<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page253" id="page253"></SPAN></span>
<h3>SERMON III</h3>
<h4>(THE SERMONS OF KIU-Ô, VOL. 1)</h4>
<p>Môshi has said, "There is the third finger. If a man's
third or nameless finger be bent, so that he cannot straighten
it, although his bent finger may cause him no pain, still if he
hears of some one who can cure it, he will think nothing of
undertaking a long journey from <i>Shin</i> to
<i>So</i><SPAN id="footnotetag94"
name="footnotetag94"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote94"><sup>94</sup></SPAN>
to consult him upon this deformed finger; for he knows it is
to be hateful to have a finger unlike those of other men.
But he cares not a jot if his heart be different to that of
other men; and this is how men disregard the true order of
things."</p>
<p>Now this is the next chapter to the one about benevolence
being the true heart of man, which I expounded to you the other
night. True learning has no other aim than that of reclaiming
lost souls; and, in connection with this, Môshi has thus
again declared in a parable the all-importance of the human
heart.</p>
<p>The nameless finger is that which is next to the little
finger. The thumb is called the parent-finger; the first finger
is called the index; the long is called the middle finger; but
the third finger has no name. It is true that it is sometimes
called the finger for applying rouge; but that is only a name
given it by ladies, and is not in general use. So, having no
name, it is called the nameless finger. And how comes it to
have no name? Why, because it is of all the fingers the least
useful. When we clutch at or grasp things, we do so by the
strength of the thumb and little finger. If a man scratches his
head, he does it with the forefinger; if he wishes to test the
heat of the wine<SPAN id="footnotetag95"
name="footnotetag95"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote95"><sup>95</sup></SPAN>
in the kettle, he uses the little finger. Thus, although
each finger has its uses and duties, the nameless finger
alone is of no use: it is not in our way if we have it, and
we do not miss it if we lose it. Of the whole body it is the
meanest member: if it be crooked so that we cannot
straighten it, it neither hurts nor itches; as Môshi
says in the text, it causes no pain; even if we were without
it, we should be none the worse off. Hence, what though it
should be bent, it would be better, since it causes no pain,
to leave it as it is. Yet if a person, having such a crooked
finger, hears of a clever doctor who can set it straight, no
matter at how great a distance he may be, he will be off to
consult this doctor. And pray why? Because he feels ashamed
of having <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page254" id="page254"></SPAN></span> a finger a little different
from the rest of the world, and so he wants to be cured, and
will think nothing of travelling from Shin to So—a
distance of a thousand miles—for the purpose. To be
sure, men are very susceptible and keenly alive to a sense
of shame; and in this they are quite right. The feeling of
shame at what is wrong is the commencement of virtue. The
perception of shame is inborn in men; but there are two ways
of perceiving shame. There are some men who are sensible of
shame for what regards their bodies, but who are ignorant of
shame for what concerns their hearts; and a terrible mistake
they make. There is nothing which can be compared in
importance to the heart. The heart is said to be the lord of
the body, which it rules as a master rules his house. Shall
the lord, who is the heart, be ailing and his sickness be
neglected, while his servants, who are the members only, are
cared for? If the knee be lacerated, apply tinder to stop
the bleeding; if the moxa should suppurate, spread a
plaster; if a cold be caught, prepare medicine and garlic
and gruel, and ginger wine! For a trifle, you will doctor
and care for your bodies, and yet for your hearts you will
take no care. Although you are born of mankind, if your
hearts resemble those of devils, of foxes, of snakes, or of
crows, rather than the hearts of men, you take no heed,
caring for your bodies alone. Whence can you have fallen
into such a mistake? It is a folly of old standing too, for
it was to that that Môshi pointed when he said that to
be cognizant of a deformed finger and ignore the deformities
of the soul was to disregard the true order of things. This
is what it is, not to distinguish between that which is
important and that which is unimportant—to pick up a
trifle and pass by something of value. The instinct of man
prompts him to prefer the great to the small, the important
to the unimportant.</p>
<p>If a man is invited out to a feast by his relations or
acquaintances, when the guests are assembled and the principal
part of the feast has disappeared, he looks all round him, with
the eyeballs starting out of his head, and glares at his
neighbours, and, comparing the little titbits of roast fowl or
fish put before them, sees that they are about half an inch
bigger than those set before him; then, blowing out his belly
with rage, he thinks, "What on earth can the host be about?
Master Tarubei is a guest, but so am I: what does the fellow
mean by helping me so meanly? There must be some malice or
ill-will here." And so his mind is prejudiced against the host.
Just be so good as to reflect upon this. Does a man show his
spite by grudging a bit of roast fowl or meat? And yet even in
such trifles as these do men show how they try to obtain what
is great, and show their dislike of what is small. How can men
be conscious of shame for a deformed finger, and count it as no
misfortune that their hearts are crooked? That is how they
abandon the substance for the shadow.</p>
<p>Môshi severely censures the disregard of the true
order of things. What mistaken and bewildered creatures men
are! <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page255" id="page255"></SPAN></span> What says the old song?
"Hidden far among the mountains, the tree which seems to be
rotten, if its core be yet alive, may be made to bear
flowers." What signifies it if the hand or the foot be
deformed? The heart is the important thing. If the heart be
awry, what though your skin be fair, your nose aquiline,
your hair beautiful? All these strike the eye alone, and are
utterly useless. It is as if you were to put horse-dung into
a gold-lacquer luncheon-box. This is what is called a fair
outside, deceptive in appearance.</p>
<p>There's the scullery-maid been washing out the pots at the
kitchen sink, and the scullion Chokichi comes up and says to
her, "You've got a lot of charcoal smut sticking to your nose,"
and points out to her the ugly spot. The scullery-maid is
delighted to be told of this, and answers, "Really! whereabouts
is it?" Then she twists a towel round her finger, and, bending
her head till mouth and forehead are almost on a level, she
squints at her nose, and twiddles away with her fingers as if
she were the famous Gotô<SPAN id="footnotetag96"
name="footnotetag96"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote96"><sup>96</sup></SPAN>
at work, carving the ornaments of a sword-handle. "I say,
Master Chokichi, is it off yet?" "Not a bit of it. You've
smeared it all over your cheeks now." "Oh dear! oh dear!
where can it be?" And so she uses the water-basin as a
looking-glass, and washes her face clean; then she says to
herself, "What a dear boy Chokichi is!" and thinks it
necessary, out of gratitude, to give him relishes with his
supper by the ladleful, and thanks him over and over again.
But if this same Chokichi were to come up to her and say,
"Now, really, how lazy you are! I wish you could manage to
be rather less of a shrew," what do you think the
scullery-maid would answer then? Reflect for a moment. "Drat
the boy's impudence! If I were of a bad heart or an angular
disposition, should I be here helping him? You go and be
hung! You see if I take the trouble to wash your dirty
bedclothes for you any more." And she gets to be a perfect
devil, less only the horns.</p>
<p>There are other people besides the poor scullery-maid who
are in the same way. "Excuse me, Mr. Gundabei, but the
embroidered crest on your dress of ceremony seems to be a
little on one side." Mr. Gundabei proceeds to adjust his dress
with great precision. "Thank you, sir. I am ten million times
obliged to you for your care. If ever there should be any
matter in which I can be of service to you, I beg that you will
do me the favour of letting me know;" and, with a beaming face,
he expresses his gratitude. Now for the other side of the
picture. "Really, Mr. Gundabei, you are very foolish; you don't
seem to understand at all. I beg you to be of a frank and
honest heart: it really makes me quite sad to see a man's heart
warped in this way." What is his answer? He turns his sword in
his girdle ready to draw, and plays the devil's tattoo upon the
hilt: it looks as if it must end in a fight
soon.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page256" id="page256"></SPAN></span>
<p>In fact, if you help a man in anything which has to do with
a fault of the body, he takes it very kindly, and sets about
mending matters. If any one helps another to rectify a fault of
the heart, he has to deal with a man in the dark, who flies in
a rage, and does not care to amend. How out of tune all this
is! And yet there are men who are bewildered up to this point.
Nor is this a special and extraordinary failing. This mistaken
perception of the great and the small, of colour and of
substance, is common to us all—to you and to me.</p>
<p>Please give me your attention. The form strikes the eye; but
the heart strikes not the eye. Therefore, that the heart should
be distorted and turned awry causes no pain. This all results
from the want of sound judgment; and that is why we cannot
afford to be careless.</p>
<p>The master of a certain house calls his servant Chokichi,
who sits dozing in the kitchen. "Here, Chokichi! The guests are
all gone; come and clear away the wine and fish in the back
room."</p>
<p>Chokichi rubs his eyes, and with a sulky answer goes into
the back room, and, looking about him, sees all the nice things
paraded on the trays and in the bowls. It's wonderful how his
drowsiness passes away: no need for any one to hurry him now.
His eyes glare with greed, as he says, "Hullo! here's a lot of
tempting things! There's only just one help of that omelette
left in the tray. What a hungry lot of guests! What's this? It
looks like fish rissoles;" and with this he picks out one, and
crams his mouth full; when, on one side, a mess of young
cuttlefish, in a Chinese<SPAN id="footnotetag97"
name="footnotetag97"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote97"><sup>97</sup></SPAN>
porcelain bowl, catches his eyes. There the little beauties
sit in a circle, like Buddhist priests in religious
meditation! "Oh, goodness! how nice!" and just as he is
dipping his finger and thumb in, he hears his master's
footstep; and knowing that he is doing wrong, he crams his
prize into the pocket of his sleeve, and stoops down to take
away the wine-kettle and cups; and as he does this, out
tumble the cuttlefish from his sleeve. The master sees
it.</p>
<p>"What's that?"</p>
<p>Chokichi, pretending not to know what has happened, beats
the mats, and keeps on saying, "Come again the day before
yesterday; come again the day before
yesterday."<SPAN id="footnotetag98"
name="footnotetag98"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote98"><sup>98</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>But it's no use his trying to persuade his master that the
little cuttlefish are spiders, for they are not the least like
them. It's no use hiding things,—they are sure to come to
light; and so it is with the heart,—its purposes will
out. If the heart is enraged, the dark veins stand out on the
forehead; if the heart is grieved, tears rise to the eyes; if
the heart is joyous, dimples appear in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page257" id="page257"></SPAN></span> the cheeks; if the heart is
merry, the face smiles: thus it is that the face reflects
the emotions of the heart. It is not because the eyes are
filled with tears that the heart is sad; nor because the
veins stand out on the forehead that the heart is enraged.
It is the heart which leads the way in everything. All the
important sensations of the heart are apparent in the
outward appearance. In the "Great Learning" of Kôshi
it is written, "The truth of what is within appears upon the
surface." How then is the heart a thing which can be hidden?
To answer when reproved, to hum tunes when scolded, show a
diseased heart; and if this disease is not quickly taken in
hand, it will become chronic, and the remedy become
difficult: perhaps the disease may be so virulent that even
Giba and Henjaku<SPAN id="footnotetag99"
name="footnotetag99"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote99"><sup>99</sup></SPAN>
in consultation could not effect a cure. So, before the
disease has gained strength, I invite you to the study of
the moral essays entitled <i>Shin-gaku</i> (the Learning of
the Heart). If you once arrive at the possession of your
heart as it was originally by nature, what an admirable
thing that will be! In that case your conscience will point
out to you even the slightest wrong bias or selfishness.</p>
<p>While upon this subject, I may tell you a story which was
related to me by a friend of mine. It is a story which the
master of a certain money-changer's shop used to be very fond
of telling. An important part of a money-changer's business is
to distinguish between good and bad gold and silver. In the
different establishments, the ways of teaching the apprentices
this art vary; however, the plan adopted by the money-changer
was as follows:—At first he would show them no bad
silver, but would daily put before them good money only; when
they had become thoroughly familiar with the sight of good
money, if he stealthily put a little base coin among the good,
he found that they would detect it immediately,—they saw
it as plainly as you see things when you throw light on a
mirror. This faculty of detecting base money at a glance was
the result of having learned thoroughly to understand good
money. Having once been taught in this way, the apprentices
would not make a mistake about a piece of base coin during
their whole lives, as I have heard. I can't vouch for the truth
of this; but it is very certain that the principle, applied to
moral instruction, is an excellent one,—it is a most safe
mode of study. However, I was further told that if, after
having thus learned to distinguish good money, a man followed
some other trade for six months or a year, and gave up handling
money, he would become just like any other inexperienced
person, unable to distinguish the good from the base.</p>
<p>Please reflect upon this attentively. If you once render
yourself familiar with the nature of the uncorrupted heart,
from that time forth you will be immediately conscious of the
slightest inclination towards bias or selfishness. And why?
Because the natural heart is illumined. When a man has once
learned that which is perfect, he will never consent to accept
that which is <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page258" id="page258"></SPAN></span> imperfect; but if, after
having acquired this knowledge, he again keeps his natural
heart at a distance, and gradually forgets to recognize that
which is perfect, he finds himself in the dark again, and
that he can no longer distinguish base money from good. I
beg you to take care. If a man falls into bad habits, he is
no longer able to perceive the difference between the good
impulses of his natural heart and the evil impulses of his
corrupt heart. With this benighted heart as a
starting-point, he can carry out none of his intentions, and
he has to lift his shoulders sighing and sighing again. A
creature much to be pitied indeed! Then he loses all
self-reliance, so that, although it would be better for him
to hold his tongue and say nothing about it, if he is in the
slightest trouble or distress, he goes and confesses the
crookedness of his heart to every man he meets. What a
wretched state for a man to be in! For this reason, I beg
you to learn thoroughly the true silver of the heart, in
order that you may make no mistake about the base coin. I
pray that you and I, during our whole lives, may never leave
the path of true principles.</p>
<p>I have an amusing story to tell you in connection with this,
if you will be so good as to listen.</p>
<p>Once upon a time, when the autumn nights were beginning to
grow chilly, five or six tradesmen in easy circumstances had
assembled together to have a chat; and, having got ready their
picnic box and wine-flask, went off to a temple on the hills,
where a friendly priest lived, that they might listen to the
stags roaring. With this intention they went to call upon the
priest, and borrowed the guests'
apartments<SPAN id="footnotetag100"
name="footnotetag100"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote100"><sup>100</sup></SPAN>
of the monastery; and as they were waiting to hear the deer
roar, some of the party began to compose poetry. One would
write a verse of Chinese poetry, and another would write a
verse of seventeen syllables; and as they were passing the
wine-cup the hour of sunset came, but not a deer had uttered
a call; eight o'clock came, and ten o'clock came; still not
a sound from the deer.</p>
<p>"What can this mean?" said one. "The deer surely ought to be
roaring."</p>
<p>But, in spite of their waiting, the deer would not roar. At
last the friends got sleepy, and, bored with writing songs and
verses, began to yawn, and gave up twaddling about the woes and
troubles of life; and as they were all silent, one of them, a
man fifty years of age, stopping the circulation of the
wine-cup, said—</p>
<p>"Well, certainly, gentlemen, thanks to you, we have spent
the evening in very pleasant conversation. However, although I
am enjoying myself mightily in this way, my people at home must
be getting anxious, and so I begin to think that we ought to
leave off drinking."</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page259" id="page259"></SPAN></span>
<p>"Why so?" said the others.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll tell you. You know that my only son is
twenty-two years of age this year, and a troublesome fellow be
is, too. When I'm at home, he lends a hand sulkily enough in
the shop: but as soon as he no longer sees the shadow of me, he
hoists sail and is off to some bad haunt. Although our
relations and connections are always preaching to him, not a
word has any more effect that wind blowing into a horse's ear.
When I think that I shall have to leave my property to such a
fellow as that, it makes my heart grow small indeed. Although,
thanks to those to whom I have succeeded, I want for nothing,
still, when I think of my son, I shed tears of blood night and
day."</p>
<p>And as he said this with a sigh, a man of some forty-five or
forty-six years said—</p>
<p>"No, no; although you make so much of your misfortunes, your
son is but a little extravagant after all. There's no such
great cause for grief there. I've got a very different story to
tell. Of late years my shopmen, for one reason or another, have
been running me into debt, thinking nothing of a debt of fifty
or seventy ounces; and so the ledgers get all wrong. Just think
of that. Here have I been keeping these fellows ever since they
were little children unable to blow their own noses, and now,
as soon as they come to be a little useful in the shop, they
begin running up debts, and are no good whatever to their
master. You see, you only have to spend your money upon your
own son."</p>
<p>Then another gentleman said—</p>
<p>"Well, I think that to spend money upon your shop-people is
no such great hardship after all. Now I've been in something
like trouble lately. I can't get a penny out of my customers.
One man owes me fifteen ounces; another owes me twenty-five
ounces. Really that is enough to make a man feel as if his
heart was worn away."</p>
<p>When he had finished speaking, an old gentleman, who was
sitting opposite, playing with his fan, said—</p>
<p>"Certainly, gentlemen, your grievances are not without
cause; still, to be perpetually asked for a little money, or to
back a bill, by one's relations or friends, and to have a lot
of hangers-on dependent on one, as I have, is a worse case
still."</p>
<p>But before the old gentleman had half finished speaking, his
neighbour called out—</p>
<p>"No, no; all you gentlemen are in luxury compared to me.
Please listen to what I have to suffer. My wife and my mother
can't hit it off anyhow. All day long they're like a couple of
cows butting at one another with their horns. The house is as
unendurable as if it were full of smoke. I often think it would
be better to send my wife back to her village; but then I've
got two little children. If I interfere and take my wife's
part, my mother gets low-spirited. If I scold my wife, she says
that I treat her so brutally because she's not of the same
flesh and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page260" id="page260"></SPAN></span> blood; and then she hates
me. The trouble and anxiety are beyond description: I'm like
a post stuck up between them."</p>
<p>And so they all twaddled away in chorus, each about his own
troubles. At last one of the gentlemen, recollecting himself,
said—</p>
<p>"Well, gentlemen, certainly the deer ought to be roaring;
but we've been so engrossed with our conversation, that we
don't know whether we have missed hearing them or not."</p>
<p>With this he pulled aside the sliding-door of the verandah
and looked out, and, lo and behold! a great big stag was
standing perfectly silent in front of the garden.</p>
<p>"Hullo!" said the man to the deer, "what's this? Since
you've been there all the time, why did you not roar?"</p>
<p>Then the stag answered, with an innocent face—</p>
<p>"Oh, I came here to listen to the lamentations of you
gentlemen."</p>
<p>Isn't that a funny story?</p>
<p>Old and young, men and women, rich and poor, never cease
grumbling from morning till night. All this is the result of a
diseased heart. In short, for the sake of a very trifling
inclination or selfish pursuit, they will do any wrong in order
to effect that which is impossible. This is want of judgment,
and this brings all sorts of trouble upon the world. If once
you gain possession of a perfect heart, knowing that which is
impossible to be impossible, and recognizing that that which is
difficult is difficult, you will not attempt to spare yourself
trouble unduly. What says the Chin-Yo?<SPAN id="footnotetag101"
name="footnotetag101"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote101"><sup>101</sup></SPAN>
The wise man, whether his lot be cast amongst rich or poor,
amongst barbarians or in sorrow, understands his position by
his own instinct. If men do not understand this, they think
that the causes of pain and pleasure are in the body.
Putting the heart on one side, they earnestly strive after
the comforts of the body, and launch into extravagance, the
end of which is miserly parsimony. Instead of pleasure they
meet with grief of the heart, and pass their lives in
weeping and wailing. In one way or another, everything in
this world depends upon the heart. I implore every one of
you to take heed that tears fall not to your
lot.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page261" id="page261"></SPAN></span>
<h1>APPENDICES</h1><!--blank page 262-->
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