Saigyōzakura
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/11/Saigy%C5%8Dzakura_%28N%C5%8Dgaku_hyakuban%29_by_Tsukioka_K%C5%8Dgyo_%28National_Noh_Theatre%29.jpg/255px-Saigy%C5%8Dzakura_%28N%C5%8Dgaku_hyakuban%29_by_Tsukioka_K%C5%8Dgyo_%28National_Noh_Theatre%29.jpg)
Saigyōzakura (西行桜, Saigyō's cherry tree) is a Noh play by Zeami about the famous poet Saigyō, regarding his well-known love for cherry blossoms.
Background[edit]
Saigyō was renowned for his love of the flowering cherry - what he himself once called "my lifelong habit of having my mind immersed in blossoms".[1]
As a recluse however, he sometimes found himself in conflict with the Japanese habit of collective blossom viewing: as he wrote in his Sankashū, "Leave me in solitude/O Cherry flowers./Draw not people,/for they come in crowds".[2]
Plot[edit]
Wishing to be alone with his cherry-blossoms,[3] Saigyō is annoyed by the arrival of a party of (potential) viewers; and, on admitting them, composes a waka blaming the cherry tree for their intrusive presence.
That night he is visited by the spirit of the cherry-tree, who rebukes him by pointing out the separateness and independence of all living creatures from human concerns.[4] The two then converse, before the play ends with an extensive dance celebrating cherry flowers, exceptional sakura sites like Kiyomizu-dera, and the transient beauty of Spring.[5]
See also[edit]
Further reading[edit]
Twelve Plays of the Noh and Kyôgen Theatres, Karen Brazell (ed.) 1988
References[edit]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- ^ W LaFleur, Awesome Nightfall (Boston 2003) p. 54 and p. 142
- ^ H H Honda trans, The Sanka Shu: The Mountain Hermitage (Hokuseido Press 1971) p. 16
- ^ Saigyo-zakura
- ^ S Leiter, Japanese Theatre and the International Stage (2021) p. 153
- ^ S Leiter, Japanese Theatre and the International Stage (2021) p. 153-4
External links[edit]