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A MIRACULOUS SWORD ABOUT the year 110 B.C. there lived a brave prince known in Japanese history as Yamato-dake no Mikoto.1 He was a great warrior, as was his son, who is said to have been a husband to the Empress Jingo — I presume a second one, for it could not have been the Emperor who was assassinated before the Empress's conquest of Korea. However, that does not very much matter to my story, which is merely the legend attached to the miraculous sword known as the Kusanagi no Tsurugi (the grass-cutting sword), which is held as one of the three sacred treasures, and is handed down from father to son in the Imperial Family. The sword is kept at the Atsuta Shrine, in Owari Province. Yamato-dake no Mikoto Destroys his Enemies and Saves Himself from Being Burned by the Aid of the Miraculous Sword At
the date given by my interpreter, 110 B.C. (I should add 'or
thereabouts,'
allowing large margins), Yamato-dake no Mikoto had been successful at
all
events in suppressing the revolutionists known as the Kumaso in Kyushu.
Being a
man of energy, and possessing a strong force of trained men, he
resolved that
he would suppress the revolutionists up on the north-eastern coasts. Before
starting, Yamato-dake no Mikoto thought he should go to Ise to worship
in the
temples, to pray for divine aid, and to call on an aunt who lived near.
Yamato-dake spent five or six days with his aunt, Princess Yamato Hime,
to whom
he announced his intention of subduing the rebels. She presented him
with her
greatest treasure — the miraculous sword — and also with a
tinder-and-flint-box. Before
parting with her nephew Yamato Hime no Mikoto said: 'This sword is the
most
precious thing which I could give you, and will guard you safely
through all
dangers. Value it accordingly, for it will be one of the sacred
treasures.' (Legend
says that in the age of the gods Susanoo-no Mikoto once found an old
man and a
woman weeping bitterly because a mammoth eight-headed snake had
devoured seven
of their daughters, and there remained only one more, whom, they felt
sure, the
eighth serpent's head would take. Susanoo-no Mikoto asked if they would
give
him the daughter if he killed the snake to which they gladly assented.
Susanoo
filled eight buckets with sake-wine, and put them where the serpent was
likely
to come, and, hiding himself in the vicinity, awaited events. The
monster came,
and the eight heads drank the eight buckets full of sake, and became,
naturally, dead-drunk. Susanoo then dashed in and cut the beast to
bits. In the
tail he found a sword — the celebrated and miraculous sword 'Kusanagi
no
Tsurugi,' the grass-cutting sword of our story.) After
bidding farewell to Yamato Hime no Mikoto, the Prince took his
departure,
setting out for the province of Suruga, on the eastern coast, to find
what he
could hear, it being in a turbulent state; and it was there that he ran
into
his first danger, and that his enemies laid a trap for him, through
their
knowledge that he was fond of hunting. There
were some immense rush plains in Suruga Province where now stands the
village
of Yaitsu Mura ('Yaita' means 'burning fields'). It was resolved by the
rebels
that one of them should go and invite Yamato-dake to come out and hunt,
while
they were to scatter and hide themselves in the long grass, until the
guide should
lead him into their midst, when they would jump up and kill him.
Accordingly,
they sent to Yamato-dake a plausible and clever man, who told him that
there
were many deer on the grass plains. Would he come and hunt them? The
man
volunteered to act as guide. The
invitation was tempting; and, as he had found the country less
rebellious than
he had expected, the Prince accepted. When
the morning arrived the Prince, in addition to carrying his
hunting-bow,
carried the sword given him by his aunt, the Princess Yamato. The day
was
windy, and it was thought by the rebels that as the rushes were so dry
it would
be more sure, and less dangerous to themselves, to fire the grass, for
it was
certain that the guide would make the Prince hunt up-wind, and if they
fired
the grass properly the flames would rush with lightning speed towards
him and
be absolutely safe for themselves. Yamato-dake
did just as they had expected. He came quietly on, suspecting nothing.
Suddenly
the rushes took fire in front and at the sides of him. The Prince
realised that
he had been betrayed. The treacherous guide 'had disappeared. The
Prince stood
in danger of suffocation and death. The smoke, dense and choking,
rushed along
with rapidity and great roaring. Yamato-dake
tried to run for the only gap, but was too late. Then he began cutting
the
grass with his sword, to prevent the fire from reaching him. He found
that
whichever direction he cut in with his sword, the wind changed to that
direction. If to the north he cut, the wind changed to the south and
prevented
the fire from advancing farther; if to the south, the wind changed to
the
north; and so on. Taking advantage of this, Yamato-dake retaliated upon
his
enemies. He got fire from his aunt's tinder-box, and where there was no
fire in
the rushes he lit them, cutting through the grass at the same time in
the
direction in which he wished the fire to go. Rushing thus from point to
point,
he was successful in the endeavour to turn the tables on his enemies,
and
destroyed them all. It is
important to note that there is in existence a sword, said to be this
sword, in
the Atsuta Shrine, Owari Province; a great festival in honour of it is
held on
June 21 every year. From
that place Yamato-dake no Mikoto went on to Sagami Province. Finding
things
quiet there, he took a ship to cross to Kazusa Province, accompanied by
a lady
he deeply loved, who was given the title of Hime (Princess) because of
Yamato-dake's rank. Her name was Tachibana. They had not got more than
ten
miles from shore when a terrible storm arose. The ship threatened to go
down. 'This,'
said Tachibana Hime, 'is the doing of one of the sea-goddesses who
thirst for
men's lives. I will give her mine, my lord; perhaps that may appease
her until
you have safely crossed the wicked sea.' Without
further warning, Tachibana Hime cast herself into the sea; the waves
closed
over her head, to the consternation and grief of all, and to the
breaking of
Yamato-dake's heart. As
Tachibana Hime had expected, the sea-goddess was appeased. The wind
went down,
the water calmed, and the ship reached Kazusa Province in safety.
Yamato-dake
went as far as Yezo, putting down small rebellions on the way. Several years afterwards, accompanied by many of his old officers, he found himself back on the side of a hill in Sagami Province overlooking the place where poor Tachibana Hime had given up her life for him by throwing herself into the sea. The Prince gazed sadly at the sea, and thrice exclaimed, with tears flowing down his cheeks, — brave though he was — 'Azuma waya!' (Alas, my dearest wife!); and Eastern Japan, about the middle, has since then been called 'Azuma.' ___________________________________________
1 Yamato-dake
no Mikoto, one of the eighty children of the
Emperor Keiko, was a great hero of the prehistoric age. While yet a
stripling
he was sent by his father to destroy the rebels of Western Japan. In
order to
accomplish this end he borrowed the gown of his aunt, who was high
priestess of
Ise, and, thus disguised, made the rebel chieftains fall in love with
him while
carousing in the cave where they dwelt. Then, suddenly drawing a sword
from his
bosom, he smote them to death. He next subdued the province of Izumo,
and
finally conquered Eastern Japan, which was at that time a barbarous
waste.
After many adventures, both warlike and amorous, he died on the
homeward march
to Yamato, where the Emperor, his father, held Court. |