
As told on stage in the play Edo no Hana Mimasu Soga (Flower of Edo: An Ichikawa Saga), the tragic love affair of the monk Seigen and the Cherry Princess Sakura-hime ends with him being driven from his temple for breaking his vows of celibacy. He later dies alone and impoverished and then haunts the princess; in this print, his ghost is shown as a skeleton drawing close to a cowering woman. When this scene was performed, the actor playing the ghost wore a black costume with bones painted on it. Here, the skeleton bears the crest of the actor on his arm, helping to identify the performance as one held at the Nakamura Theater in Edo (now Tokyo) in 1783.

Komurasaki of the Miuraya and Shirai Gompachi (Miuraya Komurasaki, Shirai Gompachi)
Kitagawa Utamaro 喜多川 歌麿 Japanese, c.1753-1806

Hamamatsu, from the series "Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido (Tokaido gojusan tsugi)," also known as the Tokaido with Poem (Kyoka iri Tokaido)
Utagawa Hiroshige 歌川 広重 Japanese, 1797-1858

Mitsuke: Ferries Crossing the Tenryu River (Mitsuke, Tenryugawa funawatashi), from the series "Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido (Tokaido gojusan tsugi)," also known as the Tokaido with Poem (Kyoka iri Tokaido)
Utagawa Hiroshige 歌川 広重 Japanese, 1797-1858