<h2><SPAN name="page54"></SPAN>LETTER VIII.</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">The Beauties of Nikkô—The Burial
of Iyéyasu—The Approach to the Great
Shrines—The Yomei Gate—Gorgeous
Decorations—Simplicity of the Mausoleum—The Shrine of
Iyémitsu—Religious Art of Japan and India—An
Earthquake—Beauties of Wood-carving.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Kanaya’s</span>, <span class="smcap">Nikkô</span>, <i>June</i> 21.</p>
<p>I <span class="smcap">have</span> been at Nikkô for nine
days, and am therefore entitled to use the word
“<i>Kek’ko</i>!”</p>
<p>Nikkô means “sunny splendour,” and its
beauties are celebrated in poetry and art all over Japan.
Mountains for a great part of the year clothed or patched with
snow, piled in great ranges round Nantaizan, their monarch,
worshipped as a god; forests of magnificent timber; ravines and
passes scarcely explored; dark green lakes sleeping in endless
serenity; the deep abyss of Kêgon, into which the waters of
Chiuzenjii plunge from a height of 250 feet; the bright beauty of
the falls of Kiri Furi, the loveliness of the gardens of
Dainichido; the sombre grandeur of the passes through which the
Daiyagawa forces its way from the upper regions; a gorgeousness
of azaleas and magnolias; and a luxuriousness of vegetation
perhaps unequalled in Japan, are only a few of the attractions
which surround the shrines of the two greatest Shôguns.</p>
<p>To a glorious resting-place on the hill-slope of Hotoké
Iwa, sacred since 767, when a Buddhist saint, called
Shôdô Shônin, visited it, and declared the old
Shintô deity of the mountain to be only a manifestation of
Buddha, Hidetada, the second Shôgun of the Tokugawa
dynasty, conveyed the corpse of his father, Iyéyasu, in
1617. It was a splendid burial. An Imperial envoy, a
priest of the Mikado’s family, court nobles from
Kivôto, and hundreds of <i>daimiyôs</i>, captains, <SPAN name="page55"></SPAN>and nobles of
inferior rank, took part in the ceremony. An army of
priests in rich robes during three days intoned a sacred classic
10,000 times, and Iyéyasu was deified by a decree of the
Mikado under a name signifying “light of the east, great
incarnation of Buddha.” The less important
Shôguns of the line of Tokugawa are buried in Uyeno and
Shiba, in Yedo. Since the restoration, and what may be
called the disestablishment of Buddhism, the shrine of
Iyéyasu has been shorn of all its glories of ritual and
its magnificent Buddhist paraphernalia; the 200 priests who gave
it splendour are scattered, and six Shintô priests
alternately attend upon it as much for the purpose of selling
tickets of admission as for any priestly duties.</p>
<p>All roads, bridges, and avenues here lead to these shrines,
but the grand approach is by the Red Bridge, and up a broad road
with steps at intervals and stone-faced embankments at each side,
on the top of which are belts of cryptomeria. At the summit
of this ascent is a fine granite <i>torii</i>, 27 feet 6 inches
high, with columns 3 feet 6 inches in diameter, offered by the
<i>daimiyô</i> of Chikuzen in 1618 from his own
quarries. After this come 118 magnificent bronze lanterns
on massive stone pedestals, each of which is inscribed with the
posthumous title of Iyéyasu, the name of the giver, and a
legend of the offering—all the gifts of
<i>daimiyô</i>—a holy water cistern made of a solid
block of granite, and covered by a roof resting on twenty square
granite pillars, and a bronze bell, lantern, and candelabra of
marvellous workmanship, offered by the kings of Corea and
Liukiu. On the left is a five-storied pagoda, 104 feet
high, richly carved in wood and as richly gilded and
painted. The signs of the zodiac run round the lower
story.</p>
<p>The grand entrance gate is at the top of a handsome flight of
steps forty yards from the <i>torii</i>. A looped white
curtain with the Mikado’s crest in black, hangs partially
over the gateway, in which, beautiful as it is, one does not care
to linger, to examine the gilded <i>amainu</i> in niches, or the
spirited carvings of tigers under the eaves, for the view of the
first court overwhelms one by its magnificence and beauty.
The whole style of the buildings, the arrangements, the art of
every kind, the thought which inspires the whole, are exclusively
Japanese, <SPAN name="page56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
56</span>and the glimpse from the <i>Ni-ô</i> gate is a
revelation of a previously undreamed-of beauty, both in form and
colour.</p>
<p>Round the neatly pebbled court, which is enclosed by a bright
red timber wall, are three gorgeous buildings, which contain the
treasures of the temple, a sumptuous stable for the three sacred
Albino horses, which are kept for the use of the god, a
magnificent granite cistern of holy water, fed from the
Sômendaki cascade, and a highly decorated building, in
which a complete collection of Buddhist Scriptures is
deposited. From this a flight of steps leads into a smaller
court containing a bell-tower “of marvellous workmanship
and ornamentation,” a drum-tower, hardly less beautiful, a
shrine, the candelabra, bell, and lantern mentioned before, and
some very grand bronze lanterns.</p>
<p>From this court another flight of steps ascends to the Yomei
gate, whose splendour I contemplated day after day with
increasing astonishment. The white columns which support it
have capitals formed of great red-throated heads of the mythical
<i>Kirin</i>. Above the architrave is a projecting balcony
which runs all round the gateway with a railing carried by
dragons’ heads. In the centre two white dragons fight
eternally. Underneath, in high relief, there are groups of
children playing, then a network of richly painted beams, and
seven groups of Chinese sages. The high roof is supported
by gilded dragons’ heads with crimson throats. In the
interior of the gateway there are side-niches painted white,
which are lined with gracefully designed arabesques founded on
the <i>botan</i> or peony. A piazza, whose outer walls of
twenty-one compartments are enriched with magnificent carvings of
birds, flowers, and trees, runs right and left, and encloses on
three of its sides another court, the fourth side of which is a
terminal stone wall built against the side of the hill. On
the right are two decorated buildings, one of which contains a
stage for the performance of the sacred dances, and the other an
altar for the burning of cedar wood incense. On the left is
a building for the reception of the three sacred cars which were
used during festivals. To pass from court to court is to
pass from splendour to splendour; one is almost glad to feel that
this is the last, and that the strain on one’s capacity for
admiration is nearly over.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page57"></SPAN>In the
middle is the sacred enclosure, formed of gilded trellis-work
with painted borders above and below, forming a square of which
each side measures 150 feet, and which contains the <i>haiden</i>
or chapel. Underneath the trellis work are groups of birds,
with backgrounds of grass, very boldly carved in wood and richly
gilded and painted. From the imposing entrance through a
double avenue of cryptomeria, among courts, gates, temples,
shrines, pagodas, colossal bells of bronze, and lanterns inlaid
with gold, you pass through this final court bewildered by
magnificence, through golden gates, into the dimness of a golden
temple, and there is—simply a black lacquer table with a
circular metal mirror upon it.</p>
<p>Within is a hall finely matted, 42 feet wide by 27 from front
to back, with lofty apartments on each side, one for the
Shôgun and the other “for his Holiness the
Abbot.” Both, of course, are empty. The roof of
the hall is panelled and richly frescoed. The
Shôgun’s room contains some very fine <i>fusuma</i>,
on which <i>kirin</i> (fabulous monsters) are depicted on a dead
gold ground, and four oak panels, 8 feet by 6, finely carved,
with the phoenix in low relief variously treated. In the
Abbot’s room there are similar panels adorned with hawks
spiritedly executed. The only ecclesiastical ornament among
the dim splendours of the chapel is the plain gold
<i>gohei</i>. Steps at the back lead into a chapel paved
with stone, with a fine panelled ceiling representing dragons on
a dark blue ground. Beyond this some gilded doors lead into
the principal chapel, containing four rooms which are not
accessible; but if they correspond with the outside, which is of
highly polished black lacquer relieved by gold, they must be
severely magnificent.</p>
<p>But not in any one of these gorgeous shrines did
Iyéyasu decree that his dust should rest.
Re-entering the last court, it is necessary to leave the
enclosures altogether by passing through a covered gateway in the
eastern piazza into a stone gallery, green with mosses and
hepaticæ. Within, wealth and art have created a
fairyland of gold and colour; without, Nature, at her stateliest,
has surrounded the great Shôgun’s tomb with a pomp of
mournful splendour. A staircase of 240 stone steps leads to
the top of the hill, where, above and behind all the stateliness
of the shrines raised in his honour, <SPAN name="page58"></SPAN>the dust of Iyéyasu sleeps in
an unadorned but Cyclopean tomb of stone and bronze, surmounted
by a bronze urn. In front is a stone table decorated with a
bronze incense-burner, a vase with lotus blossoms and leaves in
brass, and a bronze stork bearing a bronze candlestick in its
mouth. A lofty stone wall, surmounted by a balustrade,
surrounds the simple but stately enclosure, and cryptomeria of
large size growing up the back of the hill create perpetual
twilight round it. Slant rays of sunshine alone pass
through them, no flower blooms or bird sings, only silence and
mournfulness surround the grave of the ablest and greatest man
that Japan has produced.</p>
<p>Impressed as I had been with the glorious workmanship in wood,
bronze, and lacquer, I scarcely admired less the masonry of the
vast retaining walls, the stone gallery, the staircase and its
balustrade, all put together without mortar or cement, and so
accurately fitted that the joints are scarcely affected by the
rain, damp, and aggressive vegetation of 260 years. The
steps of the staircase are fine monoliths, and the coping at the
side, the massive balustrade, and the heavy rail at the top, are
cut out of solid blocks of stone from 10 to 18 feet in
length. Nor is the workmanship of the great granite cistern
for holy water less remarkable. It is so carefully adjusted
on its bed that the water brought from a neighbouring cascade
rises and pours over each edge in such carefully equalised
columns that, as Mr. Satow says, “it seems to be a solid
block of water rather than a piece of stone.”</p>
<p>The temples of Iyémitsu are close to those of
Iyéyasu, and though somewhat less magnificent are even
more bewildering, as they are still in Buddhist hands, and are
crowded with the gods of the Buddhist Pantheon and the splendid
paraphernalia of Buddhist worship, in striking contrast to the
simplicity of the lonely Shintô mirror in the midst of the
blaze of gold and colour. In the grand entrance gate are
gigantic <i>Ni-ô</i>, the Buddhist Gog and Magog, vermilion
coloured, and with draperies painted in imitation of flowered
silk. A second pair, painted red and green, removed from
Iyémitsu’s temple, are in niches within the
gate. A flight of steps leads to another gate, in whose
gorgeous niches stand hideous monsters, in human form,
representing the gods of wind and thunder. Wind has crystal
eyes and a half-jolly, half-demoniacal expression. He is
painted green, and carries <SPAN name="page59"></SPAN>a wind-bag on his back, a long sack
tied at each end, with the ends brought over his shoulders and
held in his hands. The god of thunder is painted red, with
purple hair on end, and stands on clouds holding thunderbolts in
his hand. More steps, and another gate containing the
Tennô, or gods of the four quarters, boldly carved and in
strong action, with long eye-teeth, and at last the principal
temple is reached. An old priest who took me over it on my
first visit, on passing the gods of wind and thunder said,
“We used to believe in these things, but we don’t
now,” and his manner in speaking of the other deities was
rather contemptuous. He requested me, however, to take off
my hat as well as my shoes at the door of the temple.
Within there was a gorgeous shrine, and when an acolyte drew
aside the curtain of cloth of gold the interior was equally
imposing, containing Buddha and two other figures of gilded
brass, seated cross-legged on lotus-flowers, with rows of petals
several times repeated, and with that look of eternal repose on
their faces which is reproduced in the commonest road-side
images. In front of the shrine several candles were
burning, the offerings of some people who were having prayers
said for them, and the whole was lighted by two lamps burning
low. On a step of the altar a much-contorted devil was
crouching uneasily, for he was subjugated and, by a grim irony,
made to carry a massive incense-burner on his shoulders. In
this temple there were more than a hundred idols standing in
rows, many of them life-size, some of them trampling devils under
their feet, but all hideous, partly from the bright greens,
vermilions, and blues with which they are painted.
Remarkable muscular development characterises all, and the
figures or faces are all in vigorous action of some kind,
generally grossly exaggerated.</p>
<p>While we were crossing the court there were two shocks of
earthquake; all the golden wind-bells which fringe the roofs rang
softly, and a number of priests ran into the temple and beat
various kinds of drums for the space of half an hour.
Iyémitsu’s tomb is reached by flights of steps on
the right of the chapel. It is in the same style as
Iyéyasu’s, but the gates in front are of bronze, and
are inscribed with large Sanskrit characters in bright
brass. One of the most beautiful of the many views is from
the uppermost gate of the temple. The <SPAN name="page60"></SPAN>sun shone on
my second visit and brightened the spring tints of the trees on
Hotoké Iwa, which was vignetted by a frame of dark
cryptomeria.</p>
<p>Some of the buildings are roofed with sheet-copper, but most
of them are tiled. Tiling, however, has been raised almost
to the dignity of a fine art in Japan. The tiles themselves
are a coppery grey, with a suggestion of metallic lustre about
it. They are slightly concave, and the joints are covered
by others quite convex, which come down like massive tubes from
the ridge pole, and terminate at the eaves with discs on which
the Tokugawa badge is emblazoned in gold, as it is everywhere on
these shrines where it would not be quite out of keeping.
The roofs are so massive that they require all the strength of
the heavy carved timbers below, and, like all else, they gleam
with gold, or that which simulates it.</p>
<p>The shrines are the most wonderful work of their kind in
Japan. In their stately setting of cryptomeria, few of
which are less than 20 feet in girth at 3 feet from the ground,
they take one prisoner by their beauty, in defiance of all rules
of western art, and compel one to acknowledge the beauty of forms
and combinations of colour hitherto unknown, and that lacquered
wood is capable of lending itself to the expression of a very
high idea in art. Gold has been used in profusion, and
black, dull red, and white, with a breadth and lavishness quite
unique. The bronze fret-work alone is a study, and the
wood-carving needs weeks of earnest work for the mastery of its
ideas and details. One screen or railing only has sixty
panels, each 4 feet long, carved with marvellous boldness and
depth in open work, representing peacocks, pheasants, storks,
lotuses, peonies, bamboos, and foliage. The fidelity to
form and colour in the birds, and the reproduction of the glory
of motion, could not be excelled.</p>
<p>Yet the flowers please me even better. Truly the artist
has revelled in his work, and has carved and painted with
joy. The lotus leaf retains its dewy bloom, the peony its
shades of creamy white, the bamboo leaf still trembles on its
graceful stem, in contrast to the rigid needles of the pine, and
countless corollas, in all the perfect colouring of passionate
life, unfold themselves amidst the leafage of the gorgeous
tracery. These carvings are from 10 to 15 inches deep, and
single feathers in <SPAN name="page61"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
61</span>the tails of the pheasants stand out fully 6 inches in
front of peonies nearly as deep.</p>
<p>The details fade from my memory daily as I leave the shrines,
and in their place are picturesque masses of black and red
lacquer and gold, gilded doors opening without noise, halls laid
with matting so soft that not a footfall sounds, across whose
twilight the sunbeams fall aslant on richly arabesqued walls and
panels carved with birds and flowers, and on ceilings panelled
and wrought with elaborate art, of inner shrines of gold, and
golden lilies six feet high, and curtains of gold brocade, and
incense fumes, and colossal bells and golden ridge poles; of the
mythical fauna, <i>kirin</i>, dragon, and <i>howo</i>, of
elephants, apes, and tigers, strangely mingled with flowers and
trees, and golden tracery, and diaper work on a gold ground, and
lacquer screens, and pagodas, and groves of bronze lanterns, and
shaven priests in gold brocade, and Shintô attendants in
black lacquer caps, and gleams of sunlit gold here and there, and
simple monumental urns, and a mountain-side covered with a
cryptomeria forest, with rose azaleas lighting up its solemn
shade.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">I. L. B.</p>
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