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THE CHRYSANTHEMUM HERMIT MANY
years ago there lived at the foot of the Mountains of Nambu, in Adachi
gun,
Saitama Prefecture, an old man named Kikuo, which means
Chrysanthemum-Old-Man. Kikuo
was a faithful retainer of Tsugaru; he was then called Sawada Hayato.
Kikuo was
a man of great bodily strength and fine appearance, and had much to do
with the
efficiency of the small fighting force which protected the feudal lord,
the
castle, and the estates. Nevertheless,
an evil day came. The feudal lord's small force was overthrown; the
estates and
castle were lost. The lord and his faithful retainer, with the few
survivors,
escaped to the mountains, where they continued to think that a day
might come
when they would be able to have their revenge. During
the enforced idleness Kikuo, knowing his lord's love of flowers
(especially of
the chrysanthemum), made his mind up to devote all his spare time to
making
chrysanthemum beds. This, he thought, would lessen the pain of defeat
and
exile. The
feudal lord was greatly pleased; but his cares and anxieties were not
abated.
He sickened and died in great poverty, much to the sorrow of Kikuo and
the rest
of his followers. Kikuo wept night and day over the humble and lonely
grave;
but he busied himself again to please the spirit of his lord by
planting
chrysanthemums round the tomb and tending them daily. By and by the
border of
flowers was thirty yards broad — to the wonder of all who saw. It was
because
of this that Hayato got the name of Chrysanthemum-Old-Man. The chrysanthemum is in China a holy flower. Ancient history tells of a man called Hoso (great grandson of the Emperor Juikai) who lived to the age of 800 years without showing the slightest sign of decay. This was attributed to his drinking the dew of the chrysanthemum. Besides his devotion to flowers, Kikuo delighted in children; from the village he called them to his poor hut, and as there was no schoolmaster he taught them to write, to read, and jujitsu. The children loved him, and the good villagers revered him as if he were a kind of god. Kikuo Prays at the Grave of his Feudal Lord In
about his eighty-second year Kikuo caught cold, and the fever which
came with
it gave him great pain. During
the daytime his pupils attended to his wants; but at night the old man
was
alone in his cottage. One
autumn night he awoke and found standing about his veranda some
beautiful
children. They did not look quite like any children he knew. They were
too
beautiful and noble-looking to belong to the poor of the village. 'Kikuo
Sama,' cried two of them, 'do not fear us, though we are not real
children. We
are the spirits of the chrysanthemum which you love so much, and of
which you have
taken such care. We have come to tell you how sorry we are to see you
so ill,
although we have heard that in China there once lived a man called Hoso
who
lived for 800 years by drinking the dew which falls from the flowers.
We have
tried all we can to prolong your life; but we find that the Heavens do
not
allow that you should live to a much greater age than you have already
reached.
In thirty more days you will die. Make ready, therefore, to depart.' Saying
this, they all wept bitterly. 'Good-bye,
then,' said Kikuo. 'I have no further hopes of living. Let my death be
easy. In
the next world I may be able to serve my old lord and master. The only
thing
that makes me sad to leave this world is you: I must for ever regret to
leave
my chrysanthemums!' Saying this, he smiled at them in affection. 'You
have been very kind to us,' said the Kiku spirits, 'and we love you for
it. Man
rejoices at birth, and feels sad at death; yet now you shed no tears.
You say
you do not mind dying except for leaving us. If you die we shall not
survive,
for it would be useless misery. Believe us when we say that we shall
die with
you.' As
the spirits of the chrysanthemums finished speaking a puff of wind came
about
the house, and they disappeared. As the day dawned the old man grew
worse, and,
strange to say, all the chrysanthemums began to fade — even those which
were
just beginning to bloom; — the leaves crumpled up and dried. As
the spirits had foretold, at the end of the thirtieth day the old man
died. The
Kiku flowers died then. Not one was left in the whole district. The
villagers
could not account for it. They buried the old man near his lord, and,
thinking
to honour and please him, planted, time after time, chrysanthemums near
his
grave; but all faded and died as soon as they were planted. The
two little graves were at last given up, and they remain in their
solitude,
with wild grasses only growing about them. |