ASIA is one. The Himalayas divide,
only to accentuate, two mighty civilisations, the Chinese with its communism of
Confucius, and the Indian with its individualism of the Vedas. But not even the
snowy barriers can interrupt for one moment that broad expanse of love for the
Ultimate and Universal, which is the common thought-inheritance of every
Asiatic race, enabling them to produce all the great religions of the world,
and distinguishing them from those maritime peoples of the Mediterranean and
the Baltic, who love to dwell on the Particular, and to search out the means,
not the end, of life.
of the sea, the intrepid mariners of the Bengal coast,
founding their colonies in Ceylon, Java, and Sumatra, leaving Aryan blood to
mingle with that of the sea-board races of Burmah and Siam, and binding Cathay and India fast in mutual intercourse.
The long systolic centuries - in which India, crippled in her power to give, shrank back upon herself, and China, self-absorbed in recovery
from the shock of Mongol tyranny, lost her intellectual hospitality - succeeded
the epoch of Mahmoud of Ghazni, in the eleventh century. But the old energy of
communication lived yet in the great moving sea of the Tartar hordes, whose
waves recoiled from the long walls of the North, to break upon and overrun the Punjab. The Hunas, the Sakas, and the Gettaes, grim ancestors of the Rajputs, had been the
forerunners of that great Mongol outburst which, under Genghis Khan and
Tamerlane, spread over the Celestial
soil, to deluge it with Bengali Tantrikism, and flooded the
Indian peninsula, to tinge its Mussulmân Imperialism with Mongolian polity and
art.
For if Asia be one, it is also true that the Asiatic races
form a single mighty web. We forget, in an age of classification, that types
are after all but shining points of distinctness in an ocean of approximations,
false gods deliberately set up to be worshipped, for the sake of mental
convenience, but having no more ultimate or mutually exclusive validity than
the separate existence of two interchangeable sciences. If the history of Delhi
represents the Tartar's imposition of himself upon a Mohammedan world, it must
also be remembered that the story of Baghdad and her great Saracenic culture is
equally significant of the power of Semitic peoples to demonstrate Chinese, as
well as Persian, civilisation and art, in face of the Frankish nations of the
Mediterranean coast. Arab
chivalry, Persian poetry, Chinese ethics, and Indian
thought, all speak of a single ancient Asiatic peace, in which there grew up a
common life, bearing in different regions different characteristic blossoms,
but nowhere capable of a hard and fast dividing-line. Islam itself may be
described as Confucianism on horseback, sword in hand. For it is quite possible
to distinguish, in the hoary communism of the Yellow Valley, traces of a purely
pastoral element, such as we see abstracted and self-realised in the Mussulmân
races.
Or, to turn again to Eastern Asia from the West, Buddhism -
that great ocean of idealism, in which merge all the river-systems of Eastern
Asiatic thought - is not coloured only with the pure water of the Ganges, for
the Tartaric nations that joined it made their genius also tributary, bringing
new symbolism, new organisation, new powers of devotion, to add to the
treasures of the Faith.
It has been, however, the great privilege of Japan to realise this unity-in-complexity with a special clearness. The Indo-Tartaric blood
of this race was in itself a heritage which qualified it to imbibe from the two
sources, and so mirror the whole of Asiatic consciousness. The unique blessing
of unbroken sovereignty, the proud self-reliance of an unconquered race, and
the insular isolation which protected ancestral ideas and instincts at the cost
of expansion, made Japan the real repository of the trust of Asiatic thought
and culture. Dynastic upheavals, the inroads of Tartar horsemen, the carnage
and devastation of infuriated mobs - all these things, sweeping over her again
and again, have left to China no landmarks, save her literature and her ruins,
to recall the glory of the Tâng emperors or the refinement of Sung society.
The grandeur of Asoka - ideal type of Asiatic monarchs,
whose edicts dictated
terms to the sovereigns of Antioch and Alexandria - is
almost forgotten among the crumbling stones of Bharhut and Buddha Gaya. The
jewelled court of Vikramaditya is but a lost dream, which even the poetry of
Kalidasa fails to evoke. The sublime attainments of Indian art, almost effaced
as they have been by the rough-handedness of the Hunas, the fanatical
iconoclasm of the Mussulmân, and the unconscious vandalism of mercenary Europe,
leave us to seek only a past glory in the mouldy walls of Ajanta, the tortured
sculptures of Ellora, the silent protests of rock-cut Orissa, and finally in
the domestic utensils of the present day, where beauty clings sadly to religion
in the midst of an exquisite home-life.
It is in Japan alone that the historic wealth of Asiatic
culture can be consecutively studied through its treasured specimens. The
Imperial collection, the Shinto temples, and the opened dolmens,
reveal the subtle curves of Hang workmanship. The temples
of Nara are rich in representations of Tâng culture, and of that Indian art,
then in its splendour, which so much influenced the creations of this classic
period - natural heirlooms of a nation which has preserved the music,
pronunciation, ceremony, and costumes, not to speak of the religious rites and
philosophy, of so remarkable an age, intact.
The treasure-stores of the daimyos, again, abound in works
of art and manuscripts belonging to the Sung and Mongol dynasties, and as in
China itself the former were lost during the Mongol conquest, and the latter in
the age of the reactionary Ming, this fact animates some Chinese scholars of
the present day to seek in Japan the fountain-head of their own ancient
knowledge.
Thus Japan is a museum of Asiatic civilisation; and yet
more than a museum, because the singular genius of the race
leads it to dwell on all phases of the ideals of the past,
in that spirit of living Advaitism which welcomes the new without losing the
old. The Shinto still adheres to his pre-Buddhistic rites of ancestor-worship;
and the Buddhists themselves cling to each various school of religious development
which has come in its natural order to enrich the soil.
The Yamato poetry, and Bugaku music, which reflect the Tâng
ideal under the régime of the Fujiwara aristocracy, are a source of inspiration
and delight to the present day, like the sombre Zennism and No-dances, which
were the product of Sung illumination. It is this tenacity that keeps Japan true to the Asiatic soul even while it raises her to the rank of a modern power.
The history of Japanese art becomes thus the history of
Asiatic ideals - the beach where each successive wave of Eastern thought has
left its sand-ripple as it beat against the national consciousness.
[paragraph continues] Yet I linger with dismay on the threshold of an attempt to make an
intelligible summary of those art-ideals. For art, like the diamond net of
Indra, reflects the whole chain in every link. It exists at no period in any
final mould. It is always a growth, defying the dissecting knife of the
chronologist. To discourse on a particular phase of its development means to
deal with infinite causes and effects throughout its past and present. Art with
us, as elsewhere, is the expression of the highest and noblest of our national
culture, so that, in order to understand it, we must pass in review the various
phases of Confucian philosophy; the different ideals which the Buddhist mind
has from time to time revealed; those mighty political cycles which have one
after another unfurled the banner of nationality; the reflection in patriotic
thought of the lights of poetry and the shadows of heroic characters; and the
echoes, alike of the
wailing of a multitude, and of the mad-seeming merriment of
the laughter of a race.
Any history of Japanese art-ideals is, then, almost an
impossibility, as long as the Western world remains so unaware of the varied
environment and interrelated social phenomena into which that art is set, as it
were a jewel. Definition is limitation. The beauty of a cloud or a flower lies
in its unconscious unfolding of itself, and the silent eloquence of the
masterpieces of each epoch must tell their story better than any epitome of
necessary half-truths. My poor attempts are merely an indication, not a
narrative.
NOTES
Bengali Tantrikism. - The Tantras are works written for the
most part in Northern Bengal after the thirteenth century. Their subjects
consist, very largely, of psychic phenomena and kindred matters, but they
include some of the noblest flights of pure Hinduism. Their chief purpose seems
to have been the formulation
of a religion which could reach
and redeem the lowest of the low.
Hâng Workmanship - Tâng Culture
- Sung and Mongol Dynasties.
- A brief abstract of the periods of Chinese history might run as follows: -
The Shu Dynasty (1122 to 221 B.C.). - This was the culmination
of the process of early Chinese consolidation preceded by the dynasties of Kha
and In. The capitals of these powers, though already situated in the valley of
the Yellow River, were not yet advanced so far east as the present centre. They
were placed westward of the Dokwan Pass, where the river makes a right angle in
striking the plains, at that point where it was later to be touched by the
Great Wall.
The Shin Dynasty (221 to 202 B.C.). - The tendency of this
power to suppress communism brought about its downfall. The brevity of its
duration, coupled with its importance, is only paralleled in modern times by
the Empire of the first Napoleon.
The Hâng Dynasty (902 B.C. to 220 A.D.). - This empire was created by a popular rising. The headman of a village became Emperor of
China. But the whole trend and development of the Hângs grew to be
imperialistic.
The Three Kingdoms (220 to 268 A.D.). - A territorial division.
The Six Dynasties (268 to 618 A.D.). - The Three Kingdoms were now consolidated under a single native dynasty, which had lasted
about two centuries, when an influx of Hunnish and Mongolian tribes of the
northern border drove them to take
refuge in the valley of the
Yang-tse. The scene of Chinese succession and culture is thus shifted at this
period to the South, while the North becomes the means of the introduction of
Buddhism and the establishment of Taoism.
The Tâng Dynasty (618 to 907 A.D.). - This dynasty was the result of the reconsolidation of China under the great genius of
Taiso. The capital of the Tângs was on the Hoang-Ho, where the northern and the
southern sovereignties were amalgamated. This combination was finally broken up
by the feudalistic kingdoms, known as the Five Dynasties, which lasted,
however, only half a century.
The Sung Dynasty (960 to 1280 A.D.). - The centre of rule was now again transferred to the Yang-tse. In this era, under the
name of Soju or Sung scholasticism, is developed the movement which we
have designated in the text as Neo-Confucianism.
The Gen or Mongol Dynasty (1280 to 1368 A. D.).This was a Mongolian tribe which, under Kublai Khan, overpowered the Chinese dynasty and
established itself near Pekin. The Gen introduced Llamaism or Thibetan
Tantrikism.
The Ming Dynasty (1368 to 1662 A.D.). - This was due to a popular uprising against the Mongol tyranny. It had its centre of
power at Nankin, on the Yang-tse-Kiang; but it maintained a second capital,
from the time of its third emperor, at Pekin.
The Manchu Dynasty (1662 to the present day).This was another
Tartar tribe who took advantage of the division of power between the emperor
and
the army to establish themselves
at Pekin. Having put down the rebellion of the generals, they could not again
be dislodged. Their lack of complete identification with the nation has been
the weakness of this house, and rebellions against their power have arisen
always on the Yang-tse.
Yamato Poetry. - The word Yamato is used here as
a synonym for Ama, the primitive stock of the Japanese. It is also the
name of a province in Japan.
Bugaku Music. - This means dance music - from bu,
to dance, and gaku, music, or to play. This bugaku music in Japan was developed in the Nara-Heian period, under the influence of the Chinese culture of
the Six Dynasties. It was formed of combined elements of Indian and old Hâng
music. It is played by a hereditary caste of musicians called Reijiu,
who are attached to the Imperial court, and to grand monasteries and Shinto
temples, like Kusaga, Kamo, and Tennoji. It is to be heard on great occasions
of festivity and ceremonial.