<h2><SPAN name="page21"></SPAN>LETTER V.</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Kwan-non Temple—Uniformity of Temple
Architecture—A <i>Kuruma</i> Expedition—A Perpetual
Festival—The Ni-ô—The Limbo of
Vanity—Heathen Prayers—Binzuru—A Group of
Devils—Archery Galleries—New Japan—An
Élégante.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">H.B.M.’s <span class="smcap">Legation</span>, <span class="smcap">Yedo</span>,<br/>
<i>June</i> 9.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Once</span> for all I will describe a
Buddhist temple, and it shall be the popular temple of Asakusa,
which keeps fair and festival the whole year round, and is
dedicated to the “thousand-armed” Kwan-non, the
goddess of mercy. Writing generally, it may be said that in
design, roof, and general aspect, Japanese Buddhist temples are
all alike. The sacred architectural idea expresses itself
in nearly the same form always. There is a single or
double-roofed gateway, with highly-coloured figures in niches on
either side; the paved temple-court, with more or fewer stone or
bronze lanterns; <i>amainu</i>, or heavenly dogs, in stone on
stone pedestals; stone sarcophagi, roofed over or not, for holy
water; a flight of steps; a portico, continued as a verandah all
round the temple; a roof of tremendously disproportionate size
and weight, with a peculiar curve; a square or oblong hall
divided by a railing from a “chancel” with a high and
low altar, and a shrine containing Buddha, or the divinity to
whom the chapel is dedicated; an incense-burner, and a few
ecclesiastical ornaments. The symbols, idols, and
adornments depend upon the sect to which the temple belongs, or
the wealth of its votaries, or the fancy of the priests.
Some temples are packed full of gods, shrines, banners, bronzes,
brasses, tablets, and ornaments, and others, like those of the
Monto sect, are so severely simple, that with scarcely an
alteration they might be used for Christian worship
to-morrow.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page22"></SPAN>The
foundations consist of square stones on which the uprights
rest. These are of elm, and are united at intervals by
longitudinal pieces. The great size and enormous weight of
the roofs arise from the trusses being formed of one heavy frame
being built upon another in diminishing squares till the top is
reached, the main beams being formed of very large timbers put on
in their natural state. They are either very heavily and
ornamentally tiled, or covered with sheet copper ornamented with
gold, or thatched to a depth of from one to three feet, with fine
shingles or bark. The casing of the walls on the outside is
usually thick elm planking either lacquered or unpainted, and
that of the inside is of thin, finely-planed and bevelled
planking of the beautiful wood of the <i>Retinospora
obtusa</i>. The lining of the roof is in flat panels, and
where it is supported by pillars they are invariably circular,
and formed of the straight, finely-grained stem of the
<i>Retinospora obtusa</i>. The projecting ends of the
roof-beams under the eaves are either elaborately carved,
lacquered in dull red, or covered with copper, as are the joints
of the beams. Very few nails are used, the timbers being
very beautifully joined by mortices and dovetails, other methods
of junction being unknown.</p>
<p>Mr. Chamberlain and I went in a <i>kuruma</i> hurried along by
three liveried coolies, through the three miles of crowded
streets which lie between the Legation and Asakusa, once a
village, but now incorporated with this monster city, to the
broad street leading to the Adzuma Bridge over the Sumida river,
one of the few stone bridges in Tôkiyô, which
connects east Tôkiyô, an uninteresting region,
containing many canals, storehouses, timber-yards, and inferior
<i>yashikis</i>, with the rest of the city. This street,
marvellously thronged with pedestrians and <i>kurumas</i>, is the
terminus of a number of city “stage lines,” and
twenty wretched-looking covered waggons, with still more wretched
ponies, were drawn up in the middle, waiting for
passengers. Just there plenty of real Tôkiyô
life is to be seen, for near a shrine of popular pilgrimage there
are always numerous places of amusement, innocent and vicious,
and the vicinity of this temple is full of restaurants,
tea-houses, minor theatres, and the resorts of dancing and
singing girls.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page23"></SPAN>A
broad-paved avenue, only open to foot passengers, leads from this
street to the grand entrance, a colossal two-storied
double-roofed <i>mon</i>, or gate, painted a rich dull red.
On either side of this avenue are lines of booths—which
make a brilliant and lavish display of their
contents—toy-shops, shops for smoking apparatus, and shops
for the sale of ornamental hair-pins predominating. Nearer
the gate are booths for the sale of rosaries for prayer, sleeve
and bosom idols of brass and wood in small shrines, amulet bags,
representations of the jolly-looking Daikoku, the god of wealth,
the most popular of the household gods of Japan, shrines,
memorial tablets, cheap <i>ex votos</i>, sacred bells,
candlesticks, and incense-burners, and all the endless and
various articles connected with Buddhist devotion, public and
private. Every day is a festival-day at Asakusa; the temple
is dedicated to the most popular of the great divinities; it is
the most popular of religious resorts; and whether he be
Buddhist, Shintôist, or Christian, no stranger comes to the
capital without making a visit to its crowded courts or a
purchase at its tempting booths. Not to be an exception, I
invested in bouquets of firework flowers, fifty flowers for 2
<i>sen</i>, or 1d., each of which, as it slowly consumes, throws
off fiery coruscations, shaped like the most beautiful of snow
crystals. I was also tempted by small boxes at 2 <i>sen</i>
each, containing what look like little slips of withered pith,
but which, on being dropped into water, expand into trees and
flowers.</p>
<p>Down a paved passage on the right there is an artificial
river, not over clean, with a bridge formed of one curved stone,
from which a flight of steps leads up to a small temple with a
magnificent bronze bell. At the entrance several women were
praying. In the same direction are two fine bronze Buddhas,
seated figures, one with clasped hands, the other holding a
lotus, both with “The light of the world” upon their
brows. The grand red gateway into the actual temple courts
has an extremely imposing effect, and besides, it is the portal
to the first great heathen temple that I have seen, and it made
me think of another temple whose courts were equally crowded with
buyers and sellers, and of a “whip of small cords” in
the hand of One who claimed both the temple and its courts as His
“Father’s House.” Not with less <SPAN name="page24"></SPAN>righteous
wrath would the gentle founder of Buddhism purify the
unsanctified courts of Asakusa. Hundreds of men, women, and
children passed to and fro through the gateway in incessant
streams, and so they are passing through every daylight hour of
every day in the year, thousands becoming tens of thousands on
the great <i>matsuri</i> days, when the <i>mikoshi</i>, or sacred
car, containing certain symbols of the god, is exhibited, and
after sacred mimes and dances have been performed, is carried in
a magnificent, antique procession to the shore and back
again. Under the gateway on either side are the
<i>Ni-ô</i>, or two kings, gigantic figures in flowing
robes, one red and with an open mouth, representing the
<i>Yo</i>, or male principle of Chinese philosophy, the other
green and with the mouth firmly closed, representing the
<i>In</i>, or female principle. They are hideous creatures,
with protruding eyes, and faces and figures distorted and
corrupted into a high degree of exaggerated and convulsive
action. These figures guard the gates of most of the larger
temples, and small prints of them are pasted over the doors of
houses to protect them against burglars. Attached to the
grating in front were a number of straw sandals, hung up by
people who pray that their limbs may be as muscular as those of
the <i>Ni-ô</i>.</p>
<p>Passing through this gate we were in the temple court proper,
and in front of the temple itself, a building of imposing height
and size, of a dull red colour, with a grand roof of heavy iron
grey tiles, with a sweeping curve which gives grace as well as
grandeur. The timbers and supports are solid and of great
size, but, in common with all Japanese temples, whether Buddhist
or Shintô, the edifice is entirely of wood. A broad
flight of narrow, steep, brass-bound steps lead up to the porch,
which is formed by a number of circular pillars supporting a very
lofty roof, from which paper lanterns ten feet long are
hanging. A gallery runs from this round the temple, under
cover of the eaves. There is an outer temple, unmatted, and
an inner one behind a grating, into which those who choose to pay
for the privilege of praying in comparative privacy, or of having
prayers said for them by the priests, can pass.</p>
<p>In the outer temple the noise, confusion, and perpetual
motion, are bewildering. Crowds on clattering clogs pass in
<SPAN name="page25"></SPAN>and out;
pigeons, of which hundreds live in the porch, fly over your head,
and the whirring of their wings mingles with the tinkling of
bells, the beating of drums and gongs, the high-pitched drone of
the priests, the low murmur of prayers, the rippling laughter of
girls, the harsh voices of men, and the general buzz of a
multitude. There is very much that is highly grotesque at
first sight. Men squat on the floor selling amulets,
rosaries, printed prayers, incense sticks, and other wares.
<i>Ex votos</i> of all kinds hang on the wall and on the great
round pillars. Many of these are rude Japanese
pictures. The subject of one is the blowing-up of a steamer
in the Sumidagawa with the loss of 100 lives, when the donor was
saved by the grace of Kwan-non. Numbers of memorials are
from people who offered up prayers here, and have been restored
to health or wealth. Others are from junk men whose lives
have been in peril. There are scores of men’s queues
and a few dusty braids of women’s hair offered on account
of vows or prayers, usually for sick relatives, and among them
all, on the left hand, are a large mirror in a gaudily gilt frame
and a framed picture of the P. M. S. <i>China</i>! Above
this incongruous collection are splendid wood carvings and
frescoes of angels, among which the pigeons find a home free from
molestation.</p>
<p>Near the entrance there is a superb incense-burner in the most
massive style of the older bronzes, with a mythical beast rampant
upon it, and in high relief round it the Japanese signs of the
zodiac—the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, serpent, horse,
goat, monkey, cock, dog, and hog. Clouds of incense rise
continually from the perforations round the edge, and a
black-toothed woman who keeps it burning is perpetually receiving
small coins from the worshippers, who then pass on to the front
of the altar to pray. The high altar, and indeed all that I
should regard as properly the temple, are protected by a screen
of coarsely-netted iron wire. This holy of holies is full
of shrines and gods, gigantic candlesticks, colossal lotuses of
gilded silver, offerings, lamps, lacquer, litany books, gongs,
drums, bells, and all the mysterious symbols of a faith which is
a system of morals and metaphysics to the educated and initiated,
and an idolatrous superstition to the masses. In this
interior the light was dim, the lamps burned low, the <SPAN name="page26"></SPAN>atmosphere
was heavy with incense, and amidst its fumes shaven priests in
chasubles and stoles moved noiselessly over the soft matting
round the high altar on which Kwan-non is enshrined, lighting
candles, striking bells, and murmuring prayers. In front of
the screen is the treasury, a wooden chest 14 feet by 10, with a
deep slit, into which all the worshippers cast copper coins with
a ceaseless clinking sound.</p>
<p>There, too, they pray, if that can be called prayer which
frequently consists only in the repetition of an uncomprehended
phrase in a foreign tongue, bowing the head, raising the hands
and rubbing them, murmuring a few words, telling beads, clapping
the hands, bowing again, and then passing out or on to another
shrine to repeat the same form. Merchants in silk clothing,
soldiers in shabby French uniforms, farmers, coolies in
“vile raiment,” mothers, maidens, swells in European
clothes, even the <i>samurai</i> policemen, bow before the
goddess of mercy. Most of the prayers were offered rapidly,
a mere momentary interlude in the gurgle of careless talk, and
without a pretence of reverence; but some of the petitioners
obviously brought real woes in simple “faith.”</p>
<p>In one shrine there is a large idol, spotted all over with
pellets of paper, and hundreds of these are sticking to the wire
netting which protects him. A worshipper writes his
petition on paper, or, better still, has it written for him by
the priest, chews it to a pulp, and spits it at the
divinity. If, having been well aimed, it passes through the
wire and sticks, it is a good omen, if it lodges in the netting
the prayer has probably been unheard. The <i>Ni-ô</i>
and some of the gods outside the temple are similarly
disfigured. On the left there is a shrine with a screen, to
the bars of which innumerable prayers have been tied. On
the right, accessible to all, sits Binzuru, one of Buddha’s
original sixteen disciples. His face and appearance have
been calm and amiable, with something of the quiet dignity of an
elderly country gentleman of the reign of George III.; but he is
now worn and defaced, and has not much more of eyes, nose, and
mouth than the Sphinx; and the polished, red lacquer has
disappeared from his hands and feet, for Binzuru is a great
medicine god, and centuries of sick people have rubbed his face
and limbs, and then have rubbed their own. A young woman
went up to <SPAN name="page27"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
27</span>him, rubbed the back of his neck, and then rubbed her
own. Then a modest-looking girl, leading an ancient woman
with badly inflamed eyelids and paralysed arms, rubbed his
eyelids, and then gently stroked the closed eyelids of the
crone. Then a coolie, with a swelled knee, applied himself
vigorously to Binzuru’s knee, and more gently to his
own. Remember, this is the great temple of the populace,
and “not many rich, not many noble, not many mighty,”
enter its dim, dirty, crowded halls. <SPAN name="citation27"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote27" class="citation">[27]</SPAN></p>
<p>But the great temple to Kwan-non is not the only sight of
Asakusa. Outside it are countless shrines and temples, huge
stone <i>Amainu</i>, or heavenly dogs, on rude blocks of stone,
large cisterns of stone and bronze with and without canopies,
containing water for the ablutions of the worshippers, cast iron
<i>Amainu</i> on hewn stone pedestals—a recent
gift—bronze and stone lanterns, a stone prayer-wheel in a
stone post, figures of Buddha with the serene countenance of one
who rests from his labours, stone idols, on which devotees have
pasted slips of paper inscribed with prayers, with sticks of
incense rising out of the ashes of hundreds of former sticks
smouldering before them, blocks of hewn stone with Chinese and
Sanskrit inscriptions, an eight-sided temple in which are figures
of the “Five Hundred Disciples” of Buddha, a temple
with the roof and upper part of the walls richly coloured, the
circular Shintô mirror in an inner shrine, a bronze
treasury outside with a bell, which is rung to attract the
god’s attention, a striking, five-storied pagoda, with much
red lacquer, and the ends of the roof-beams very boldly carved,
its heavy eaves fringed with wind bells, and its uppermost roof
terminating in a graceful copper spiral of great height, with the
“sacred pearl” surrounded by flames for its
finial. Near it, as near most temples, is an upright frame
of plain wood with tablets, on which are inscribed the names of
donors to the temple, and the amount of their gifts.</p>
<p>There is a handsome stone-floored temple to the south-east of
the main building, to which we were the sole visitors. <SPAN name="page28"></SPAN>It is lofty
and very richly decorated. In the centre is an octagonal
revolving room, or rather shrine, of rich red lacquer most
gorgeously ornamented. It rests on a frame of carved black
lacquer, and has a lacquer gallery running round it, on which
several richly decorated doors open. On the application of
several shoulders to this gallery the shrine rotates. It
is, in fact, a revolving library of the Buddhist Scriptures, and
a single turn is equivalent to a single pious perusal of
them. It is an exceedingly beautiful specimen of ancient
decorative lacquer work. At the back part of the temple is
a draped brass figure of Buddha, with one hand raised—a
dignified piece of casting. All the Buddhas have Hindoo
features, and the graceful drapery and oriental repose which have
been imported from India contrast singularly with the grotesque
extravagances of the indigenous Japanese conceptions. In
the same temple are four monstrously extravagant figures carved
in wood, life-size, with clawed toes on their feet, and <SPAN name="page29"></SPAN>two great
fangs in addition to the teeth in each mouth. The heads of
all are surrounded with flames, and are backed by golden
circlets. They are extravagantly clothed in garments which
look as if they were agitated by a violent wind; they wear
helmets and partial suits of armour, and hold in their right
hands something between a monarch’s sceptre and a
priest’s staff. They have goggle eyes and open
mouths, and their faces are in distorted and exaggerated
action. One, painted bright red, tramples on a writhing
devil painted bright pink; another, painted emerald green,
tramples on a sea-green devil, an indigo blue monster tramples on
a sky-blue fiend, and a bright pink monster treads under his
clawed feet a flesh-coloured demon. I cannot give you any
idea of the hideousness of their aspect, and was much inclined to
sympathise with the more innocent-looking fiends whom they were
maltreating. They occur very frequently in Buddhist
temples, and are said by some to be assistant-torturers to Yemma,
the lord of hell, and are called by others “The gods of the
Four Quarters.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p28b.jpg"><ANTIMG alt="Stone Lanterns" title= "Stone Lanterns" src="images/p28s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>The temple grounds are a most extraordinary sight. No
English fair in the palmiest days of fairs ever presented such an
array of attractions. Behind the temple are archery
galleries in numbers, where girls, hardly so modest-looking as
usual, smile and smirk, and bring straw-coloured tea in dainty
cups, and tasteless sweetmeats on lacquer trays, and smoke their
tiny pipes, and offer you bows of slender bamboo strips, two feet
long, with rests for the arrows, and tiny cherry-wood arrows,
bone-tipped, and feathered red, blue, and white, and smilingly,
but quite unobtrusively, ask you to try your skill or luck at a
target hanging in front of a square drum, flanked by red
cushions. A click, a boom, or a hardly audible
“thud,” indicate the result. Nearly all the
archers were grown-up men, and many of them spend hours at a time
in this childish sport.</p>
<p>All over the grounds booths with the usual charcoal fire,
copper boiler, iron kettle of curious workmanship, tiny cups,
fragrant aroma of tea, and winsome, graceful girls, invite you to
drink and rest, and more solid but less inviting refreshments are
also to be had. Rows of pretty paper lanterns decorate all
the stalls. Then there are photograph galleries, mimic
tea-gardens, <SPAN name="page30"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
30</span>tableaux in which a large number of groups of life-size
figures with appropriate scenery are put into motion by a
creaking wheel of great size, matted lounges for rest, stands
with saucers of rice, beans and peas for offerings to the gods,
the pigeons, and the two sacred horses, Albino ponies, with pink
eyes and noses, revoltingly greedy creatures, eating all day long
and still craving for more. There are booths for singing
and dancing, and under one a professional story-teller was
reciting to a densely packed crowd one of the old, popular
stories of crime. There are booths where for a few
<i>rin</i> you may have the pleasure of feeding some very ugly
and greedy apes, or of watching mangy monkeys which have been
taught to prostrate themselves Japanese fashion.</p>
<p>This letter is far too long, but to pass over Asakusa and its
novelties when the impression of them is fresh would be to omit
one of the most interesting sights in Japan. On the way
back we passed red mail carts like those in London, a squadron of
cavalry in European uniforms and with European saddles, and the
carriage of the Minister of Marine, an English brougham with a
pair of horses in English harness, and an escort of six
troopers—a painful precaution adopted since the political
assassination of Okubo, the Home Minister, three weeks ago.
So the old and the new in this great city contrast with and
jostle each other. The Mikado and his ministers, naval and
military officers and men, the whole of the civil officials and
the police, wear European clothes, as well as a number of
dissipated-looking young men who aspire to represent “young
Japan.” Carriages and houses in English style, with
carpets, chairs, and tables, are becoming increasingly numerous,
and the bad taste which regulates the purchase of foreign
furnishings is as marked as the good taste which everywhere
presides over the adornment of the houses in purely Japanese
style. Happily these expensive and unbecoming innovations
have scarcely affected female dress, and some ladies who adopted
our fashions have given them up because of their discomfort and
manifold difficulties and complications.</p>
<p>The Empress on State occasions appears in scarlet satin
<i>hakama</i>, and flowing robes, and she and the Court ladies
invariably wear the national costume. I have only seen two
<SPAN name="page31"></SPAN>ladies in
European dress; and this was at a dinner-party here, and they
were the wives of Mr. Mori, the go-ahead Vice-Minister for
Foreign Affairs, and of the Japanese Consul at Hong Kong; and
both by long residence abroad have learned to wear it with
ease. The wife of Saigo, the Minister of Education, called
one day in an exquisite Japanese dress of dove-coloured silk
<i>crêpe</i>, with a pale pink under-dress of the same
material, which showed a little at the neck and sleeves.
Her girdle was of rich dove-coloured silk, with a ghost of a pale
pink blossom hovering upon it here and there. She had no
frills or fripperies of any description, or ornaments, except a
single pin in her chignon, and, with a sweet and charming face,
she looked as graceful and dignified in her Japanese costume as
she would have looked exactly the reverse in ours. Their
costume has one striking advantage over ours. A woman is
perfectly <i>clothed</i> if she has one garment and a girdle on,
and perfectly <i>dressed</i> if she has two. There is a
difference in features and expression—much exaggerated,
however, by Japanese artists—between the faces of high-born
women and those of the middle and lower classes. I decline
to admire fat-faces, pug noses, thick lips, long eyes, turned up
at the outer corners, and complexions which owe much to powder
and paint. The habit of painting the lips with a
reddish-yellow pigment, and of heavily powdering the face and
throat with pearl powder, is a repulsive one. But it is
hard to pronounce any unfavourable criticism on women who have so
much kindly grace of manner.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">I. L. B.</p>
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