I visited the "five-legged shoes" monument built in front of Kawajo Ryokan along the Hakata River in Nakasu. In July 1868, five of the Meisei school, Tetsumoto Yosano, Hakushu Kitahara, Isamu YOSHII, tsurutaro Kinoshita, and Marino Hirano stopped at Hakata's town on the way to the trip called Kyushu Nanban trip. After receiving a welcome sponsored by the Fukuoka Prefectural Literature Association at Yoshiwara Tei in Nishi Park, the party stayed at kawajo Ryokan in Nakasu across Hakata Bay. The famous "Five-legged Shoes" for this trip is a literary monument built in front of the inn as a commemoration. It is the starting point of the journey of five poets who wrote great footprints in the history of Japanese literature. Looking upstream from the Meiji Bridge over the Hakata River The three-story white building on the center and right is Kawatake Ryokan. Nakasu 3-chome, Hakata-ku Crossing Hakata Bridge over the Hakata River to Nakasu The left side is Nakasu 2-chome, On the right side is Nakasu 3-chome, and on the right side of the white building in front of the right, you can see the downstream of the Hakata River from Hakatabashi, where Kawatake Ryokan is located. "Five-legged shoes" literary monument built in front of the literary monument in July 1884 Five of the Meisei school, Tetsumoto Yosano, Hakushu Kitahara, Isamu YOSHII, tsurutaro Kinoshita, and Marino Hirano stopped at Hakata town on the way to the trip called Kyushu Nanban trip. After receiving a welcome sponsored by the Fukuoka Prefectural Literature Association at Yoshiwara Tei in Nishi Park, the party stayed at kawajo Ryokan in Nakasu across Hakata Bay. The famous "Five-legged Shoes" for this trip is a literary monument built in front of the inn as a commemoration. It is the starting point of the journey of five poets who wrote great footprints in the history of Japanese literature. At that time, a travelogue written by five people in turn was serialized in the Tokyo 26 Shimbun entitled "Five-legged shoes". The literary monument of "Five-legged shoes" was built on July 31, 1966 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the party's entry into Kyushu. The name of the hatagoya, a literary monument of "goto no shoes" built in front of Kawajo Ryokan, is Kawajo and Ishikoto, and I miss it. I stayed at an inn called Kawajo Nakajima. It is a house that doubles as an inn, a hot spring inn, a yose, an ice shop, and a cool shop with water fireworks. He let me sleep with the door on the second floor open. "
More
I visited the "five-legged shoes" monument built in front of Kawajo Ryokan along the Hakata River in Nakasu. In July 1868, five of the Meisei school, Tetsumoto Yosano, Hakushu Kitahara, Isamu YOSHII, tsurutaro Kinoshita, and Marino Hirano stopped at Hakata's town on the way to the trip called Kyushu Nanban trip. After receiving a welcome sponsored by the Fukuoka Prefectural Literature Association at Yoshiwara Tei in Nishi Park, the party stayed at kawajo Ryokan in Nakasu across Hakata Bay. The famous "Five-legged Shoes" for this trip is a literary monument built in front of the inn as a commemoration. It is the starting point of the journey of five poets who wrote great footprints in the history of Japanese literature. Looking upstream from the Meiji Bridge over the Hakata River The three-story white building on the center and right is Kawatake Ryokan. Nakasu 3-chome, Hakata-ku Crossing Hakata Bridge over the Hakata River to Nakasu The left side is Nakasu 2-chome, On the right side is Nakasu 3-chome, and on the right side of the white building in front of the right, you can see the downstream of the Hakata River from Hakatabashi, where Kawatake Ryokan is located. "Five-legged shoes" literary monument built in front of the literary monument in July 1884 Five of the Meisei school, Tetsumoto Yosano, Hakushu Kitahara, Isamu YOSHII, tsurutaro Kinoshita, and Marino Hirano stopped at Hakata town on the way to the trip called Kyushu Nanban trip. After receiving a welcome sponsored by the Fukuoka Prefectural Literature Association at Yoshiwara Tei in Nishi Park, the party stayed at kawajo Ryokan in Nakasu across Hakata Bay. The famous "Five-legged Shoes" for this trip is a literary monument built in front of the inn as a commemoration. It is the starting point of the journey of five poets who wrote great footprints in the history of Japanese literature. At that time, a travelogue written by five people in turn was serialized in the Tokyo 26 Shimbun entitled "Five-legged shoes". The literary monument of "Five-legged shoes" was built on July 31, 1966 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the party's entry into Kyushu. The name of the hatagoya, a literary monument of "goto no shoes" built in front of Kawajo Ryokan, is Kawajo and Ishikoto, and I miss it. I stayed at an inn called Kawajo Nakajima. It is a house that doubles as an inn, a hot spring inn, a yose, an ice shop, and a cool shop with water fireworks. He let me sleep with the door on the second floor open. "
It is quietly built beside the closed inn and is difficult to understand.
There is a monument in an inconspicuous place in Nakasu.
It is in a place that is not conspicuous enough to overlook if you don't look carefully.
A monument next to the inn, which is currently closed. Is it often overlooked because it is behind the bushes?