4/12/2013

Gifts for events

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Daruma Gifts for special Events

gifuto ギフト / ibento イベント




and for the year of the snake, 2013




DARUMART - Daruma Market
Special Gifts for special Events, with the name of a friend or company or event.




- source : rakuten.co.jp/maeki -



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Projet Darum' Art
Un Wiki de voyages et de croyances.





"Standing Daruma"
by Fugai


source : darum-art.wikispaces.com

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CLICK here for more gifts!

- Daruma Gifts - だるま ギフト -


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. Regional Folk Toys from Japan .

. - - - Welcome to Edo 江戸 ! - - -


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2/26/2013

Tatami heri borders

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saifu, purse, see below
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Tatami heri 畳の縁 borders

Details about the
. Tatami floor mats 畳 .  

The heri 縁 border, edges of a tatami mat are made of various materials, with various patterns.

Lately, the use of tatami has become less and less and the heri brocade weavers have found new objects for their products.




- source : vivajieigy.exblog.jp

Pattern for a kozeni ire 小銭入れ purse for coins


small purse




. gamakuchi, gamaguchi がま口 Daruma purse .



saifu 財布 purse
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

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pen case with Daruma ペンケース・だるま


source : nagasakitatami

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- Reference -

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. Regional Folk Toys from Japan .

. - - - Welcome to Edo 江戸 ! - - -

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1/01/2013

Nenga New Year Cards

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Nengajoo 年賀状 New Year Cards 2013

The Year of the Snake





For your first dream, with

Ichi-Fuji, Ni-Taka, San-Nasubi
一富士、二鷹、三茄子
1. Mount Fuji, 2. Hawk, 3. Eggplant

. Hatsuyume (初夢) First Dream .



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source : xxx
チンパ家だるま年賀状 Chinpanze Family


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New Year Sweets with Daruma 歲時亭和菓子
source : 歲時亭和菓子


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- Reference 年賀状 2013 -

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"Daruma - New Year´s greeting"
Maekawa Senpan (1888-1960) - 1933.

For Gabi Greve!
- Shared by Yoshio Kusaba - FB -


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Greetings from Hidenori Sensei, Akita





面壁は窓越しの雪息を張る
menpeki wa madogoshi no yuki iki w haru

zazen before the wall -
snowing outside
taking a deep breath 


Hidenori 秀法



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. Daruma Nengajo of previous years  
Since 2005 !


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12/24/2012

Sencha tea

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Sencha 煎茶 

MAIN ENTRY
- - - 茶 Tea and Daruma - - -  

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Sencha (煎茶) is a Japanese green tea, specifically one made without grinding the tea leaves. The word "sencha" means "decocted tea," referring to the method that the tea beverage is made from the dried tea leaves. This is as opposed, for example, to matcha (抹茶), powdered Japanese green tea, in which case the green tea powder is mixed with hot water and therefore the leaf itself is included in the beverage.



Among the types of Japanese green tea prepared by decoction, "sencha" is distinguished from such specific types as gyokuro and bancha. It is the most popular tea in Japan, and represents about 80 percent of the tea produced in Japan

Depending upon the temperature of the water in which it is decocted, the flavor will be different, and this also is the appeal of sencha. With relatively not too hot water, it is relatively mellow; with hot water, it is more astringent. Unground tea was brought from China after matcha (抹茶, powdered green tea). Some varieties expand when steeped to resemble leaf vegetable greens in smell, appearance, and taste.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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made by itibei

朱泥ダルマ彫煎茶 Cup for sencha
made from shudei 朱泥 red clay from China


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- Reference - Shudei Pottery -
a lot is made in Kyushu, Tokoname . . .


CLICK for more samples !


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source : yudachigama

From the kiln Yudachigama 夕立窯.

This cup can "korokoro" tumble around like Daruma, getting up eight times.


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not related to sencha, however some cups:


source : gotheborg.com

Antique Chinese and Japanese Porcelain Collector's
Jan-Erik Nilsson Gothenburg, Sweden
source : gotheborg.com


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- - - 茶 Tea and Daruma - - -  

. Baisaoo, Baisaō 売茶翁 Baisao, "Old Tea Seller"
賣茶翁 (ばいさおう) / 高遊外 Ko Yugai (1675 – 1763) .

The veneration of Baisao during and after his lifetime helped to popularize sencha tea and led to the creation of the sencha tea ceremony.

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9/04/2012

Carole Davenport

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Carole Davenport Collection

MEDIEVAL TO MODERN:
JAPANESE WORKS OF ART AT

SEPT 8 - 28, New York


DARUMA 18TH CENTURY JAPAN


Carole Davenport announces her fall exhibition,
Medieval to Modern: Japanese Works of Art,
a select exhibition of all fields of Japanese art, from stunning sculpture exemplified by a strong
18th century Daruma figure whose red robes are finely painted in mineral pigments and gold,
to a dramatic and extraordinarily large stencil print by Yoshitoshi Mori executed in 1963, to a fine white porcelain group of two quails from the mid-Edo period.

In celebration of the Rinpa shows at the Metropolitan Museum and the Japan Society, there are ceramic works by Kenzan and his followers as well as a representative calligraphy by Nobuhiro of the famed Konoe family of the 17th century. This exhibit also serves to introduce the sublime photography of Koichiro Kurita whose images grace museum collections in the United States and Japan.

About Carole Davenport:

After apprenticing at a Madison Avenue gallery for 5 years, Carole began her private dealing in 1980. The years have been punctuated with public exhibitions such as Bellman shows in the 1980's, Arts of Pacific Asia in the 1990's as well as the International Asia Art Fair at the Armory from 1996-2000. Focuses on an art historical approach to prove authenticity and seeks works of aesthetic merit. Now affiliated with the Japanese art dealers association of New York.
- source : www.artfixdaily.com


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CAROLE DAVENPORT
JAPANESE ART


PLEASE REVIEW OUR RECENT SELECTIONS ON THE PAGES OF THIS SITE :

. caroledavenport.com/ .  


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8/02/2012

Musubi Daruma Shibarare Jizo

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Musubi Daruma and Shibarare Jizo 結びだるま
Daruma and Jizo bound by a rope









This is a special Daruma with a rope around the body.
You buy it when you make a comittmend (for example give up smoking or drinking sake) and to BIND you to your promise, the Daruma gets a rope to remind you.
You can buy such a Daruma for a New Year resolution on the Year End Market on December 31 to January 2 at the tempel Nanzoo-In, Tokyo.
- source : 結びだるま

This Daruma custom is closely related to the Jizo statue below.

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Shibarare Jizoo 縛られ地蔵 Jizo bound by ropes


at temple Nanzo-In 南蔵院
東京都葛飾区東水元2-28-25



Daruma bound by a rope



And Jizo on a votive tablet (ema 絵馬)

source : I.HATADA. 1997

Daruma to tie with a rope are sold at the New Year Fair from December 31 to January, 2.
Then a special Daruma ritual (Daruma kuyoo だるま供養) is held.

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quote
Nanzoin Temple visitors make a wish and a knot

Nanzoin Temple in Katsushika, Tokyo, is famous for the Shibarare Jizo, a rope-tied guardian deity.
The legend of Shibarare Jizo goes back to the early 18th century. On a hot summer afternoon, a kimono store clerk pulling a cart laden with kimono cloth passed a Jizo statue, then stopped to rest in the shade of a tree by the Jizo statue and dozed off. When he woke up, his bundle of goods was gone.

In a panic, he rushed to the magistrate’s office. Then-renowned magistrate Ooka Echizen 越前守 carried out an investigation.

As no witnesses could be found, the judge decided exceptional measures would be needed to solve the case. After pondering the matter, he decided that the statue of Jizo, a god that protects travelers, had been derelict in its duty. Echizen instructed his constables to return to the crime scene and arrest the Jizo statue.

The men lifted it from its heavy stone pedestal and bound it with ropes.

“Jizo,” the magistrate said, “is guilty for his negligence in keeping watch and letting the robber escape.”




Word of the trial spread, and a crowd of spectators thronged to the magistrate’s office yard. Then the magistrate tactically ordered the gate closed, and said, “breaking into the divine court is unforgivable.” As punishment, the magistrate fined each spectator a roll of cloth.

They went home, and brought some cloth to the magistrate. Among the pieces brought by them, Echizen found one belonging to the clerk, which lead to the arrest of a notorious ring of thieves.

Today, people believe the Jizo of Nanzoin temple grants all wishes — including protection from robbery, better health, matchmaking (tie a knot), protecting you against evil, and more. When you make a wish, you bind the Jizo with a rope. After your wish comes true, you untie the rope.
All the ropes tied and untied are made into a bonfire at 11 p.m. on New Year’s Eve.

source : www.stripes.com - Hiroshi Chida


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- quote -
Shibarare Jizō 縛られ地蔵, String-Bound Jizō
This form of Jizō is relatively new. The earliest Japanese text to mention Shibarare Jizō (to my knowledge) is the Edo Sunago 江戸砂子, dated 1732, which cites the curious habit of binding a Jizō statue at Rinsenji Temple 林泉寺 (Tokyo) in ropes before beseeching the deity for divine intervention. There are various legends about this form of Jizō. Three are presented below. Although String-Bound Jizō is clearly an Edo-era creation, the deity's origins may have drawn from a much earlier story appearing in the Taiheiki 太平記 (circa 1371 Japanese text), which describes a soldier taking refuge in a Jizō sanctuary after fleeing from a battle. As the enemy drew nearer, Jizō appeared in the form of a priest who was then captured by the enemy in place of the soldier. From that point forward, the Jizō statue in the sanctuary showed markings where it had been bound.

Legend One.
Rinsenji Temple (Tokyo). Text and photo from Yomiuri Shimbun, Sept. 9, 2003.
Legend Two.
Nanzō-in Temple (Tokyo).
Legend Three.
Paper-Pasted Jizō (Kamihari Jizō 紙張地蔵).

- source : Mark Schumacher


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quote
Shibarare Jizō 縛られ地蔵, String-Bound Jizō
The gentle, round face of Jizō, the guardian deity of children, can barely be seen amidst the layers of cord tied around the stone statue of the god at Rinsenji Temple in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo, which was erected in 1602. The stone statue called "Shibarare (string-bound) Jizō" is said to have been donated to the temple by its founder, Ito Hanbei, in memory of his late parents.

There are other Shibarare Jizō statues in other locations around Tokyo.
However, the statue at Rinsenji appeared in "Zenigata Heiji," a detective story set in the Edo Era (1603-1868), written by novelist Kodo Nomura (1882-1963).

Local residents originally started tying strings around the statue when offering prayers for the recovery of stolen or missing items. When their prayers were answered, people were supposed to remove the string. These days, however, many people visit the temple to offer prayers for various other reasons. "At the end of every year, we hold a ceremony to remove all the strings and burn them.
But the statue was already covered with new strings in January," said the chief priest at the temple, Shin-jin Eda, 40.

.

Paper-Pasted Jizō (kamihari Jizō
紙張地蔵)
Located at the Yōshū-in 陽秀院 (Nagoya), the statue is covered with paper prayer slips. Devotees write their prayers on the slips and then paste the slips on Jizō's body.
- source : Mark Schumacher -


kamihari Jizo


. Zenigata Heiji 銭形平次 .

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Taikooan 退耕庵 Taiko-An - Tamazusajijo 玉章地蔵
former Komachi Temple 小町寺.


This is another Jizo in a temple in Kyoto, plastered with the many love-letters that Ono no Komachi received and plastered on it.
It is now a hot-spot for lovers

Komachi Fumihari Jizo 小町文張地蔵尊

The statue is about 3 meters high.



source : www.ntv.co.jp/kyoto



. Ono no Komachi 小野 小町 .
c. 825 — c. 900. Waka Poetess and Famous Beauty


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. Jizoo Bosatsu (Kshitigarbha) 地蔵菩薩  




CLICK for more Musubi Daruma photos !

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shibari Kannon 縛り観音
多治見市大原町にある”大杉の観音様
Osugi Kannon, Tajimi Gifu





- shared by Aoi on facebook -

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7/14/2012

Shichiruido Tenkei

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Shichiruido Tenkei 七類堂天谿

十七世雪祖等旦
アトリエ鴉笑舎(あしょうしゃ)
〒722-0012 広島県尾道市潮見町1-12 ANNEX立花2F





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Exhibition at temple Shokoku-Ji 相国寺
Jotenkaku Museum 承天閣美術館




Shichiruido Tenkei,
born in 1961 in Hiroshima, is a Doshaku-ga painter who was appreciated as the second Sesshu in China. Doshaku-ga is a painting with the motif of Daruma, Seven Gods or Tenjin God as the symbols of Buddhism, Taoism and Shintoism. Some of the Gods he painted look like a manga and make us smile.

This painter introduced a new style and atmosphere to the traditional way of Doshaku-ga painting. You can relax and enjoy seeing them at Jotenkaku Museum, located in the Shokoku-ji Temple Ground. This is a place where Sesshu trained at a young age.
source : www.greentour-kyoto.net

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source : a-kakejiku






dooshakuga 道釈画 Doshakuga、Doshaku-Ga
paintings about Daruma, the Seven Gods of Good Luck, Tenjin and other deities
達磨、七福神、天神像など

Tenkei is a painter in the tradition of the temple Tendo-Ji in China 天童寺, where special painters were given the title of

天童第一座 Tendo Daiichiza
Tendozan Daiichiza 天 童山第一座.


The first Japanese to get this title was Eisai 栄西 and the next was Sesshu 雪舟 in the Muromachi period.

Now, almost 540 years after Sesshu there is a third painter of this group, Shichiruido Tenkei.





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dooshakuga 道釈画 Doshakuga、Doshaku-Ga
doshaku jinbutsu ga 道釈人物画


quote
Despite the growing importance of Zen Buddhism in China, Zen would not reach Japan until the thirteenth century. A Tendai priest named Eisai (1141-1215) is credited as the foremost founder of Japanese Zen after his voyage to Sung China in 1168 and establishment of the Kennin-ji temple in 1202 . The slow adoption of Zen is reflected in the fact that early 'Zen' temples like Kennin-ji actually had to combine Zen with more popular sects like Tendai in order to teach it at all. Though popular with the warrior class as a religion that denied many old traditions, Zen would not be established as a formal sect until the fourteenth century .

During this time of solidification, a large number of Chinese Zen priests were coming to Japan to escape the Mongol invasions of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. They brought paintings with them as well; many of these paintings were of the doshakuga type,
a type that used Taoist and Buddhist themes for aesthetic appreciation instead of worship .

These paintings helped promote a growing movement in Japanese art away from mysticism and toward pragmaticism and realism, values that Zen Buddhism (and therefore Zen art) fit easily with.

Doshakuga, or paintings on Taoist and Buddhist themes,
appear similarly frequently, even in the secular realm. A large number of figures belong to this category, including Sakyamuni and Bodhidharma, the respective founders of Indian and Chinese Buddhism, as well as Buddhist and Taoist gods such as the White-robed Kannon. It is important to note here that although these paintings are of religious figures, they typically render the subject as quite human and devoid of many trappings of religion .
Hotei, though he appears most frequently in Zen art, deserves a special mention here because of his popularity as a subject: the carefree monk with his protruding belly is often a symbol of proper Zen attitude and denial of rules.


Nuances of Black and White
Major Styles of Japanese Ink Art

source : academic.mu.edu/meissnerd


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道教や仏教、儒教などの教義の如何に関わらず、人生の指標とすべき人物を画題とした絵画。

source : sadouhyakuji

Paintings of human scenes from Taoism, Buddhisn, Confucianism and other types of religious topics.



source : www.kanaishoten.jp

from a Sesson exhibition 雪村(せっそん)

Sesson Shukei 雪村周継 (orig. Satake Heizo) (1504-1589)
- Reference -


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6/05/2012

Ishigami stone

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Ishigami root Daruma

quote
I'm looking for any information about these figure of Daruma made from a wooden root which catched a stone during its grow.
It seems these items were popular during the Meiji period, especially among the Sencha practionners.



Philippe Boudin & Maiko Takenobu
Mingei Arts Gallery
Paris-France

- Mingei Arts Gallery -

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. Stones and Daruma 石、岩とだるま  

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5/28/2012

Marudaruma Book

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ma-ru-da-ru-ma



This is a play with syllables.
You can read this from left to right or right to left, it will not change.

Also read the following from both sides:

maru-dai ni noru hatsu-haru no ni-i daruma
ma ru da i ni no ru ha tsu ha ru no ni i da ru ma

on a round tray stands a new Daruma for the New Year

hatsu-haru > first spring, denotes the New Year
ni-i 新しい reading for something new


     MA=RU=DA=RU=MA
     まるだるま


is the title of a wonderful book about the positive Daruma Energy in peoples lives.
It has also a great collection of Daruma items in the form of a Paper Museum.
Written by Mikurube Shigeru 三廻部蕃 .

Mikurube san has collected more than 1300 pieces in about 40 years.

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marudaruma
anata ni hisomu daruma enerugi o hikidase

まるだるま ―
あなたに潜むだるま度を引き出せ


開運の神様として古くから日本人に親しまれてきた「だるま」の魅力をあますところなく紹介するビジュアル・ブック。
まずは、著者が40年かけて収集した1300点以上のコレクションからえりすぐりを紙上公開。おなじみの高崎張子のだるまはもちろん、達磨大師が蘆(あし)の葉に乗って揚子江6300キロを渡ったという伝説を表した蘆葉(ろよう)だるま、台湾製の白檀・黒檀のペアダルマ、だるまの愛称で親しまれたウイスキーのビンに化粧糸を施して仕立てた「糸だるま」など、ユニークな作品が並ぶ。その他、おむすびの型押し器やお盆、ループタイまで、さまざまな意匠のだるまは見ているだけで自然と心が和んでくる。

これらのだるまのモデルである中国禅宗の始祖・達磨大師は実はインド人で、ダルマとは古代インドの言葉だという。インドで仏教の布教に励んだ後、120歳で中国に渡ったといわれるその生涯を振り返りながら、大師が説いた「不立文字・教化別伝・直指人心・見性成仏」の四聖句の教えも紹介。

さらには、昭和3年の衆議院初の普通選挙から使われていた必勝だるまや、だるまの赤が江戸時代には疱瘡(ほうそう)防止の魔よけの意味だったというウンチク話をはじめ、日本各地の達磨寺やだるま作家の訪問記、著者が心のよりどころにし
てきただるま哲学までだるま尽くしだ。
... www.bookreview.ne.jp.2004


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- quote -
In English, a word, phrase, or sentence that reads the same forward or backward is a 'palindrome'.
The Japanese equivalent of a 'palindrome' is a 'kaibun' (回文; 'circle sentence'):
The unit of kaibun is mora, since the Japanese language uses syllabaries, hiragana and katakana.
Single word palindromes are not uncommon in Japanese. For example, Ku-ku (九九, multiplication table), Shi-n-bu-n-shi (新聞紙, newspaper), to-ma-to (トマト, tomato), etc. So kaibun usually refers to a palindromic sentence, but a passage can be a kaibun too.
The topic marker "wa" (は)
can be treated as "ha" and small kana ゃ,ゅ and ょ are usually allowed to be interpreted as big kana や, ゆ and よ. In classics, diacritic marks are often ignored.
Rather than saying
"read the same forwards and backwards", because Japanese is traditionally written vertically, Japanese people describe the word as being the same when read from the top (ue kara yomu) as when read from the bottom (shita kara yomu).
- - - - - Famous kaibun
- Ta-ke-ya-bu ya-ke-ta (竹薮焼けた) - A bamboo grove has been burned.
- Wa-ta-shi ma-ke-ma-shi-ta-wa (私負けましたわ) - I have lost.
- Na-ru-to wo to-ru-na (なるとを取るな) - Do not take my naruto (spiral-shaped fishcake).
- Shi-na-mo-n pa-n mo re-mo-n pa-n mo na-shi (シナモンパンもレモンパンも無し) - There is neither cinnamon bread nor lemon bread.
- Na-ga-ki yo-no to-ho-no ne-bu-ri-no mi-na me-za-me na-mi-no-ri-bu-ne-no o-to-no-yo-ki-ka-na (長き世の 遠の眠りの 皆目覚め 波乗り船の 音の良きかな) Tanka - Everybody gets awakened from a long sleep and enjoys the sound of waves on which the boat is gliding along.
- Yo-no-na-ka, ho-ka-ho-ka na-no-yo (世の中、ホカホカなのよ) - The world is a warm place.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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