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中川
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The overall size, excluding the axis tips, is approximately 196cm x 45cm. Shunto Mori (April 25, 1819 – November 21, 1889) was a Chinese poet who lived from the late Edo period to the early Meiji period. His given name was Rojiki [1], his courtesy name was Kiko [1], his common name was Kofu, and his pen names were Shunto, Hoten, and Kogu. His childhood names were Taiichiro, Motuo, and Shundo. He was the father of the Chinese poet Kainan Mori. He was born as the son of Ichicho Mori, a doctor in Ichinomiya, Owari (present-day Ichinomiya City, Aichi Prefecture). Since his family had been doctors for generations, his father intended for Shunto to become a doctor as well, and he was entrusted to the Nakagawa family, relatives who were famous ophthalmologists. However, Shunto showed no interest in medicine, instead becoming engrossed in reading Joruri books. The adoptive family, giving up on him, gave him the book "Yogaku Shiin," which opened his talent for poetry. At the age of 17, he entered the tutelage of Ekisai Washizu of Niwa Village, Owari Province, where he met and mutually encouraged each other with Makuzan Onuma, and they were called the two pillars. In 1835, he returned to his hometown and devoted himself to poetry. In 1850, he went to Kyoto and became a disciple of Seigan Yanagawa [1]. In 1842, he traveled to Edo, rekindling his old friendship with Makuzan Onuma, and became acquainted with various scholars such as Kozan Ono, Unnyo Toyama, Shotoh Suzuki, and Baichi Shaku. From 1862, he moved around Nagoya, Fukui, and Echigo, and in 1874, he moved to Tokyo, and the following year he settled in Shitaya Marishiten Yokomachi (present-day 4-chome, Ueno, Taito-ku, Tokyo). Following Makuzan Onuma, who had opened the Shitaya Ginsha in Nakamachi, Shunto formed the Matsuri Ginsha [1], and from July of that year, he published the monthly magazine "Shinbunshi" [1]. The magazine published poems and prose by various famous people and continued until 1883. In September 1874, he compiled the poetry collection "Tokyo Saisai Zekku," which included poems by 166 people representing the Meiji Chinese poetry world, including the lords of Nabeshima Kansou, Yamauchi Yodo, and Matsudaira Shungaku, and it was widely welcomed by the world. From 1877, he collected and published poems from the Qing Dynasty (Zhang Chuanshan, Chen Bicheng, and Guo Pingjia) and made efforts to introduce them. His disciples included Kanan Niwa, Kou Okuda, Sekitai Nagasaka, Sokuzan Jinpa, Chodo Tokuyama, Sanko Sugiyama, Yoto Hashimoto, Shosen Iwakei, and Sambashi Nagai. He died of stomach cancer and malaria [2]. He was 71 years old. He was buried at Kyo-o-ji Temple in Yanaka (Nishi-Nippori, Arakawa-ku, Tokyo).
3 months ago