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       Lafcadio Hearn

      Gleanings in Buddha-Fields: Studies of Hand and Soul in the Far East

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664648358

       GLEANINGS IN BUDDHA-FIELDS

       I

       A LIVING GOD

       II

       OUT OF THE STREET

       III

       NOTES OF A TRIP TO KYŌTO

       IV

       DUST

       V

       ABOUT FACES IN JAPANESE ART

       VI

       NINGYŌ-NO-HAKA

       VII

       IN ŌSAKA

       VIII

       BUDDHIST ALLUSIONS IN JAPANESE FOLK-SONG

       IX

       NIRVANA

       X

       THE REBIRTH OF KATSUGORŌ

       XI

       WITHIN THE CIRCLE

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      I

      Why certain architectural forms produce in the beholder a feeling of weirdness is a question about which I should like to theorize some day: at present I shall venture only to say that Shinto shrines evoke such a feeling. It grows with familiarity instead of weakening; and a knowledge of popular beliefs is apt to intensify it. We have no English words by which these queer shapes can be sufficiently described—much less any language able to communicate the peculiar impression which they make. Those Shinto terms which we loosely render by the words "temple" and "shrine" are really untranslatable;—I mean that the Japanese ideas attaching to them cannot be conveyed by translation. The so-called "august house" of the Kami is not so much a temple, in the classic meaning of the term, as it is a haunted room, a spirit-chamber, a ghost-house; many of the lesser divinities being veritably ghosts—ghosts of great warriors and heroes and rulers and teachers, who lived and loved and died hundreds or thousands of years ago. I fancy that to the Western mind the word "ghost-house" will convey, better than such terms as "shrine" and "temple," some vague notion of the strange character of the Shinto miya or yashiro,—containing in its perpetual dusk nothing more substantial than symbols or tokens, the latter probably of paper. Now the emptiness behind the visored front is more suggestive than anything material could possibly be; and when you remember that millions of people during thousands of years have worshipped their great dead before such yashiro—that a whole race still believes those buildings tenanted by viewless conscious personalities—you are apt also to reflect how difficult it would be to prove the faith absurd. Nay! in spite of Occidental reluctances—in spite of whatever you may think it expedient to say or not to say at a later time about the experience—you may very likely find yourself for a moment forced into the attitude of respect toward possibilities. Mere cold reasoning will not help you far in the opposite direction. The evidence of the senses counts for little: you know there are ever so many realities which can neither be seen nor heard nor felt, but which exist as forces—tremendous forces. Then again you cannot mock the conviction of forty millions of people while that conviction thrills all about you like the air—while conscious that it is pressing upon your psychical being just as the atmosphere presses upon your physical being. As for myself, whenever I am alone in the presence of a Shinto shrine, I have the sensation of being haunted; and I cannot help thinking about the possible apperceptions of the haunter. And this tempts me to fancy how I should feel if I myself were a god—dwelling in some old Izumo shrine on the summit of a hill, guarded by stone lions and shadowed by a holy grove.

      Elfishly small my habitation might be, but never too small, because I should have

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