900 TO 1200 A.D.
THE Fujiwara period dates from the ripened ascendency of
that family at the accession of the Emperor Daigo, 898 A.D. With it begins a new development in Japanese art and culture, which may be termed the national,
in contrast to the predominating continental ideas of preceding epochs.
All that was best in Chinese thought and Indian wisdom had long found its way
to Japan, till now the pent-up energy of this assimilated culture was precipitating
the race upon the evolution of its own special forms, both in life and in
ideals.
For the national mind may be held, in the Heian period, to
have completed the apprehension of the Indian ideal. And
now, according to mental habit, it isolates it, and makes
its realisation its solitary purpose. In this the Japanese, by their greater
Indian affinity, enjoy an advantage over the Chinese, who are withheld by that
strong common sense which is expressed in Confucianism, from the unbalanced development
of any single motive to its full intensity.
Those disturbances in China which, towards the close of the
Tâng dynasty, prevented the exchange of diplomatic amenities between the two
countries, and the conscious dependence which Japan began to place on her own
power, induced the statesmen of the time - amongst whom stands that Michizane
who is so revered as Tenjin, patron of letters and learning - to resolve on
sending no more embassies to Choan, and to cease borrowing further from Chinese
institutions. A new era began, in which Japan strove to create a system of her
own, based on the revival of purely Yamato ideals, for
the administration of civil and religious affairs.
This new development is marked in letters by the appearance
of important books, written in Japanese by women. For till now, in comparison
with the classic Chinese style of the scholars, the vernacular language had
been considered effeminate, and was left to become the proper instrument of
woman only. So dawned the great era of feminine literature, in the course of
which may be mentioned Murasa ki Shikibu, authoress of the grand romance of
Genji; Seishonagon, whose sarcastic pen anticipates, by seven hundred years,
Madame Scudery's witticisms on the court scandals of the Grand Monarque;
Akazome, noted for her peaceful and pure conception of life; and Komachi, the
great sad poetess, whose life exemplifies the loves and sorrows of that refined
and voluptuous epoch. Men imitated the style of these ladies, for this was, par
excellence, the age of woman.
Confined in their island home, with no questions of state
to trouble their sweet reveries, the court aristocracy found their serious
occupation in art and poetry. The lesser duties of statecraft were left to
inferiors, for to the over-refinement of the time it appeared that useful
duties were both lowering and impure, so that the handling of money and the use
of arms were functions fit only for the menial classes.
Even the administration of justice was relegated to the
lower orders. Governors of provinces would almost spend their lives in the
capital, Kyoto, leaving their representatives and henchmen to take charge of
their local duties, and some were even heard to make the proud boast that they
had never left the metropolis.
To Buddhism, still the dominant element in the nation's
range of variation, the halo of the eternal feminine draws closer in the Jodo
ideal of the Fujiwara epoch than at any other moment in its
history. The strict and masculine discipline of the
monk-taught doctrines of preceding ages - seeking salvation through personal
effort and self-mastery alone - had brought about its own reaction, and the
movement of revolt coincided with a renewal of that Tendai conception of the
Buddhistic idea, prevalent in the Asuka or pre-Nara period, when perfection was
regarded as attainable by mere contemplation of the Abstract-Absolute. Thus the
religious consciousness, exhausted by despair of the terrible struggle for
Samadhi through renunciation, swings back upon the thought of the madness of
supreme love. The prayer which dissolves the self into union with the ocean of
infinite mercy takes the place of the proud assertion of the privilege of
manhood in self-realisation. So, in India, also, Sankaracharya is succeeded by
Ramanuja and Chaitanya, an age of Bhakti succeeds an age of Jnan.
A wave of religious emotion passed
over Japan in the Fujiwara epoch, and, intoxicated with
frantic love, men and women deserted the cities and villages in crowds to
follow Kuya or Ipen, dancing and singing the name of Amida as they went.
Masquerades came into vogue, representing angels descending from Heaven with
the lotus daïs, in order to welcome and bear upward the departing soul. Ladies
would spend a lifetime in weaving or embroidering the image of Divine Mercy,
out of threads extracted from the lotus-stem. Such was the new movement, which,
however closely paralleled in China, in the beginning of the Tâng dynasty, was
nevertheless so completely and distinctively Japanese. It has never died, and
to this day two-thirds of the people belong to this Jodo sect, which
corresponds to the Vaishnavism of India.
Both Genshin, the formulator of the creed, and Genku, who
carried it to its culmination, pleaded that human nature
was weak and, try as it might, could not accomplish entire
self-conquest and direct attainment of the Divine in this life. It was rather
by the mercy of the Amida Buddha and his emanation, Kwannon, that one could
alone be saved. They did not put themselves in conflict with the earlier sects,
but, leaving them to work out, each its own results in its own way, declared
that it was for strong natures and rare individuals to develop by what they
called Shodo, or the Path of Saints, while for the ordinary masses a
prayer, even a single prayer, addressed to the almost maternal Godhead,
represented in Amida, the Immeasurable Light, was enough to draw the soul into
His world of purity, called the Jodo, where, free from the pains and
evils of this wretched life, they could evolve into the Buddhahood itself.
This prayer they called "the easier path," and
their images, softened by the spirit of femininity, produced a new type, very
different from those of the stately
[paragraph continues] Buddhas, and fierce representations of the Divine wrath, known to
the preceding age as the Siva-like Fudo, Destroyer of Earthly Passion
and Sentiment. Shinran, a disciple of Genku, founded the Honganji sect, now the
most powerful in the country, of the adherents of this idea.
Japanese painting, with its delicate lines and refined
colours, begins now to be characterised, from the tenth century onwards, by a
predominating use of gold, which, not unlike the gold backgrounds of mediæval
artists in Europe, is explained by the argument that yellow light must permeate
the regions of Amida.
Its subjects of illustration are the Kingdom of Amida, or ideal Mercy, the Kwannon of Seishi, or ideal Power, and the twenty-five Angels, who,
with their heavenly music, escorted spirits into Paradise. There is no better
representation of this idea than in the grand picture of Amida and the
twenty-five Angels by
[paragraph continues] Genshin himself - which picture is now kept in Koyashan.
The sculpture of the period rose to its greatest height in
Jocho (of the eleventh century), whose Amida is still to be seen in all its
glory at Hoodo, in Uji, one of the innumerable temples which the Fujiwara
ministers consecrated to the new Jodo, or Faith in the Land of Purity. The Fudo
of this sculptor is so sweet as to be almost an Amida - a fact which is
significant of the strength of that feminine influence that could change even
the mighty form of Siva himself.
But, alas! in a world so worldly, no such dreamland could
long persist! The storm was already brewing in the provinces that was to
scatter to the four winds that festival of flowers which reigned in Kyoto, the capital. Each local disturbance added to the power of those provincial
magistrates who actually held the reins of government, and ultimately
constituted them the daimyos and
barons of succeeding ages. Revolts in the North gave an
opportunity to the martial family of Minamoto, and their long campaign of
fifteen years won the hearts of the uncivilised peoples east of the Hakone Pass, who were almost as much dreaded by the people of the court as the hordes of
Goths by the later Romans. The suppression of pirates in the Inland Sea also
called into prominence the power of the Taira, so that towards the end of the
eleventh century the military strength of the empire was divided between these
two rival families of Minamoto and Taira. The aristocracy of the court - pleading
in their extreme effeminacy that the true man was a combination of man and
woman - were going so far as to imitate women in painting their faces and in
their attire, and could not, in their frivolity, understand the danger that was
threatening them so close.
A civil war between two aspirants for the imperial throne
in the middle of the
twelfth century completely unmasked the powerlessness of
the Fujiwara court. The Commander-in-chief of the forces was not even able to
mount his horse, and the Captain of the Imperial Guard found it impossible to
move, in the heavy armour which had become fashionable at the period. In this
dilemma the warlike families of Minamoto and Taira, held in contempt by the
court, and treated as an almost inferior class. though they were both descended
from the imperial loins, were necessarily called in to assist the rivals for
the throne.
The family of that imperial candidate who was supported by
the Taira arms gained the ascendency, and held it close on half a century. Then
they succumbed to the habits and ideals of the Fujiwaras, so as completely to
lose their valour. The scion of the Minamotos found them then an easy prey, and
all their power and prestige were destroyed in the epic battles of Suma and
Shioya.
NOTES
Choan is the present city of Suiang, in the
viceroyalty of Shenshi, where the Empress-Dowager took refuge recently, during
the unfortunate occupation of Pekin by the Allies. Choan, with Rakuio or Loyang, formed the two chief capitals of the Hâng and Tâng dynasties. In this and other
cases we have followed the Japanese pronunciation of Chinese names.
Bhakti. - That love of God, and devotion in love,
which attains to selflessness. In Europe St. Teresa and some of the modern
Protestant sects may stand as examples.
Gnan. - That supreme illumination of the
intellect in which the transcendent oneness of all things becomes self-evident.
Sankaracharya. - The greatest Hindu saint and
commentator of modern times. He lived in the eighth century, and is the father
of modern Hinduism. He died at the age of 32.
Ramanuja. - A saint and philosopher of the
Bhakti-type. He lived in Southern India in the twelfth century. He is the
founder of the second great school of the Vedanta philosophy.
Chaitanya. - Known as the "Prophet of
Nuddea," in Bengal, an ecstatic saint of the thirteenth century.
Suma and Shioya. - Two places near Kobe, Japan.