<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page263" id="page263"></SPAN></span>
<h2>APPENDIX A</h2>
<h3>AN ACCOUNT OF THE HARA-KIRI</h3>
<h4>(FROM A RARE JAPANESE MS.)</h4>
<p>Seppuku <i>(hara-kiri)</i> is the mode of suicide adopted
amongst Samurai when they have no alternative but to die. Some
there are who thus commit suicide of their own free will;
others there are who, having committed some crime which does
not put them outside the pale of the privileges of the Samurai
class, are ordered by their superiors to put an end to their
own lives. It is needless to say that it is absolutely
necessary that the principal, the witnesses, and the seconds
who take part in the affair should be acquainted with all the
ceremonies to be observed. A long time ago, a certain Daimio
invited a number of persons, versed in the various ceremonies,
to call upon him to explain the different forms to be observed
by the official witnesses who inspect and verify the head,
&c., and then to instruct him in the ceremonies to be
observed in the act of suicide; then he showed all these rites
to his son and to all his retainers. Another person has said
that, as the ceremonies to be gone through by principal,
witnesses, and seconds are all very important matters, men
should familiarize themselves with a thing which is so
terrible, in order that, should the time come for them to take
part in it, they may not be taken by surprise.</p>
<p>The witnesses go to see and certify the suicide. For
seconds, men are wanted who have distinguished themselves in
the military arts. In old days, men used to bear these things
in mind; but now-a-days the fashion is to be ignorant of such
ceremonies, and if upon rare occasions a criminal is handed
over to a Daimio's charge, that he may perform
<i>hara-kiri,</i> it often happens, at the time of execution,
that there is no one among all the prince's retainers who is
competent to act as second, in which case a man has to be
engaged in a hurry from some other quarter to cut off the head
of the criminal, and for that day he changes his name and
becomes a retainer of the prince, either of the middle or
lowest class, and the affair is entrusted to him, and so the
difficulty is got over: nor is this considered to be a
disgrace. It is a great breach of decorum if the second, who is
a most important officer, commits any mistake (such as not
striking off the head at a blow) in the presence of the
witnesses sent by the Government. On this account a skilful
person must be employed; and, to hide the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page264" id="page264"></SPAN></span> unmanliness of his own
people, a prince must perform the ceremony in this imperfect
manner. Every Samurai should be able to cut off a man's
head: therefore, to have to employ a stranger to act as
second is to incur the charge of ignorance of the arts of
war, and is a bitter mortification. However, young men,
trusting to their youthful ardour, are apt to be careless,
and are certain to make a mistake. Some people there are
who, not lacking in skill on ordinary occasions, lose their
presence of mind in public, and cannot do themselves
justice. It is all the more important, therefore, as the act
occurs but rarely, that men who are liable to be called upon
to be either principals or seconds or witnesses in the
<i>hara-kiri</i> should constantly be examined in their
skill as swordsmen, and should be familiar with all the
rites, in order that when the time comes they may not lose
their presence of mind.</p>
<p>According to one authority, capital punishment may be
divided into two kinds—beheading and strangulation. The
ceremony of <i>hara-kiri</i> was added afterwards in the case
of persons belonging to the military class being condemned to
death. This was first instituted in the days of the
Ashikaga<SPAN id="footnotetag102"
name="footnotetag102"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote102"><sup>102</sup></SPAN>
dynasty. At that time the country was in a state of utter
confusion; and there were men who, although fighting, were
neither guilty of high treason nor of infidelity to their
feudal lords, but who by the chances of war were taken
prisoners. To drag out such men as these, bound as
criminals, and cut their heads off, was intolerably cruel;
accordingly, men hit upon a ceremonious mode of suicide by
disembowelling, in order to comfort the departed spirit.
Even at present, where it becomes necessary to put to death
a man who has been guilty of some act not unworthy of a
Samurai, at the time of the execution witnesses are sent to
the house; and the criminal, having bathed and put on new
clothes, in obedience to the commands of his superiors, puts
an end to himself, but does not on that account forfeit his
rank as a Samurai. This is a law for which, in all truth,
men should be grateful.</p>
<h4>ON THE PREPARATION OF THE PLACE OF EXECUTION</h4>
<p>In old days the ceremony of <i>hara-kiri</i> used to be
performed in a temple. In the third year of the period called
Kan-yei (A.D. 1626), a certain person, having been guilty of
treason, was ordered to disembowel himself, on the fourteenth
day of the first month, in the temple of Kichijôji, at
Komagomé, in Yedo. Eighteen years later, the retainer of
a certain Daimio, having had a dispute with a sailor belonging
to an Osaka coasting-ship, killed the sailor; and, an
investigation having been made into the matter by the Governor
of Osaka, the retainer was ordered to perform
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page265" id="page265"></SPAN></span> <i>hara-kiri</i>, on the
twentieth day of the sixth month, in the temple called
Sokusanji, in Osaka. During the period Shôhô
(middle of seventeenth century), a certain man, having been
guilty of heinous misconduct, performed <i>hara-kiri</i> in
the temple called Shimpukuji, in the Kôji-street of
Yedo. On the fourth day of the fifth month of the second
year of the period Meiréki (A.D. 1656), a certain
man, for having avenged the death of his cousin's husband at
a place called Shimidzudani, in the Kôji-street,
disembowelled himself in the temple called Honseiji. On the
twenty-sixth day of the sixth month of the eighth year of
the period Yempô (A.D. 1680), at the funeral
ceremonies in honour of the anniversary of the death of
Genyuin Sama, a former Shogun, Naitô Idzumi no Kami,
having a cause of hatred against Nagai Shinano no Kami,
killed him at one blow with a short sword, in the main hall
of the temple called Zôjôji (the burial-place of
the Shoguns in Yedo). Idzumi no Kami was arrested by the
officers present, and on the following day performed
<i>hara-kiri</i> at Kiridôshi, in the temple called
Seiriuji.</p>
<p>In modern times the ceremony has taken place at night,
either in the palace or in the garden of a Daimio, to whom the
condemned man has been given in charge. Whether it takes place
in the palace or in the garden depends upon the rank of the
individual. Daimios and Hatamotos, as a matter of course, and
the higher retainers of the Shogun, disembowel themselves in
the palace: retainers of lower rank should do so in the garden.
In the case of vassals of feudatories, according to the rank of
their families, those who, being above the grade of captains,
carry the bâton,<SPAN id="footnotetag103"
name="footnotetag103"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote103"><sup>103</sup></SPAN>
should perform <i>hara-kiri</i> in the palace; all others in
the garden. If, when the time comes, the persons engaged in
the ceremony are in any doubt as to the proper rules to be
followed, they should inquire of competent persons, and
settle the question. At the beginning of the eighteenth
century, during the period Genroku, when Asano Takumi no
Kami<SPAN id="footnotetag104"
name="footnotetag104"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote104"><sup>104</sup></SPAN>
disembowelled himself in the palace of a Daimio called
Tamura, as the whole thing was sudden and unexpected, the
garden was covered with matting, and on the top of this
thick mats were laid and a carpet, and the affair was
concluded so; but there are people who say that it was wrong
to treat a Daimio thus, as if he had been an ordinary
Samurai. But it is said that in old times it was the custom
that the ceremony should take place upon a leather carpet
spread in the garden; and further, that the proper place is
inside a picket fence tied together in the garden: so it is
wrong for persons who are only acquainted with one form of
the ceremony to accuse Tamura of having acted improperly.
If, however, the object was to save the house from the
pollution of blood, then the accusation of ill-will may well
be brought; for the preparation of the place is of great
importance.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page266" id="page266"></SPAN></span>
<p>Formerly it was the custom that, for personages of
importance, the enclosure within the picket fence should be of
thirty-six feet square. An entrance was made to the south, and
another to the north: the door to the south was called
<i>Shugiyômon</i> ("the door of the practice of virtue");
that to the north was called <i>Umbanmon</i> ("the door of the
warm basin"<SPAN id="footnotetag105"
name="footnotetag105"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote105"><sup>105</sup></SPAN>).
Two mats, with white binding, were arranged in the shape of
a hammer, the one at right angles to the other; six feet of
white silk, four feet broad, were stretched on the mat,
which was placed lengthwise; at the four corners were
erected four posts for curtains. In front of the two mats
was erected a portal, eight feet high by six feet broad, in
the shape of the portals in front of temples, made of a fine
sort of bamboo wrapped in white<SPAN id="footnotetag106"
name="footnotetag106"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote106"><sup>106</sup></SPAN>
silk. White curtains, four feet broad, were hung at the four
corners, and four flags, six feet long, on which should be
inscribed four quotations from the sacred books. These
flags, it is said, were immediately after the ceremony
carried away to the grave. At night two lights were placed,
one upon either side of the two mats. The candles were
placed in saucers upon stands of bamboo, four feet high,
wrapped in white silk. The person who was to disembowel
himself, entering the picket fence by the north entrance,
took his place upon the white silk upon the mat facing the
north. Some there were, however, who said that he should sit
facing the west: in that case the whole place must be
prepared accordingly. The seconds enter the enclosure by the
south entrance, at the same time as the principal enters by
the north, and take their places on the mat that is placed
crosswise.</p>
<p>Nowadays, when the <i>hara-kiri</i> is performed inside the
palace, a temporary place is made on purpose, either in the
garden or in some unoccupied spot; but if the criminal is to
die on the day on which he is given in charge, or on the next
day, the ceremony, having to take place so quickly, is
performed in the reception-room. Still, even if there is a
lapse of time between the period of giving the prisoner in
charge and the execution, it is better that the ceremony should
take place in a decent room in the house than in a place made
on purpose. If it is heard that, for fear of dirtying his
house, a man has made a place expressly, he will be blamed for
it. It surely can be no disgrace to the house of a soldier that
he was ordered to perform the last offices towards a Samurai
who died by <i>hara-kiri</i>. To slay his enemy against whom he
has cause of hatred, and then to kill himself, is the part of a
noble Samurai; and it is sheer nonsense to look upon the place
where he has disembowelled himself as polluted. In the
beginning of the eighteenth century, seventeen of the retainers
of Asano Takumi no Kami performed <i>hara-kiri</i> in the
garden of a palace at Shirokané, in Yedo. When it was
over, the people of the palace called upon the priests of a
sect named Shugenja to <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page267" id="page267"></SPAN></span> come and purify the place;
but when the lord of the palace heard this, he ordered the
place to be left as it was; for what need was there to
purify a place where faithful Samurai had died by their own
hand? But in other palaces to which the remainder of the
retainers of Takumi no Kami were entrusted, it is said that
the places of execution were purified. But the people of
that day praised Kumamoto Ko (the Prince of Higo), to whom
the palace at Shirokané belonged. It is a currish
thing to look upon death in battle or by <i>hara-kiri</i> as
a pollution: this is a thing to bear in mind. In modern
times the place of <i>hara-kiri</i> is eighteen feet square
in all cases; in the centre is a place to sit upon, and the
condemned man is made to sit facing the witnesses; at other
times he is placed with his side to the witnesses: this is
according to the nature of the spot. In some cases the
seconds turn their backs to the witnesses. It is open to
question, however, whether this is not a breach of
etiquette. The witnesses should be consulted upon these
arrangements. If the witnesses have no objection, the
condemned man should be placed directly opposite to them.
The place where the witnesses are seated should be removed
more than twelve or eighteen feet from the condemned man.
The place from which the sentence is read should also be
close by. The writer has been furnished with a plan of the
<i>hara-kiri</i> as it is performed at present. Although the
ceremony is gone through in other ways also, still it is
more convenient to follow the manner indicated.</p>
<p>If the execution takes place in a room, a kerchief of five
breadths of white cotton cloth or a quilt should be laid down,
and it is also said that two mats should be prepared; however,
as there are already mats in the room, there is no need for
special mats: two red rugs should be spread over all, sewed
together, one on the top of the other; for if the white cotton
cloth be used alone, the blood will soak through on to the
mats; therefore it is right the rugs should be spread. On the
twenty-third day of the eighth month of the fourth year of the
period Yenkiyô (A.D. 1740), at the <i>hara-kiri</i> of a
certain person there were laid down a white cloth, eight feet
square, and on that a quilt of light green cotton, six feet
square, and on that a cloth of white hemp, six feet square, and
on that two rugs. On the third day of the ninth month of the
ninth year of the period Tempô (A.D. 1838), at the
<i>hara-kiri</i> of a certain person it is said that there were
spread a large double cloth of white cotton, and on that two
rugs. But, of these two occasions, the first must be commended
for its careful preparation. If the execution be at night,
candlesticks of white wood should be placed at each of the four
corners, lest the seconds be hindered in their work. In the
place where the witnesses are to sit, ordinary candlesticks
should be placed, according to etiquette; but an excessive
illumination is not decorous. Two screens covered with white
paper should be set up, behind the shadow of which are
concealed the dirk upon a tray, a bucket to hold the head after
it has been cut off, an incense-burner, a pail of water,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page268" id="page268"></SPAN></span> and a basin. The above
rules apply equally to the ceremonies observed when the
<i>hara-kiri</i> takes place in a garden. In the latter case
the place is hung round with a white curtain, which need not
be new for the occasion. Two mats, a white cloth, and a rug
are spread. If the execution is at night, lanterns of white
paper are placed on bamboo poles at the four corners. The
sentence having been read inside the house, the persons
engaged in the ceremony proceed to the place of execution;
but, according to circumstances, the sentence may be read at
the place itself. In the case of Asano Takumi no Kami, the
sentence was read out in the house, and he afterwards
performed <i>hara-kiri</i> in the garden. On the third day
of the fourth month of the fourth year of the period Tenmei
(A.D. 1784), a Hatamoto named Sano, having received his
sentence in the supreme court-house, disembowelled himself
in the garden in front of the prison. When the ceremony
takes place in the garden, matting must be spread all the
way to the place, so that sandals need not be worn. The
reason for this is that some men in that position suffer
from a rush of blood to the head, from nervousness, so their
sandals might slip off their feet without their being aware
of their loss; and as this would have a very bad appearance,
it is better to spread matting. Care must be taken lest, in
spreading the matting, a place be left where two mats join,
against which the foot might trip. The white screens and
other things are prepared as has been directed above. If any
curtailment is made, it must be done as well as
circumstances will permit. According to the crime of which a
man who is handed over to any Daimio's charge is guilty, it
is known whether he will have to perform <i>hara-kiri</i>;
and the preparations should be made accordingly. Asano
Takumi no Kami was taken to the palace of Tamura Sama at the
hour of the monkey (between three and five in the
afternoon), took off his dress of ceremony, partook of a
bowl of soup and five dishes, and drank two cups of warm
water, and at the hour of the cock (between five and seven
in the evening) disembowelled himself. A case of this kind
requires much attention; for great care should be taken that
the preparations be carried on without the knowledge of the
principal. If a temporary room has been built expressly for
the occasion, to avoid pollution to the house, it should be
kept a secret. It once happened that a criminal was received
in charge at the palace of a certain nobleman, and when his
people were about to erect a temporary building for the
ceremony, they wrote to consult some of the parties
concerned; the letter ran as follows—</p>
<p>"The house in which we live is very small and inconvenient
in all respects. We have ordered the guard to treat our
prisoner with all respect; but our retainers who are placed on
guard are much inconvenienced for want of space; besides, in
the event of fire breaking out or any extraordinary event
taking place, the place is so small that it would be difficult
to get out. We are thinking, therefore, of adding an apartment
to the original building,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page269" id="page269"></SPAN></span> so that the guard may be
able at all times to go in and out freely, and that if, in
case of fire or otherwise, we should have to leave the
house, we may do so easily. We beg to consult you upon this
point."</p>
<p>When a Samurai has to perform <i>hara-kiri</i> by the
command of his own feudal lord, the ceremony should take place
in one of the lesser palaces of the clan. Once upon a time, a
certain prince of the Inouyé clan, having a just cause
of offence against his steward, who was called Ishikawa
Tôzayémon, and wishing to punish him, caused him
to be killed in his principal palace at Kandabashi, in Yedo.
When this matter was reported to the Shogun, having been
convicted of disrespect of the privileges of the city, he was
ordered to remove to his lesser palace at Asakusa. Now,
although the <i>hara-kiri</i> cannot be called properly an
execution, still, as it only differs from an ordinary execution
in that by it the honour of the Samurai is not affected, it is
only a question of degree; it is a matter of ceremonial. If the
principal palace<SPAN id="footnotetag107"
name="footnotetag107"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote107"><sup>107</sup></SPAN>
is a long distance from the Shogun's castle, then the
<i>hara-kiri</i> may take place there; but there can be no
objection whatever to its taking place in a minor palace.
Nowadays, when a man is condemned to <i>hara-kiri</i> by a
Daimio, the ceremony usually takes place in one of the
lesser palaces; the place commonly selected is an open space
near the horse-exercising ground, and the preparations which
I have described above are often shortened according to
circumstances.</p>
<p>When a retainer is suddenly ordered to perform
<i>hara-kiri</i> during a journey, a temple or shrine should be
hired for the occasion. On these hurried occasions, coarse
mats, faced with finer matting or common mats, may be used. If
the criminal is of rank to have an armour-bearer, a carpet of
skin should be spread, should one be easily procurable. The
straps of the skin (which are at the head) should, according to
old custom, be to the front, so that the fur may point
backwards. In old days, when the ceremony took place in a
garden, a carpet of skin was spread. To hire a temple for the
purpose of causing a man to perform <i>hara-kiri</i> was of
frequent occurrence: it is doubtful whether it may be done at
the present time. This sort of question should be referred
beforehand to some competent person, that the course to be
adopted may be clearly understood.</p>
<p>In the period Kambun (A.D. 1661-1673) a Prince Sakai,
travelling through the Bishiu territory, hired a temple or
shrine for one of his retainers to disembowel himself in; and
so the affair was
concluded.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page270" id="page270"></SPAN></span>
<h4>ON THE CEREMONIES OBSERVED AT THE HARA-KIRI OF A PERSON
GIVEN IN CHARGE TO A DAIMIO.</h4>
<p>When a man has been ordered by the Government to disembowel
himself, the public censors, who have been appointed to act as
witnesses, write to the prince who has the criminal in charge,
to inform them that they will go to his palace on public
business. This message is written directly to the chief, and is
sent by an assistant censor; and a suitable answer is returned
to it. Before the ceremony, the witnesses send an assistant
censor to see the place, and look at a plan of the house, and
to take a list of the names of the persons who are to be
present; he also has an interview with the <i>kaishaku</i>, or
seconds, and examines them upon the way of performing the
ceremonies. When all the preparations have been made, he goes
to fetch the censors; and they all proceed together to the
place of execution, dressed in their hempen-cloth dress of
ceremony. The retainers of the palace are collected to do
obeisance in the entrance-yard; and the lord, to whom the
criminal has been entrusted, goes as far as the front porch to
meet the censors, and conducts them to the front
reception-room. The chief censor then announces to the lord of
the palace that he has come to read out the sentence of such an
one who has been condemned to perform <i>hara-kiri</i>, and
that the second censor has come to witness the execution of the
sentence. The lord of the palace then inquires whether he is
expected to attend the execution in person, and, if any of the
relations or family of the criminal should beg to receive his
remains, whether their request should be complied with; after
this he announces that he will order everything to be made
ready, and leaves the room. Tea, a fire-box for smoking, and
sweetmeats are set before the censors; but they decline to
accept any hospitality until their business shall have been
concluded. The minor officials follow the same rule. If the
censors express a wish to see the place of execution, the
retainers of the palace show the way, and their lord
accompanies them; in this, however, he may be replaced by one
of his <i>karô</i> or councillors. They then return, and
take their seats in the reception-room. After this, when all
the preparations have been made, the master of the house leads
the censors to the place where the sentence is to be read; and
it is etiquette that they should wear both sword and
dirk.<SPAN id="footnotetag108"
name="footnotetag108"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote108"><sup>108</sup></SPAN>
The lord of the palace takes his place on one side; the
inferior censors sit on either side in a lower place. The
councillors and other officers of the palace also take their
places. One of the councillors present, addressing the
censors without moving from his place, asks whether he shall
bring forth the prisoner.</p>
<p>Previously to this, the retainers of the palace, going to
the room where the prisoner is confined, inform him that, as
the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page271" id="page271"></SPAN></span> censors have arrived, he
should change his dress, and the attendants bring out a
change of clothes upon a large tray: it is when he has
finished his toilet that the witnesses go forth and take
their places in the appointed order, and the principal is
then introduced. He is preceded by one man, who should be of
the rank of <i>Mono-gashira</i> (retainer of the fourth
rank), who wears a dirk, but no sword. Six men act as
attendants; they should be of the fifth or sixth rank; they
walk on either side of the principal. They are followed by
one man who should be of the rank of <i>Yônin</i>
(councillor of the second class). When they reach the place,
the leading man draws on one side and sits down, and the six
attendants sit down on either side of the principal. The
officer who follows him sits down behind him, and the chief
censor reads the sentence.</p>
<p>When the reading of the sentence is finished, the principal
leaves the room and again changes his clothes, and the chief
censor immediately leaves the palace; but the lord of the
palace does not conduct him to the door. The second censor
returns to the reception-room until the principal has changed
his clothes. When the principal has taken his seat at the place
of execution, the councillors of the palace announce to the
second censor that all is ready; he then proceeds to the place,
wearing his sword and dirk. The lord of the palace, also
wearing his sword and dirk, takes his seat on one side. The
inferior censors and councillors sit in front of the censor:
they wear the dirk only. The assistant second brings a dirk
upon a tray, and, having placed it in front of the principal,
withdraws on one side: when the principal leans his head
forward, his chief second strikes off his head, which is
immediately shown to the censor, who identifies it, and tells
the master of the palace that he is satisfied, and thanks him
for all his trouble. The corpse, as it lies, is hidden by a
white screen which is set up around it, and incense is brought
out. The witnesses leave the place. The lord of the palace
accompanies them as far as the porch, and the retainers
prostrate themselves in the yard as before. The retainers who
should be present at the place of execution are one or two
councillors (<i>Karô</i>), two or three second
councillors (<i>Yônin</i>), two or three
<i>Mono-gashira</i>, one chief of the palace (<i>Rusui</i>),
six attendants, one chief second, two assistant seconds, one
man to carry incense, who need not be a person of
rank—any Samurai will do. They attend to the setting up
of the white screen.</p>
<p>The duty of burying the corpse and of setting the place in
order again devolves upon four men; these are selected from
Samurai of the middle or lower class; during the performance of
their duties, they hitch up their trousers and wear neither
sword nor dirk. Their names are previously sent in to the
censor, who acts as witness; and to the junior censors, should
they desire it. Before the arrival of the chief censor, the
requisite utensils for extinguishing a fire are prepared,
firemen are <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page272" id="page272"></SPAN></span>
engaged,<SPAN id="footnotetag109"
name="footnotetag109"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote109"><sup>109</sup></SPAN>
and officers constantly go the rounds to watch against fire.
From the time when the chief censor comes into the house
until he leaves it, no one is allowed to enter the premises.
The servants on guard at the entrance porch should wear
their hempen dresses of ceremony. Everything in the palace
should be conducted with decorum, and the strictest
attention paid in all things.</p>
<p>When any one is condemned to <i>hara-kiri</i>, it would be
well that people should go to the palace of the Prince of Higo,
and learn what transpired at the execution of the Rônins
of Asano Takumi no Kami. A curtain was hung round the garden in
front of the reception-room; three mats were laid down, and
upon these was placed a white cloth. The condemned men were
kept in the reception-room, and summoned, one by one; two men,
one on each side, accompanied them; the second, followed
behind; and they proceeded together to the place of execution.
When the execution was concluded in each case, the corpse was
hidden from the sight of the chief witness by a white screen,
folded up in white cloth, placed on a mat, and carried off to
the rear by two foot-soldiers; it was then placed in a coffin.
The blood-stained ground was sprinkled with sand, and swept
clean; fresh mats were laid down, and the place prepared anew;
after which the next man was summoned to come forth.</p>
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