Long ago I believe bells, church bells, played an important role in everyday life, especially in rural areas. I wonder if that's still true today. Growing up in Chicago, I don't remember bells as being especially important or noticeable. I wonder if we lost something when we moved from the countryside to urban areas.
Cloud of cherry-bloom . . .
Tolling twilight bell . . .Temple
Ueno? Asakura?
-- Basho --
I remember reading in a novel (Proust?) about a traveler listening to the sounds of church bells in the village he has just left, when he reaches the crest of a hill and now hears also the sound of bells from the village he is approaching.
Silent the old town . . .
The scent of flowers floating . . .
And evening bell
-- Basho --
What must that be like? Silence....the scent of flowers... joined by the sound of a bell
Voices of two bells
That speak from twilight temples . . .
Ah! cool dialogue
-- Buson --
I never connected bells with temperature, but cool is very apt.
Butterfly asleep
Folded soft on temple bell . . .
Then bronze gong rang!
-- Buson --
Poor butterfly!
In the holy dusk
Nightingales begin their psalms . . .
Good! the dinner gong!
-- Buson --
Interesting shift from "holy dusk" and the nightingales' "psalms." Contrary to the usual portrayal, these bells lead one from the sacred to the profane.
Ah! I intended
Never never to grow old . . .
Listen: New Year's bell!
-- Jokun --
Is New Year's a time for sorrow at the passing of the old or joy at the entrance of the new?
We stand still to hear
Tinkle of far temple bell . . .
Willow-leaves falling
-- Basho --
I think the tinkle of that far off temple bell would be the perfect accompaniment for those falling leaves. I can close my eyes and see and hear them.
The calling bell
Travels the curling mist-ways . . .
Autumn morning
-- Basho --
a bell and mist--again perfect for autumn
Are bells still important in places?
Above haiku are found in A Little Treasury of Haiku
Translations by Peter Beilenson.