 by a famous Japanese scholar, poet, administrative officer, Tsutsugu Tree lived in the reign of Susa Emperor. Tsuruyuki who served as Governor Tosa in Shikoku recorded the diary in commemoration of the trip after returning to the capital Kyoto. This is the work that survived the earliest in Japanese prose. There are other diaries in this period. The great novelist Murasaki Kibu (the first name is taken from her book Genji Monogatori, the second name is the honorific noun her father was entitled to). That name is ritual and not personal. ) During the same period, it was an adjunct to the court and had a diary called Pillow Book. These diaries are widespread in order to show the exquisiteness and culture of their writers. They are full of details of other personal findings and court procedures unknown.