Sakutarō Hagiwara (1886–1942) was born in Maebashi, Gunma, the  eldest of six children. His father was a successful physician, and  Hagiwara enjoyed a sheltered and pampered childhood. At age fifteen he  discovered literature and began writing classical tanka verse and  publishing in literary magazines. As a young student he moved frequently  throughout Japan, unable to finish college, prone to illness, and  tormented by youthful lust. In Tokyo, he learned to play the mandolin  and guitar, and upon returning to his hometown founded a musicians’ club  called Gondola Western Music Society. By 1913, Hagiwara had abandoned  classical metrical schemes in his poetry for free verse. He became a  founding member of the Mermaid Poetry Society, worked as an editor at  literary magazines, and in 1917 published his first book of poetry,  Howling at the Moon, which was an immediate success and transformed  modern Japanese verse forever. An arranged marriage in 1919 produced two  daughters and ended ten years later with his wife eloping with her  dance partner; a second marriage in 1938 lasted a year, again with his  wife fleeing. His mother is quoted as saying, “He spent all his income  from his writing on booze. He was good for nothing, but with all that  drinking, he neither increased nor decreased the family money.” After  turning to essays and aphorisms for several years, Hagiwara eventually  published his second poetry collection, Blue Cat, in 1923. These  two books of poems—noted for their sensual philosophy, intimate gloom,  symbolist imagery, riveting self-exploration, and confessions of vulgar  secrets that blended the literary with the daily vernacular—marked the  peak of Hagiwara’s creative heights. Of his writing process, Hagiwara  wrote to a friend, “I am merely catching a kind of rhythm that flows at  the bottom of my heart and unconsciously pursuing the rhythm, therefore  at the time of creation my own self is merely something like a  half-conscious automatic machine.” He would go on to write four more  books of poems and prose poems, as well as other collections of essays.  Hagiwara taught at Meiji University from 1934 until his death from  pneumonia at the age of fifty-five.
Hiroaki Sato is the author of Snow in a Silver Bowl: A Quest for the World of Yugen and One Hundred Frogs: From Renga to Haiku to English, among other books. He is a contributor to a greatly expanded adaptation of Naoki Inose’s Persona: A Biography of Yukio Mishima, and the co-editor with Burton Watson of the landmark volume From the Country of Eight Islands: An Anthology of Japanese Poetry,  which won the PEN American Center Translation Prize. Sato has  translated three dozen books of Japanese literature and poetry, most  recently, The Iceland by Sakutarō Hagiwara and, with Nancy Sato, So Happy to See Cherry Blossoms: Haiku from the Year of the Great Earthquake and Tsunami.  He has also translated various American poets into Japanese, among them  John Ashbery, Charles Reznikoff, and Jerome Rothenberg. Since 2000 Sato  has written a regular column for The Japan Times.