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Kenshō, who also finished with a losing record (23-39-38), was so aggrieved by the decisions that he composed a lengthy tract, Kenshō chinjō (Kenshō’s rejoinder), in which he meticulously criticized several dozen of the judgments, with copious citations of poems from earlier anthologies, especially the Man’yōshū, in a legalistic attempt to cite precedents and thereby justify his usage of diction rejected by Shunzei.
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Paul S. Atkins (Teika: The Life and Works of a Medieval Japanese Poet)