<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page282" id="page282"></SPAN></span> conducted in the most
private manner, the casual remarks which we overheard in the
streets, and a crowd lining the principal entrance to the
temple, showed that it was a matter of no little interest to
the public. The courtyard of the temple presented a most
picturesque sight; it was crowded with soldiers standing
about in knots round large fires, which threw a dim
flickering light over the heavy eaves and quaint gable-ends
of the sacred buildings. We were shown into an inner room,
where we were to wait until the preparation for the ceremony
was completed: in the next room to us were the high Japanese
officers. After a long interval, which seemed doubly long
from the silence which prevailed, Itô Shunské,
the provisional Governor of Hiogo, came and took down our
names, and informed us that seven <i>kenshi</i>, sheriffs or
witnesses, would attend on the part of the Japanese. He and
another officer represented the Mikado; two captains of
Satsuma's infantry, and two of Choshiu's, with a
representative of the Prince of Bizen, the clan of the
condemned man, completed the number, which was probably
arranged in order to tally with that of the foreigners.
Itô Shunské further inquired whether we wished
to put any questions to the prisoner. We replied in the
negative.</p>
<p>A further delay then ensued, after which we were invited to
follow the Japanese witnesses into the <i>hondo</i> or main
hall of the temple, where the ceremony was to be performed. It
was an imposing scene. A large hall with a high roof supported
by dark pillars of wood. From the ceiling hung a profusion of
those huge gilt lamps and ornaments peculiar to Buddhist
temples. In front of the high altar, where the floor, covered
with beautiful white mats, is raised some three or four inches
from the ground, was laid a rug of scarlet felt. Tall candles
placed at regular intervals gave out a dim mysterious light,
just sufficient to let all the proceedings be seen. The seven
Japanese took their places on the left of the raised floor, the
seven foreigners on the right. No other person was present.</p>
<p>After an interval of a few minutes of anxious suspense, Taki
Zenzaburô, a stalwart man, thirty-two years of age, with
a noble air, walked into the hall attired in his dress of
ceremony, with the peculiar hempen-cloth wings which are worn
on great occasions. He was accompanied by a <i>kaishaku</i> and
three officers, who wore the <i>jimbaori</i> or war surcoat
with gold-tissue facings. The word <i>kaishaku</i>, it should
be observed, is one to which our word <i>executioner</i> is no
equivalent term. The office is that of a gentleman: in many
cases it is performed by a kinsman or friend of the condemned,
and the relation between them is rather that of principal and
second than that of victim and executioner. In this instance
the <i>kaishaku</i> was a pupil of Taki Zenzaburô, and
was selected by the friends of the latter from among their own
number for his skill in swordsmanship.</p>
<p>With the <i>kaishaku</i> on his left hand, Taki
Zenzaburô advanced slowly towards the Japanese witnesses,
and the two bowed before
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page283" id="page283"></SPAN></span> them, then drawing near to
the foreigners they saluted us in the same way, perhaps even
with more deference: in each case the salutation was
ceremoniously returned. Slowly, and with great dignity, the
condemned man mounted on to the raised floor, prostrated
himself before the high altar twice, and
seated<SPAN id="footnotetag112"
name="footnotetag112"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote112"><sup>112</sup></SPAN>
himself on the felt carpet with his back to the high altar,
the <i>kaishaku</i> crouching on his left-hand side. One of
the three attendant officers then came forward, bearing a
stand of the kind used in temples for offerings, on which,
wrapped in paper, lay the <i>wakizashi</i>, the short sword
or dirk of the Japanese, nine inches and a half in length,
with a point and an edge as sharp as a razor's. This he
handed, prostrating himself, to the condemned man, who
received it reverently, raising it to his head with both
hands, and placed it in front of himself.</p>
<p>After another profound obeisance, Taki Zenzaburô, in a
voice which betrayed just so much emotion and hesitation as
might be expected from a man who is making a painful
confession, but with no sign of either in his face or manner,
spoke as follows:—</p>
<p>"I, and I alone, unwarrantably gave the order to fire on the
foreigners at Kôbé, and again as they tried to
escape. For this crime I disembowel myself, and I beg you who
are present to do me the honour of witnessing the act."</p>
<p>Bowing once more, the speaker allowed his upper garments to
slip down to his girdle, and remained naked to the waist.
Carefully, according to custom, he tucked his sleeves under his
knees to prevent himself from falling backwards; for a noble
Japanese gentleman should die falling forwards. Deliberately,
with a steady hand, he took the dirk that lay before him; he
looked at it wistfully, almost affectionately; for a moment he
seemed to collect his thoughts for the last time, and then
stabbing himself deeply below the waist on the left-hand side,
he drew the dirk slowly across to the right side, and, turning
it in the wound, gave a slight cut upwards. During this
sickeningly painful operation he never moved a muscle of his
face. When he drew out the dirk, he leaned forward and
stretched out his neck; an expression of pain for the first
time crossed his face, but he uttered no sound. At that moment
the <i>kaishaku</i>, who, still crouching by his side, had been
keenly watching his every movement, sprang to his feet, poised
his sword for a second in the air; there was a flash, a heavy,
ugly thud, a crashing fall; with one blow the head had been
severed from the body.</p>
<p>A dead silence followed, broken only by the hideous noise of
the blood throbbing out of the inert heap before us, which but
a moment before had been a brave and chivalrous man. It was
horrible.</p>
<p>The <i>kaishaku</i> made a low bow, wiped his sword with a
piece of paper which he had ready for the purpose, and retired
from <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page284" id="page284"></SPAN></span> the raised floor; and the
stained dirk was solemnly borne away, a bloody proof of the
execution.</p>
<p>The two representatives of the Mikado then left their
places, and, crossing over to where the foreign witnesses sat,
called us to witness that the sentence of death upon Taki
Zenzaburô had been faithfully carried out. The ceremony
being at an end, we left the temple.</p>
<p>The ceremony, to which the place and the hour gave an
additional solemnity, was characterized throughout by that
extreme dignity and punctiliousness which are the distinctive
marks of the proceedings of Japanese gentlemen of rank; and it
is important to note this fact, because it carries with it the
conviction that the dead man was indeed the officer who had
committed the crime, and no substitute. While profoundly
impressed by the terrible scene it was impossible at the same
time not to be filled with admiration of the firm and manly
bearing of the sufferer, and of the nerve with which the
<i>kaishaku</i> performed his last duty to his master. Nothing
could more strongly show the force of education. The Samurai,
or gentleman of the military class, from his earliest years
learns to look upon the <i>hara-kiri</i> as a ceremony in which
some day he may be called upon to play a part as principal or
second. In old-fashioned families, which hold to the traditions
of ancient chivalry, the child is instructed in the rite and
familiarized with the idea as an honourable expiation of crime
or blotting out of disgrace. If the hour comes, he is prepared
for it, and gravely faces an ordeal which early training has
robbed of half its horrors. In what other country in the world
does a man learn that the last tribute of affection which he
may have to pay to his best friend may be to act as his
executioner?</p>
<p>Since I wrote the above, we have heard that, before his
entry into the fatal hall, Taki Zenzaburô called round
him all those of his own clan who were present, many of whom
had carried out his order to fire, and, addressing them in a
short speech, acknowledged the heinousness of his crime and the
justice of his sentence, and warned them solemnly to avoid any
repetition of attacks upon foreigners. They were also addressed
by the officers of the Mikado, who urged them to bear no
ill-will against us on account of the fate of their
fellow-clansman. They declared that they entertained no such
feeling.</p>
<p>The opinion has been expressed that it would have been
politic for the foreign representatives at the last moment to
have interceded for the life of Taki Zenzaburô. The
question is believed to have been debated among the
representatives themselves. My own belief is that mercy,
although it might have produced the desired effect among the
more civilized clans, would have been mistaken for weakness and
fear by those wilder people who have not yet a personal
knowledge of foreigners. The offence—an attack upon the
flags and subjects of all the Treaty Powers, which lack of
skill, not of will, alone prevented from ending in a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page285" id="page285"></SPAN></span> universal
massacre—was the gravest that has been committed upon
foreigners since their residence in Japan. Death was
undoubtedly deserved, and the form chosen was in Japanese
eyes merciful and yet judicial. The crime might have
involved a war and cost hundreds of lives; it was wiped out
by one death. I believe that, in the interest of Japan as
well as in our own, the course pursued was wise, and it was
very satisfactory to me to find that one of the ablest
Japanese ministers, with whom I had a discussion upon the
subject, was quite of my opinion.</p>
<p>The ceremonies observed at the <i>hara-kiri</i> appear to
vary slightly in detail in different parts of Japan; but the
following memorandum upon the subject of the rite, as it used
to be practised at Yedo during the rule of the Tycoon, clearly
establishes its judicial character. I translated it from a
paper drawn up for me by a Japanese who was able to speak of
what he had seen himself. Three different ceremonies are
described:—</p>
<p>1st. <i>Ceremonies observed at the "hara-kiri" of a Hatamoto
(petty noble of the Tycoon's court) in prison.</i>—This
is conducted with great secrecy. Six mats are spread in a large
courtyard of the prison; an <i>ometsuké</i> (officer
whose duties appear to consist in the surveillance of other
officers), assisted by two other <i>ometsukés</i> of the
second and third class, acts as <i>kenshi</i> (sheriff or
witness), and sits in front of the mats. The condemned man,
attired in his dress of ceremony, and wearing his wings of
hempen cloth, sits in the centre of the mats. At each of the
four corners of the mats sits a prison official. Two officers
of the Governor of the city act as <i>kaishaku</i>
(executioners or seconds), and take their place, one on the
right hand and the other on the left hand of the condemned. The
<i>kaishaku</i> on the left side, announcing his name and
surname, says, bowing, "I have the honour to act as
<i>kaishaku</i> to you; have you any last wishes to confide to
me?" The condemned man thanks him and accepts the offer or not,
as the case may be. He then bows to the sheriff, and a wooden
dirk nine and a half inches long is placed before him at a
distance of three feet, wrapped in paper, and lying on a stand
such as is used for offerings in temples. As he reaches forward
to take the wooden sword, and stretches out his neck, the
<i>kaifihaku</i> on his left-hand side draws his sword and
strikes off his head. The <i>kaishaku</i> on the right-hand
side takes up the head and shows it to the sheriff. The body is
given to the relations of the deceased for burial. His property
is confiscated.</p>
<p>2nd. <i>The ceremonies observed at the "hara-kiri" of a
Daimio's retainer.</i>—When the retainer of a Daimio is
condemned to perform the <i>hara-kiri,</i> four mats are placed
in the yard of the <i>yashiki</i> or palace. The condemned man,
dressed in his robes of ceremony and wearing his wings of
hempen cloth, sits in the centre. An officer acts as chief
witness, with a second witness under him. Two officers, who act
as <i>kaishaku</i>, are on the right and left of the condemned
man; four officers are placed at the corners of the mats. The
<i>kaishaku</i>, as in the former case, offers to execute
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page286" id="page286"></SPAN></span> the last wishes of the
condemned. A dirk nine and a half inches long is placed
before him on a stand. In this case the dirk is a real dirk,
which the man takes and stabs himself with on the left side,
below the navel, drawing it across to the right side. At
this moment, when he leans forward in pain, the
<i>kaishaku</i> on the left-hand side cuts off the head. The
<i>kaishaku</i> on the right-hand side takes up the head,
and shows it to the sheriff. The body is given to the
relations for burial. In most cases the property of the
deceased is confiscated.</p>
<p>3rd. <i>Self-immolation of a Daimio on account of
disgrace</i>.—When a Daimio had been guilty of treason or
offended against the Tycoon, inasmuch as the family was
disgraced, and an apology could neither be offered nor
accepted, the offending Daimio was condemned to
<i>hara-kiri</i>. Calling his councillors around him, he
confided to them his last will and testament for transmission
to the Tycoon. Then, clothing himself in his court dress, he
disembowelled himself, and cut his own throat. His councillors
then reported the matter to the Government, and a coroner was
sent to investigate it. To him the retainers handed the last
will and testament of their lord, and be took it to the
Gorôjiu (first council), who transmitted it to the
Tycoon. If the offence was heinous, such as would involve the
ruin of the whole family, by the clemency of the Tycoon, half
the property might be confiscated, and half returned to the
heir; if the offence was trivial, the property was inherited
intact by the heir, and the family did not suffer.</p>
<p>In all cases where the criminal disembowels himself of his
own accord without condemnation and without investigation,
inasmuch as he is no longer able to defend himself, the offence
is considered as non-proven, and the property is not
confiscated. In the year 1869 a motion was brought forward in
the Japanese parliament by one Ono Seigorô, clerk of the
house, advocating the abolition of the practice of
<i>hara-kiri</i>. Two hundred members out of a house of 209
voted against the motion, which was supported by only three
speakers, six members not voting on either side. In this debate
the <i>seppuku, or hara-kiri</i>, was called "the very shrine
of the Japanese national spirit, and the embodiment in practice
of devotion to principle," "a great ornament to the empire," "a
pillar of the constitution," "a valuable institution, tending
to the honour of the nobles, and based on a compassionate
feeling towards the official caste," "a pillar of religion and
a spur to virtue." The whole debate (which is well worth
reading, and an able translation of which by Mr. Aston has
appeared in a recent Blue Book) shows the affection with which
the Japanese cling to the traditions of a chivalrous past. It
is worthy of notice that the proposer, Ono Seigorô, who
on more than one occasion rendered himself conspicuous by
introducing motions based upon an admiration of our Western
civilization, was murdered not long after this debate took
place.</p>
<p>There are many stories on record of extraordinary heroism
being <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page287" id="page287"></SPAN></span> displayed in the
<i>hara-kiri.</i> The case of a young fellow, only twenty
years old, of the Choshiu clan, which was told me the other
day by an eye-witness, deserves mention as a marvellous
instance of determination. Not content with giving himself
the one necessary cut, he slashed himself thrice
horizontally and twice vertically. Then he stabbed himself
in the throat until the dirk protruded on the other side,
with its sharp edge to the front; setting his teeth in one
supreme effort, he drove the knife forward with both hands
through his throat, and fell dead.</p>
<p>One more story and I have done. During the revolution, when
the Tycoon, beaten on every side, fled ignominiously to Yedo,
he is said to have determined to fight no more, but to yield
everything. A member of his second council went to him and
said, "Sir, the only way for you now to retrieve the honour of
the family of Tokugawa is to disembowel yourself; and to prove
to you that I am sincere and disinterested in what I say, I am
here ready to disembowel myself with you." The Tycoon flew into
a great rage, saying that he would listen to no such nonsense,
and left the room. His faithful retainer, to prove his honesty,
retired to another part of the castle, and solemnly performed
the
<i>hara-kiri.</i></p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page288" id="page288"></SPAN></span>
<h2>APPENDIX B</h2>
<h3>THE MARRIAGE CEREMONY</h3>
<h4>(FROM THE "SHO-REI HIKKI"—RECORD OF CEREMONIES.)</h4>
<p>The ceremonies observed at marriages are various, and it is
not right for a man, exceeding the bounds of his condition in
life, to transgress against the rules which are laid down. When
the middle-man has arranged the preliminaries of the marriage
between the two parties, he carries the complimentary present,
which is made at the time of betrothal, from the future
bridegroom to his destined bride; and if this present is
accepted, the lady's family can no longer retract their
promise. This is the beginning of the contract. The usual
betrothal presents are as follows. Persons of the higher
classes send a robe of white silk; a piece of gold embroidery
for a girdle; a piece of silk stuff; a piece of white silk,
with a lozenge pattern, and other silk stuffs (these are made
up into a pile of three layers); fourteen barrels of wine, and
seven sorts of condiments. Persons of the middle class send a
piece of white silk stuff; a piece of gold embroidery for a
girdle; a piece of white silk, with a lozenge pattern, and
other silk stuffs (these are made up into a pile of two
layers); ten barrels of wine, and five sorts of condiments. The
lower classes send a robe of white silk, a robe of coloured
silk, in a pile of one layer, together with six barrels of wine
and three sorts of condiments. To the future father-in-law is
sent a sword, with a scabbard for slinging, such as is worn in
war-time, together with a list of the presents; to the
mother-in-law, a silk robe, with wine and condiments. Although
all these presents are right and proper for the occasion, still
they must be regulated according to the means of the persons
concerned. The future father-in-law sends a present of equal
value in return to his son-in-law, but the bride elect sends no
return present to her future husband; the present from the
father-in-law must by no means be omitted, but according to his
position, if he be poor, he need only send wine and
condiments.</p>
<p>In sending the presents care must be taken not to fold the
silk robe. The two silk robes that are sent on the marriage
night must be placed with the collars stitched together in a
peculiar fashion.</p>
<p>The ceremonies of sending the litter to fetch the bride on
the wedding night are as follows. In families of good position,
one <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page289" id="page289"></SPAN></span> of the principal retainers
on either side is deputed to accompany the bride and to
receive her. Matting is spread before the entrance-door,
upon which the bride's litter is placed, while the two
principal retainers congratulate one another, and the
officers of the bridegroom receive the litter. If a bucket
containing clams, to make the wedding broth, has been sent
with the bride, it is carried and received by a person of
distinction. Close by the entrance-door a fire is lighted on
the right hand and on the left. These fires are called
garden-torches. In front of the corridor along which the
litter passes, on the right hand and on the left, two men
and two women, in pairs, place two mortars, right and left,
in which they pound rice; as the litter passes, the pounded
rice from the left-hand side is moved across to the right,
and the two are mixed together into one. This is called the
blending of the rice-meal.<SPAN id="footnotetag113"
name="footnotetag113"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote113"><sup>113</sup></SPAN>
Two candles are lighted, the one on the right hand and the
other on the left of the corridor; and after the litter has
passed, the candle on the left is passed over to the right,
and, the two wicks being brought together, the candles are
extinguished. These last three ceremonies are only performed
at the weddings of persons of high rank; they are not
observed at the weddings of ordinary persons. The bride
takes with her to her husband's house, as presents, two
silken robes sewed together in a peculiar manner, a dress of
ceremony with wings of hempen cloth, an upper girdle and an
under girdle, a fan, either five or seven pocket-books, and
a sword: these seven presents are placed on a long tray, and
their value must depend upon the means of the family.</p>
<p>The dress of the bride is a white silk robe with a lozenge
pattern, over an under-robe, also of white silk. Over her head
she wears a veil of white silk, which, when she sits down, she
allows to fall about her as a mantle.</p>
<p>The bride's furniture and effects are all arranged for her
by female attendants from her own house on a day previous to
the wedding; and the bridegroom's effects are in like manner
arranged by the women of his own house.</p>
<p>When the bride meets her husband in the room where the
relations are assembled, she takes her seat for this once in
the place of honour, her husband sitting in a lower place, not
directly opposite to her, but diagonally, and discreetly
avoiding her glance.</p>
<p>On the raised part of the floor are laid out beforehand two
trays, the preparations for a feast, a table on which are two
wagtails,<SPAN id="footnotetag114"
name="footnotetag114"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote114"><sup>114</sup></SPAN>
a second table with a representation of Elysium, fowls,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page290" id="page290"></SPAN></span> fish, two wine-bottles,
three wine-cups, and two sorts of kettles for warming wine.
The ladies go out to meet the bride, and invite her into a
dressing-room, and, when she has smoothed her dress, bring
her into the room, and she and the bridegroom take their
seats in the places appointed for them. The two trays are
then brought out, and the ladies-in-waiting, with
complimentary speeches, hand dried fish and seaweed, such as
accompany presents, and dried chestnuts to the couple. Two
married ladies then each take one of the wine-bottles which
have been prepared, and place them in the lower part of the
room. Then two handmaids, who act as wine-pourers, bring the
kettles and place them in the lower part of the room. The
two wine-bottles have respectively a male and female
butterfly, made of paper, attached to them. The female
butterfly is laid on its back, and the wine is poured from
the bottle into the kettle. The male butterfly is then taken
and laid on the female butterfly, and the wine from the
bottle is poured into the same kettle, and the whole is
transferred with due ceremony to another kettle of different
shape, which the wine-pourers place in front of themselves.
Little low dining-tables are laid, one for each person,
before the bride and bridegroom, and before the bride's
ladies-in-waiting; the woman deputed to pour the wine takes
the three wine-cups and places them one on the top of the
other before the bridegroom, who drinks two
cups<SPAN id="footnotetag115"
name="footnotetag115"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote115"><sup>115</sup></SPAN>
from the upper cup, and pours a little wine from the full
kettle into the empty kettle. The pouring together of the
wine on the wedding night is symbolical of the union that is
being contracted. The bridegroom next pours out a third cup
of wine and drinks it, and the cup is carried by the ladies
to the bride, who drinks three cups, and pours a little wine
from one kettle into the other, as the bridegroom did. A cup
is then set down and put on the other two, and they are
carried back to the raised floor and arranged as before.
After this, condiments are set out on the right-hand side of
a little table, and the wine-pourers place the three cups
before the bride, who drinks three cups from the second cup,
which is passed to the bridegroom; he also drinks three cups
as before, and the cups are piled up and arranged in their
original place, by the wine-pourers. A different sort of
condiment is next served on the left-hand side; and the
three cups are again placed before the bridegroom, who
drinks three cups from the third cup, and the bride does the
same. When the cups and tables have been put back in their
places, the bridegroom, rising
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page291" id="page291"></SPAN></span> from his seat, rests
himself for a while. During this time soup of fishes' fins
and wine are served to the bride's ladies-in-waiting and to
the serving-women. They are served with a single wine-cup of
earthenware, placed upon a small square tray, and this again
is set upon a long tray, and a wine-kettle with all sorts of
condiments is brought from the kitchen. When this part of
the feast is over, the room is put in order, and the bride
and bridegroom take their seats again. Soups and a
preparation of rice are now served, and two earthenware
cups, gilt and silvered, are placed on a tray, on which
there is a representation of the island of
Takasago.<SPAN id="footnotetag116"
name="footnotetag116"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote116"><sup>116</sup></SPAN>
This time butterflies of gold and silver paper are attached
to the wine-kettles. The bridegroom drinks a cup or two, and
the ladies-in-waiting offer more condiments to the couple.
Rice, with hot water poured over it, according to custom,
and carp soup are brought in, and, the wine having been
heated, cups of lacquer ware are produced; and it is at this
time that the feast commences. (Up to now the eating and
drinking has been merely a form.) Twelve plates of
sweetmeats and tea are served; and the dinner consists of
three courses, one course of seven dishes, one of five
dishes, and one of three dishes, or else two courses of five
dishes and one of three dishes, according to the means of
the family. The above ceremonies are those which are proper
only in families of the highest rank, and are by no means
fitting for the lower classes, who must not step out of the
proper bounds of their position.</p>
<p>There is a popular tradition that, in the ceremony of
drinking wine on the wedding night, the bride should drink
first, and then hand the cup to the bridegroom; but although
there are some authorities upon ceremonies who are in favour of
this course, it is undoubtedly a very great mistake. In the
"Record of Rites," by Confucius, it is written, "The man stands
in importance before the woman: it is the right of the strong
over the weak. Heaven ranks before earth; the prince ranks
before his minister. This law of honour is one." Again, in the
"Book of History," by Confucius, it is written, "The hen that
crows in the morning brings misfortune." In our own literature
in the Jusho (Book of the Gods), "When the goddesses saw the
gods for the first time, they were the first to cry cut, 'Oh!
what beautiful males!' But the gods were greatly displeased,
and said, 'We, who are so strong and powerful, should by rights
have been the first to speak; how is it that, on the contrary,
these females speak first? This is indeed vulgar.'" Again it is
written, "When the gods brought forth the cripple Hiruko, the
Lord of Heaven, answering, said that his misfortune was a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page292" id="page292"></SPAN></span> punishment upon the
goddesses who had presumed to speak first." The same rule
therefore exists in China and in Japan, and it is held to be
unlucky that the wife should take precedence: with this
warning people should be careful how they commit a breach of
etiquette, although it may be sanctioned by the vulgar.</p>
<p>At the wedding of the lower classes, the bride and her
ladies and friends have a feast, but the bridegroom has no
feast; and when the bride's feast is over, the bridegroom is
called in and is presented with the bride's wine-cup; but as
the forms observed are very vulgar, it is not worth while to
point out the rules which guide them. As this night is
essentially of importance to the married couple only, there are
some writers on ceremonies who have laid down that no feast
need be prepared for the bride's ladies, and in my opinion they
are right: for the husband and wife at the beginning of their
intercourse to be separated, and for the bride alone to be
feasted like an ordinary guest, appears to be an inauspicious
opening. I have thus pointed out two ill-omened customs which
are to be avoided.</p>
<p>The ceremonies observed at the weddings of persons of
ordinary rank are as follows:—The feast which is prepared
is in proportion to the means of the individuals. There must be
three wine-cups set out upon a tray. The ceremony of drinking
wine three times is gone through, as described above, after
which the bride changes her dress, and a feast of three courses
is produced—two courses of five dishes and one of three
dishes, or one course of five dishes, one of three, and one of
two, according to the means of the family. A tray, with a
representation of the island of Takasago, is brought out, and
the wine is heated; sweetmeats of five or seven sorts are also
served in boxes or trays; and when the tea comes in, the
bridegroom gets up, and goes to rest himself. If the wine
kettles are of tin, they must not be set out in the room: they
must be brought in from the kitchen; and in that case the paper
butterflies are not attached to them.</p>
<p>In old times the bride and bridegroom used to change their
dress three or five times during the ceremony; but at the
present time, after the nine cups of wine have been drunk, in
the manner recorded above, the change of dress takes place
once. The bride puts on the silk robe which she has received
from the bridegroom, while he dons the dress of ceremony which
has been brought by the bride.</p>
<p>When these ceremonies have been observed, the bride's ladies
conduct her to the apartments of her parents-in-law. The bride
carries with her silk robes, as presents for her parents and
brothers and sister-in-law. A tray is brought out, with three
wine-cups, which are set before the parents-in-law and the
bride. The father-in-law drinks three cups and hands the cup to
the bride, who, after she has drunk two cups, receives a
present from her father-in-law; she then drinks a third cup,
and returns <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page293" id="page293"></SPAN></span> the cup to her
father-in-law, who again drinks three cups. Fish is then
brought in, and, in the houses of ordinary persons, a
preparation of rice. Upon this the mother-in-law, taking the
second cup, drinks three cups and passes the cup to the
bride, who drinks two cups and receives a present from her
mother-in-law: she then drinks a third cup and gives back
the cup to the mother-in-law, who drinks three cups again.
Condiments are served, and, in ordinary houses, soup; after
which the bride drinks once from the third cup and hands it
to her father-in-law, who drinks thrice from it; the bride
again drinks twice from it, and after her the mother-in-law
drinks thrice. The parents-in-law and the bride thus have
drunk in all nine times. If there are any brothers or
sisters-in-law, soup and condiments are served, and a single
porcelain wine-cup is placed before them on a tray, and they
drink at the word of command of the father-in-law. It is not
indispensable that soup should be served upon this occasion.
If the parents of the bridegroom are dead, instead of the
above ceremony, he leads his bride to make her obeisances
before the tablets on which their names are inscribed.</p>
<p>In old days, after the ceremonies recorded above had been
gone through, the bridegroom used to pay a visit of ceremony to
the bride's parents; but at the present time the visit is paid
before the wedding, and although the forms observed on the
occasion resemble those of the ancient times, still they are
different, and it would be well that we should resume the old
fashion. The two trays which had been used at the wedding
feast, loaded with fowl and fish and condiments neatly
arranged, used to be put into a long box and sent to the
father-in-law's house. Five hundred and eighty cakes of rice in
lacquer boxes were also sent. The modern practice of sending
the rice cakes in a bucket is quite contrary to etiquette: no
matter how many lacquer boxes may be required for the purpose,
they are the proper utensils for sending the cakes in. Three,
five, seven, or ten men's loads of presents, according to the
means of the family, are also offered. The son-in-law gives a
sword and a silk robe to his father-in-law, and a silk robe to
his mother-in-law, and also gives presents to his brothers and
sisters-in-law. (The ceremony of drinking wine is the same as
that which takes place between the bride and her
parents-in-law, with a very slight deviation: the bridegroom
receives no presents from his mother-in-law, and when the third
cup is drunk the son-in-law drinks before the father-in-law). A
return visit is paid by the bride's parents to the bridegroom,
at which similar forms are observed.</p>
<p>At the weddings of the great, the bridal chamber is composed
of three rooms thrown into one,<SPAN id="footnotetag117"
name="footnotetag117"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote117"><sup>117</sup></SPAN>
and newly decorated. If there are only two rooms available,
a third room is built for the occasion. The presents, which
have been mentioned above, are set
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page294" id="page294"></SPAN></span> out on two trays. Besides
these, the bridegroom's clothes are hung up upon
clothes-racks. The mattress and bedclothes are placed in a
closet. The bride's effects must all be arranged by the
women who are sent on a previous day for the purpose, or it
may be done whilst the bride is changing her clothes. The
shrine for the image of the family god is placed on a shelf
adjoining the sleeping-place. There is a proper place for
the various articles of furniture. The
<i>kaioké</i><SPAN id="footnotetag118"
name="footnotetag118"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote118"><sup>118</sup></SPAN>
is placed on the raised floor; but if there be no raised
floor, it is placed in a closet with the door open, so that
it may be conspicuously seen. The books are arranged on a
book-shelf or on a cabinet; if there be neither shelf nor
cabinet, they are placed on the raised floor. The bride's
clothes are set out on a clothes-rack; in families of high
rank, seven robes are hung up on the rack; five of these are
taken away and replaced by others, and again three are taken
away and replaced by others; and there are either two or
three clothes-racks: the towel-rack is set up in a place of
more honour than the clothes-racks. If there is no
dressing-room, the bride's bedclothes and dressing furniture
are placed in the sleeping-room. No screens are put up on
the bridal night, but a fitting place is chosen for them on
the following day. All these ceremonies must be in
proportion to the means of the family.</p>
<h3>NOTE.</h3>
<p>The author of the "Sho-rei Hikki" makes no allusion to the
custom of shaving the eyebrows and blackening the teeth of
married women, in token of fidelity to their lords. In the
upper classes, young ladies usually blacken their teeth before
leaving their father's house to enter that of their husbands,
and complete the ceremony by shaving their eyebrows immediately
after the wedding, or, at any rate, not later than upon the
occasion of their first pregnancy.</p>
<p>The origin of the fashion is lost in antiquity. As a proof
that it existed before the eleventh century, A.D., a curious
book called "Teijô Zakki," or the Miscellaneous Writings
of Teijô, cites the diary of Murasaki Shikibu, the
daughter of one Tamésoki, a retainer of the house of
Echizen, a lady of the court and famous poetess, the authoress
of a book called "Genji-mono-gatari," and other works. In her
diary it is written that on the last night of the fifth year of
the period Kankô (A.D. 1008), in order that she might
appear to advantage on New Year's Day, she retired to the
privacy of her own apartment, and repaired the deficiencies of
her personal appearance by re-blackening her teeth, and
otherwise adorning herself. Allusion is also made to the custom
in the "Yeiga-mono-gatari," an ancient book by the same
authoress.</p>
<p>The Emperor and nobles of his court are also in the habit of
blackening their teeth; but the custom is gradually dying out
in their case. It is said to have originated with one Hanazono
Arishito, who held the high rank of <i>Sa-Daijin,</i> or
"minister of the left," at the commencement of the twelfth
century, in the reign of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page295" id="page295"></SPAN></span> the Emperor Toba. Being a,
man of refined and sensual tastes, this minister plucked out
his eyebrows, shaved his beard, blackened his teeth,
powdered his face white, and rouged his lips in order to
render himself as like a woman as possible. In the middle of
the twelfth century, the nobles of the court, who went to
the wars, all blackened their teeth; and from this time
forth the practice became a fashion of the court. The
followers of the chiefs of the Hôjô dynasty also
blackened their teeth, as an emblem of their fidelity; and
this was called the Odawara fashion, after the castle town
of the family. Thus a custom, which had its origin in a love
of sensuality and pleasure, became mistaken for the sign of
a good and faithful spirit.</p>
<p>The fashion of blackening the teeth entails no little
trouble upon its followers, for the colour must be renewed
every day, or at least every other day. Strange and repelling
as the custom appears at first, the eye soon learns to look
without aversion upon a well-blacked and polished set of teeth;
but when the colour begins to wear away, and turns to a dullish
grey, streaked with black, the mouth certainly becomes most
hideous. Although no one who reads this is likely to put a
recipe for blackening the teeth to a practical test, I append
one furnished to me by a fashionable chemist and druggist in
Yedo:—</p>
<p>"Take three pints of water, and, having warmed it, add half
a teacupful of wine. Put into this mixture a quantity of
red-hot iron; allow it to stand for five or six days, when
there will be a scum on the top of the mixture, which should
then be poured into a small teacup and placed near a fire. When
it is warm, powdered gallnuts and iron filings should be added
to it, and the whole should be warmed again. The liquid is then
painted on to the teeth by means of a soft feather brush, with
more powdered gallnuts and iron, and, after several
applications, the desired colour will be obtained."</p>
<p>The process is said to be a preservative of the teeth, and I
have known men who were habitual sufferers from toothache to
prefer the martyrdom of ugliness to that of pain, and apply the
black colouring when the paroxysms were severe. One man told me
that he experienced immediate relief by the application, and
that so long as he blackened his teeth he was quite free from
pain.</p>
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