@article{oai:uec.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006897, author = {島内, 景二 and Shimauchi, Keiji}, issue = {1-2}, journal = {電気通信大学紀要}, month = {Jan}, note = {TAKEDA Shingen(武田信玄; 1521~73)was a renowned daimy(feudal lord) who governed Kai(甲斐) and Shinano(信濃)Provinces. As well as a military tactician, he was a man of letters. Shingen studied tanka poetry(和歌)because he aspired to hold both the pen and the sword(文武二道). His poem calligraphed on colored paper(色紙)is treasured in the Erin-ji Temple(恵林寺)even now. The poem reads as follows: sasowa-zu wa 誘引ずは kuyashikara-mashi くやしからまし sakura-bana さくら花 sane-kon koro wa 実こんころは yuki no furu tera 雪のふるてらIt is noteworthy that Shingen employed Chinese characters 誘引 and 実 in writingさそふ (to invite) and さね(really)respectively. By so doing, Shingen hinted at allusions to Wakan rei-sh (和漢朗詠集), Genji monogatari (源氏物語), and Ise monogatari (伊勢物語). This paper argues that Shingens tanka poem can be interpreted as a self-praise of his being a master of both the pen and the sword.}, pages = {183--194}, title = {武田信玄の和歌をめぐって――恵林寺の花の歌――}, volume = {21}, year = {2009}, yomi = {シマウチ, ケイジ} }