. Exotics and retrospectives. Kirigirisu (natural si^e, insect depend for interest upon ingenious butuntranslatable allusions to those words. I offerrenderings therefore of only two poems on thekirigirisu, —the first by an unknown poet in theKokinsbu; the second by Tadaf usa: — O Kirigirisu ! when the clover changes color,Are the nights then sad for you as for me that cannotsleep ? 0 Kirigirisu! cry not, I pray, so loudly IHearing, my sorrow grows, — and the autumn-night islong I Insect-Musicians 69. KUSA-HIBARI (natural sip). Kusa-bibari. The kusa-hibari, or Grass-Lark, — alsocalled Asa-su^u,


. Exotics and retrospectives. Kirigirisu (natural si^e, insect depend for interest upon ingenious butuntranslatable allusions to those words. I offerrenderings therefore of only two poems on thekirigirisu, —the first by an unknown poet in theKokinsbu; the second by Tadaf usa: — O Kirigirisu ! when the clover changes color,Are the nights then sad for you as for me that cannotsleep ? 0 Kirigirisu! cry not, I pray, so loudly IHearing, my sorrow grows, — and the autumn-night islong I Insect-Musicians 69. KUSA-HIBARI (natural sip). Kusa-bibari. The kusa-hibari, or Grass-Lark, — alsocalled Asa-su^u, or Morning-Bell; Yabu-su%u, or the LittleBell of the Bamboo-grove ; Aki-ka^e, orAutumn-Wind; and Ko-su^u-musbi,or the Child of theBell-Insect, — is aday-singer. It is verysmall, — perhaps the smallest of the insect-, . Yamato-sdzu choir, except the Ya- ^ little-Beix of Yamato ) mato-SU^U. (natural si^e).


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidcu31924014418549, bookyear