was a literary magazine published monthly in Japan between January 1909 and December 1913. The name of the publisher was , written in kanji as opposed to the magazine title written in katakana.
Subaru was the spiritual successor to the better-known and longer-running magazine Myà Âjà Â. It mainly focused on the publication of poetry and was known for its advocacy of the trend of romanticism in Japanese literature in the late Meiji period (1868 – 1912). It was priced at 30 sen (0.3 yen) and ultimately published 60 issues in total.
In 1909, after Myà Âjà  ceased publication, Mori à Âgai and a few other prominent Myà Âjà  writers including Tekkan Yosano and Akiko Yosano came together to publish a new magazine that would become Subaru. Ishikawa Takuboku initially served as editor. The magazine was noted for publishing works by Ishikawa, as well as Mokutaro Kinoshita, Kà Âtarà  Takamura, Yoshii Isamu (1886 – 1960), and Hakushà « Kitahara (the latter leaving Myà Âjà  in January 1908 was one of the factors contributing to its going out of print). Anti-Naturalist and Romantic writings were most prominent, and writers known for having their works published in Subaru were known as .
Among the works Mori à Âgai published in the magazine were The Wild Geese, Vita Sexualis, and Seinen. Yoshii first published Sake hogai and Gogo san-ji in the magazine. The complete run of Subaru was reprinted in facsimile in 1965 by the publishing house Rinsen Shoten.