Michizō Tachihara

Michizō Tachihara
Michizō Tachihara at age 23
Native name
立原 道造
Born(1914-07-30)30 July 1914
Nihonbashi, Tokyo, Japan
Died29 March 1939(1939-03-29) (aged 24)
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationPoet, architect
NationalityJapanese
GenrePoetry

Michizō Tachihara (立原 道造, Tachihara Michizō, 30 July 1914 – 29 March 1939) was a Japanese poet and architect. He died at age 24 from tuberculosis, before either career could seriously get under way. Michizō struggled to find a way for an urban poet to root himself in traditional customs and still be "modern."

Though a citizen of Tokyo, Michizō would rarely mention modern urban scenes in his work. Aside from several references to cars, Michizō chose to describe a vegetable, not a mineral realm. He described trains as vehicles of escape, rescuing him from being cooped up in his architectural office.

The natural landscapes of the Shinano Highlands provided an endless parade of conventional imagery that Michizō would use in his work; such as birds, clouds, flowers, grasses, mountains, skies, trees, and wind. A sizable part of his poetry used poetic impulse, often causing his work to be labelled as "sentimental". He wrote openly about his feelings and expressed what was in his heart, allowing his verse to be both uncontaminated and genuine.

His Dharma name was Onkyōin Shiundō Norikiyo Shinshi (温恭院紫雲道範清信士).