Uma no Naishi


Uma no Naishi was a Japanese Waka poet and noble from the middle Heian period. She is enumerated as one of the Thirty-Six Female Immortals of Poetry alongside famous authors, poets, and contemporaries Sei Shōnagon and Murasaki Shikibu.
Naishi, as a contemporary and follower of Shōnagon, was a lady of the same court in Heian period Japan, and bettered her knowledge of Waka poetry through her connection to Shōnagon, who was famously known for her Waka poetry as well as her novel of courtly observations, The Pillow Book. Shōnagon was a notorious rival of fellow Immortal of Poetry, Murasaki Shikibu, author of The Tale of Genji.
Her poems are included in the Japanese imperial poetry anthology Shūi Wakashū. She also has a personal collection entitled Uma no Naishi-shū.
At some point in her life, she had a love affair with Major Captain of the Left Asamitsu, writing a poem for him. Of the Waka poems she wrote, only three have survived into modernity. Near the end of her life, Naishi took Buddhist vows and withdrew to a temple to serve as a monk.

Writing

utsuroFu Fa
sitaba bakari to
misi Fodo ni
yagate mo aki ni
narinikeru kana
Change has touched
The under-leaves alone –
When I saw that
At last, our autumn
Had arrived!

This poem was written in response to a confession of love by Asamitsu, Major Captain of the Left.