Buson's poetry is plastic and versatile. His haikus reveal a more objective and pictorial style than his master Bashô. Buson's poems, of great diversity, are rich in images that describe with great clarity the beauty of movement and the sensuality of objects; It is a dynamic poetry submerged in wide landscapes, lyrical, sensitive to the human and full of grace and romanticism in its hidden stories. Long eclipsed by his role as a painter, Buson's poetic talent did not go unnoticed in the 20th century, the figure of Masaoka Shiki, the renovator of modern haiku, being key in his rediscovery.