Let’s celebrate cicadas, the sound of the summer’s dazzling heat.
Suddenly blue sky
Suddenly cicadas buzz
Suddenly summer!
A classic haiku:
Soon to die
But there’s no sign of it
In the cicadas’ song
やがて死ぬけしきは見えず蝉の声
(yagate shinu keshiki wa miezu semi no koe)
--Matsuo Basho (1690), Translation Thomas McAuley
Cicadas on the soundtrack of movies and TV dramas are a seasonal marker. There are at least three distinct varieties. The first to appear has a high-pitched hiss that is the tinnitus of early summer. Around the same time the trilling jitter of a second cicada species, higurashi, enters the soundscape in the dawn chorus, the cooler dusk, or when a day turns cloudy. Soon after, the largest, most visible cicada begins to dominate the heat of day with its strident “min-min-minnn” hiccupping sequence, and its blundering flight.
But let me add, I’m talking about the particular area in central Kanto where I live. When I visit Shimoda, not very far to the south, the cicadas have a different timbre. What, I wonder, do they sound like in other areas the length and breadth of Japan?
Trudging through summer
did Basho note cicadas
have local voices?
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