Stewart lived frugally, supporting himself with literary journalism and part-time work in the Norman Robb Bookshop in Melbourne 1950-1966. While working at the Bookshop, Stewart set up a weekly study group to discuss Oriental doctrines. By this stage, Rene Guenon and the new philosophical movement, Traditionalism, had displaced Carl Jung in his thinking about Eastern religions. Its key insight was to posit a single spiritual tradition underlying all the great religious faiths and call for a return to spiritual values being lost in the modern world. Several members of the study group became interested in practice and attached themselves to particular Buddhist traditions. In the late 1950s Stewart became more engaged with Japanese culture just as a second wave of Traditionalist theorists led by Frithjof Schuon emphasised the need for active involvement in a living tradition. In 1959-1960 Stewart was awarded the Saionji Memorial Scholarship to study Japanese culture for a year. He visited Japan in 1961 and again in 1963 when he met the love of his life, Ueshima Masaaki. Stewart studied under Bando Shojun, a Shin Buddhist priest and professor of Buddhism. Stewart moved permanently to Japan in 1966, settling in Kyoto and continuing his study of Shin Buddhism. He produced several translations of haiku and translated a number of classic Buddhist texts in collaboration with his teachers.
His first epic, By the Old Walls of Kyoto (1981), was supported by grants from the Literature Board of Australia and the Australia-Japan Foundation. In 1982, he was awarded a Senior Emeritus Writers' Fellowship by the Literature Board which provided his first stable income. His second epic, 'Autumn Landscape Roll: A Divine Panorama' , a five thousand word voyage to the afterlife by the Tang Dynasty poet Wu Tao Tzu, was completed just before he died and is yet to be published. It was dedicated to his patron, Dr. Heinz Karrer of Switzerland, who had supported him for decades. Although fairly reclusive, Stewart kept up a voluminous correspondence with, among others, Dorothy Green (q.v.), the literary critic and Carmen Blacker, folklorist and Professor of Japanese at Cambridge University. When he died in 1995, he was mourned by many people throughout the world who valued his contribution to Buddhist teaching and Australian literature. Stewart never achieved the recognition he desired from his home country, the land he called 'darkest Oz'. Michael Ackland claims he had the misfortune to produce his greatest work at the end of his career. (270). James McAuley never lived to see his 1938 prophecy realised that '"Skald" (Stewart) is capable of producing stuff that will put us all to shame' but A. D. Hope did and said that By the Old Walls of Kyoto (1981) was the greatest poem in English written in the twentieth century. (247).
(Source: Adapted from 'Harold Stewart Interviewed by Richard Kelly Tipping' Westerly 32.4 (1987): 24-35); Michael Ackland Damaged Men: The Precarious Lives of James McAuley and Harold Stewart (2001); Michael Ackland 'Harold Stewart December 14, 1916-August 7, 1995' Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 260: Australian Writers, 1915-1950. (2002):. 367-374; Michael Heyward The Ern Malley Affair (1993 ); Peter Kelly Buddha in a Bookshop : Harold Stewart and the Traditionalists (2007)).