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Seven Demon Stories from Medieval Japan

Page 35

by Noriko T. Reider


  lation tsukumogami for the tool specters came from an image conjured up

  from 九十九髪. Indeed, part of the preceding poem is used in an expla-

  nation of the Sweeping Soot event that appears in the opening section of

  Tsukumogami ki: “kore [Susuharai] sunawachi ‘momotose ni hitotose taranu

  tsukumogami’ no sainan ni awaji to nari” (Sweeping Soot is carried out so

  as not to meet with misfortune caused by tsukumogami tool specters but a

  year short of 100) ( MJMT 9: 417).

  Longevity and special Power: from aging Demonic

  animals to Demonic tool specters

  Komatsu Kazuhiko writes that the term tsukumogami signifies longevity (as

  explained above), and he furthermore suggests that it refers to someone or

  something that has acquired special powers as a result of its extreme lon-

  gevity. He explains that the syllabic tsukumogami can also mean 九十九神

  (ninety-nine deities; note: kami 髪, hair, and kami 神, deity, are homonyms),

  signifying spirits that are impregnated in extraordinarily long-lived persons

  or objects. When the spirit does something mysterious, it becomes a specter

  of an old person or object (Komatsu, Hyōrei shinkō ron 330).

  Stories about aged beings turning demonic are contained in various

  narratives. Notably, Konjaku monogatarishū contains an account of a woman

  who becomes extremely old and transforms into an oni.26 At the end of the

  story, the narrator explains that “when parents become extremely old they

  always turn into oni and try to eat even their own children” (translation in

  Ury, Tales of Times Now Past 165).

  Demonic old animals are described in the otogizōshi Tamamo no mae (Lady

  Tamamo) and the Noh play Sesshōseki (Killing Stone), in which an extraor-

  dinarily old fox enchants a retired emperor.27 Komatsu ( Hyōrei shinkō ron

  330) suggests that in addition to the tsukumogami of humans and animals,

  people in pre-modern times probably also believed in the tsukumogami of

  tools and utensils. I concur with Komatsu’s suggestion, although unfortu-

  nately Komatsu does not provide any concrete examples of the old animals

  and objects to which he refers being called tsukumogami.

  Tanaka, in contrast, contends that there is a major difference between

  the living creatures called tsukumogami and the tsukumogami of non-sentient

  beings. She suggests that some medieval Ise monogatari commentaries may

  The Record of Tool Specters

  223

  help fill in the gap between the two. For example, according to the Reizei-ke

  ryū Ise shō (Ise episode 63), wolves, foxes, and tanuki that live for more than

  100 years have both the power to change their shapes and the will to harm

  humans; those transformed animals are called tsukumogami. Tanaka writes

  that calling an aging, shape-shifting animal a tsukumogami is just one step

  away from calling the shape-shifting specters of non-sentient beings tsuku-

  mogami (Tanaka, “Tsukumogami to chūgoku bunken” 206–8).

  That one step between the tsukumogami of aging demonic animals and

  tsukumogami tool specters seems to be bridged in part by an illustration in

  Fudō riyaku engi (The Benevolence of Fudō myōō, ca. fourteenth century).28

  In an illustration portraying a scene of praying by a yin-yang diviner or prac-

  titioner of Onmyōdō (the Way of yin-yang),29 five unidentifiable creatures

  representing illness deities are depicted. Among the five, two look like some

  kind of container: one is a furry basin with handles ( tsunodarai ), and another

  one looks like a large furry bowl. They resemble containers made of ani-

  mals. Indeed, all five deities have animal features—fur and paws. Earlier,

  I wrote “in part” because these creatures are considered deities of illness

  rather than spirits of tools. It could be the case that these illness deities

  possessed the tools (in the sense of “spirit possession” rather than “owner-

  ship”) or were held in the containers, thus becoming vengeful tool spirits.

  As mentioned in chapter 2, Peter Knecht, Hasegawa Masao, Minobe

  Shigekatsu, and Tsujimoto Hiroshige report an interesting contagious dis-

  ease called denshi-byō (illness caused by denshi ), in which a person is emaciated by the time of death (“Denshi ‘oni’ to ‘mushi’ ”). The modern diagnosis of

  this illness is pulmonary tuberculosis, although this interpretation is open

  to debate. Fascinatingly, this denshi was considered both a mushi (worm) and

  an oni from the ancient through early modern periods, and consequently a

  remedy was sought from both medicine and religion. From the viewpoint

  of religious treatments, an esoteric Buddhist denshi-byō healing ritual is par-

  ticularly interesting. According to an entry titled Ji denshibyō hiden (Secret

  Transmissions for Healing Denshi-byō ) in the Sho kaji hihō (Various Secret

  Formulas of Incantation), the ritual includes leaving a picture of a denshi-

  oni underneath the victim’s bed for three days, during which time a small

  amount of food is set aside from the patient’s meals. After the ritual prayer

  is over, the priest strokes the victim’s body with the picture to have the oni

  transfer to the picture, and he places the food set aside from each meal into

  designated utensils ( ki 器). The priest then recites directly to the utensils:

  “attached spirits, eat this and leave this place” (Knecht et al., “Denshi ‘oni’

  to ‘mushi’ ” 60). That night, the picture is buried together with the food in

  the utensils.

  yo ok T

  ty of

  Detail from Fudō riyaku engi. Proper

  aku engi. . ves

  ō riy hi

  Fud e Arc

  . Detail from yer e: TNM Imag

  s pra . Imag

  viner’

  unications

  T Comm

  DNP AR

  tesy of

  ve illness deities appear in response to a di

  Figure 7.2. Fi National Museum. Cour

  The Record of Tool Specters

  225

  What is noteworthy about the ritual is that the priest speaks directly to

  the utensil as if it were a living thing. Presumably, the oni is going to eat

  this meal, but (part of) the illness is already contained in the utensil through

  the victim’s contaminated food. Practically speaking, the illness is already

  inside the utensil or inherently part of it. The illness deities that look like

  containers portrayed in the illustration in Fudō riyaku engi may have reflected

  that concept. That is, an oni or illness deity exists together with a utensil,

  and the utensil that was earlier associated with the oni becomes an oni itself.

  The oni-utensil that harms humans could be a precursor of tsukumogami. In

  any case, I assume that esoteric Buddhist monks as well as yin-yang divin-

  ers played a role in the spread, if not the birth, of tsukumogami, primarily

  through the use of objects in various rituals.

  In fact, according to Tō Teikan (1732–97), the author of Kōko shōroku

  (A Minor Record of a Predilection for Things old), the creatures por-

  trayed in the Fudō riyaku engi illustration are tsukumogami. Quoting a line

  from Sankaiki, the diary of Fujiwara no Tadachika (1131–95), concerning a

  high Bud
dhist priest’s ritual or magic for transferring a possessing evil spirit

  into a female medium and then depositing it into a thing, Tō comments

  that Buddhist priests and yin-yang diviners are good at ritual and magical

  techniques (quoted in Takasaki 52). It is unclear what this “thing” was. It

  could have been a hitogata (paper or straw representation of a human) or

  some other object. But the idea of objects into which evil spirits and defile-

  ments are transferred reminds me of a purification ceremony in which a jar

  is used. According to Engishiki (The Engi Codes, tenth century), the Ōharae

  (great purification ceremony) was held twice a year in the imperial palace

  when the emperor, empress, and crown prince transferred their impuri-

  ties, as well as the accumulated impurities of the nation, into five bamboo

  scales, swords, and a pot into which they breathed (see KT 26: 26–28; Bock

  83–85). These agamono, things into which pollution, defilement, and crimes

  are transferred for a purification ceremony, were then to be thrown away

  in the river or on riverbanks. The discarded agamono—paper dolls, jars, and

  whatever was used for the purification ceremony—were to be abandoned

  with people’s breath and impurities. These abandoned objects may have

  been thought to contain evil spirits and to act vengefully. Again, tools and

  utensils used in rituals seem to have had a deep relationship with the forma-

  tion of tsukumogami beliefs.

  Belief in animate Objects before and during the medieval Period

  As mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, animate utensils are

  not unique to the medieval period. A utensil transformation had already

  226

  Part IV: It

  appeared in Konjaku monogatarishū, in which a copper decanter changed into

  a three-foot-tall man. According to a yin-yang diviner, this animate copper

  decanter was a harmless spirit ( mono no ke). The narrator concludes the story

  by stating that “even from this, people come to know that the spirit of an

  object manifests itself through a human shape.”30 The comment indicates

  that the idea that objects are endowed with their own spirits existed by

  the end of the Heian period. It is interesting that this spirit of an object is

  simultaneously considered a harmless spirit and appears not as an animate

  decanter but as a human.

  Stories of animate objects that hurt humans also exist. For instance,

  the same collection contains a tale about a small oil pot that kills a sick girl.

  In this story, however, the offending spirit is said to have possessed an oil

  pot rather than to have itself been the innate spirit of the pot ( SNKBZ 38:

  64–66). Again, these harmful utensils are not old material objects that receive

  souls and transform into vengeful spirits but rather evil spirits or oni that

  take control of the objects. one can assume from these stories that by the

  end of the Heian period there was a belief that when an object does not

  harm people, the spirit of the object may manifest as a human being, but

  when it does harm people, the appearance of the object remains unchanged

  while the harm is believed to have been caused by an oni or evil spirit pos-

  sessing the object. When we turn to the Muromachi-period Tsukumogami ki

  and look at the illustration of Holy Ichiren, he does look like a human, and

  he transforms without the help of the creation god. In contrast, the other

  tsukumogami look like specters of tools or simply weird creatures. Apparently,

  Holy Ichiren’s case represents a spirit manifestation in human form.

  Interestingly, the idea that inanimate objects can be possessed by evil

  spirits or oni rather than possessing their own intrinsic spirits is expressed

  in Tsukumogami ki as well, but, importantly, the narrator condemns this view

  as an explanation by the preachers of exoteric Buddhism. The narrator

  explains, “Scholars of the exoteric Buddhist schools say that according to

  the Agongyō, oni and deities reside on the streets and in the houses, filling

  every inch of space. The exoteric Buddhists believe that the transformation

  of old tools into specters is due to the deities and oni possessing them. They

  ask, ‘how could inanimate objects have souls?’ ” ( MJMT 9: 425). Although

  this disagreement reflects the religious tone of the late tenth century, the

  differences between the esoteric and exoteric Buddhist schools of the

  Muromachi period were still distinct, and those schools maintained a fierce

  rivalry for predominance. So, the disagreement can also be interpreted as an

  aspect of an ongoing political and economic competition among the vari-

  ous schools of Buddhism during the Muromachi period. Indeed, R. Keller

  The Record of Tool Specters

  227

  Kimbrough writes that “it is important to keep in mind that competition

  among temples and sects tended to be fierce, and that doctrinal and institu-

  tional rivalries were often played out in the realm of seemingly innocuous

  tales” ( Preachers, Poets, Women, and the Way 24).

  Perhaps the notion of demons and evil spirits possessing objects was

  still popular while a belief in material objects receiving souls to do harm

  was simultaneously spreading. Buddhist priests and yin-yang diviners seem

  to have been at the center of tsukumogami thought, and, as we have seen, the

  author of Tsukumogami ki takes advantage of preexisting tsukumogami beliefs

  to emphasize the universal presence of souls in vegetation, tools, and other

  objects. Ironically, Tsukumogami ki then itself became a source for the defini-

  tion of tsukumogami. According to the transcription of a kyōka awase (comic

  tanka contest) held in the first month of 1508, a poet composed a kyōka

  about old clothes that did not transform into new ones on New Year’s Eve.

  The judge is said to have commented that “extremely old objects receive

  souls and turn into specters . . . Lord Fujiwara no Saneyori [himself] met

  various specters on his way to the imperial palace” (Hanawa, Gunsho ruijū

  28: 615). As we can see from the judge’s apparent allusion to Tsukumogami ki

  in his explanation of tsukumogami, the popular belief in tool specters both

  inspired and was itself later shaped by Tsukumogami ki.

  As I have discussed in the body of this chapter, Tsukumogami ki is full

  of amusing wordplays and parodies, many of which are intertwined with

  Shingon Esoteric teachings. While entertainment plays an important role in

  the text, Tsukumogami ki ’s principal purpose may have been to exert religious

  influence on a broad audience outside monastic institutions. Highly sophis-

  ticated Shingon Buddhist materialist cosmology may have been too com-

  plex for ordinary people, but through the vernacular Tsukumogami ki, which

  drew upon existing tsukumogami beliefs, the Shingon teachings could have

  been disseminated. Educated audiences would have understood the story’s

  parodies and wordplays; although less educated readers might have missed

  most of these, they would still have been exposed to the esoteric teach-

  ings through the vernacular story with its many illustrations. Tsukumogami ki

  also encourages people to sponsor memorial services for their abando
ned

  objects, lest the vengeful spirits harm their former owners. And through the

  act of performing ceremonies of propitiation, Shingon priests could influ-

  ence the daily lives of medieval people. While those who requested services

  would receive material benefits, such as peace of mind, priests who per-

  formed the services would also benefit from material compensation. Thus,

  Tsukumogami ki seems to have played important religious and financial roles

  in wider Muromachi society.

  228

  Part IV: It

  transLatiOn Of tsukuMOgaMi ki

  This is a translation of the single-scroll National Diet Library emaki, a Type

  B text, typeset in MJMT 9: 417–25. While translating it, I also consulted

  Kokumin tosho kabushiki gaisha’s “Otogizōshi,” 24–34, and Washio’s

  “Tsukumogami,” 15–25. The illustrations are from the Kyoto University

  Library’s scrolls, also a Type B text. See Kyoto daigaku fuzoku toshokan,

  “Tsukumogami,” http://edb.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/exhibit/tsuroll/indexA.html

  and http://edb.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/exhibit/tsuroll/indexB.html.

  The Record of Tool Specters

  S C R o L L o N E

  According to Miscellaneous Records of Yin and Yang,31 after a span of 100 years,

  utsuwamono or kibutsu (containers, tools, and instruments) receive souls and

  trick people. They are called tsukumogami. In view of that, every year people

  bring out the old tools from their houses and discard them in the alleys

  before the New Year. This event, called susuharai (lit. “sweeping soot,” year-

  end housecleaning), is carried out to avoid misfortune caused by tsukumo-

  gami tool specters but a year short of a hundred.

  This custom of renewing the hearth fire, drawing fresh water, and

  renewing everything from clothing to furniture at the New Year is thought

  to have started from the proud extravagance of the well-to-do, but now we

  understand that the custom is meant to prevent the calamities caused by

  tsukumogami.

  Around the era of Kōhō (964–67) perhaps, according to the usual cus-

  tom of sweeping soot, old tools were thrown away from houses both inside

  the capital and in the surrounding area. Those abandoned instruments got

  together to discuss their fate: “We have faithfully served the houses as fur-

  niture and utensils for a long time. Instead of getting the reward that is our

 

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