Shintaishi (literally "new form poetry") has its origins in the
Meiji period. It refers to poetry with a fixed form and written in
classical Japanese. Early Japanese bilingual dictionaries of French and English generally translated the words
poème and
poem as
shi (詩), but in the early Meiji period this word almost exclusively referred to
kanshi (poetry in
Classical Chinese). and
Ryōkichi Yatabe, as well as
Inoue Tetsujirō in his preface to a verse by
Longfellow, expressed the necessity that Meiji poetry be written in a new form unlike the classical styles of Japanese poetry. The word
shintaishi is modeled on
kotaishi ("old form poetry", the Japanese name for
gushi) and
kintaishi ("modern form poetry", the Japanese pronunciation of
jintishi). == Content ==