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Last Days of Issa's Father


The Chichi no Shuen Nikki (父の終焉日記 Chichi no Shūen Nikki?) was a diary of Kobayashi Issa, the title referring to the last days of his father. This is said to be the very root of Japan's I novel.

Kobayashi Issa (1763–1828), one of the four great haiku masters of Japan, along with Matsuo Basho, Yosa Buson and Masaoka Shiki, described the last days of his father in his diary, beginning when his father suddenly developed fever and became seriously ill and continuing until a week after his demise. The weakening father and conflicts between his step-mother, his brother-in-law and him were vividly described in a factual manner. However, the diary was intended for publication, and thus had some embellishments. The title given by Tsukasue Tsuyuka, Chichi no Shuen Nikki (父の終焉日記 Chichi no Shūen Nikki?), became the established title.

One of the four great masters of haiku, Kobayashi Issa was born as the first son of a family of Kashiwabara, now part of Shinano-machi, Shinano Province (present-day Nagano Prefecture). Issa endured the loss of his mother, who died when he was three. He was cared for by his grandmother, who doted on him, but his life changed again when his father remarried five years later. Issa's half-brother was born two years later, and when his grandmother died when he was 14, he was sent to Edo (present-day Tokyo) by his father one year later to eke out a living. He wandered throughout Japan and when he returned to his home in 1801, he experienced the sudden onset of disease of his father, and wrote about the last days of his father in a diary.


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