Although he spent a large part of his childhood in Nara, he experienced the era of worker discontent during his middle school years.
That same year, he founded his own anarchist, Dadaist magazine Dam-Dam, but only published one issue before ceasing.
[1] In 1926, he self-published his first book of poems, "Hanbun Hiraita Mado" ("A Half-Opened Window"), and married the following year.
[2] In 1930 he and another anarchist poet, Kiyoshi Akiyama, founded another magazine, Dando (Trajectory), but again it only ran for a short time.
[2] He turned more and more to socialist realism in his writing, with strong criticism of lyrical poetry that lacked a critical spirit and advocate of rational long poems, which became part of the culture of the Kansai region.