Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852’1912 (65 page)

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Authors: Donald Keene

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BOOK: Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852’1912
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Motoda was moved by the emperor’s newly awakened self-examination after the long period during which he had neglected his studies and also by his readiness to respond to his advisers’ criticism. A fuller program of studies was initiated on December 13.
7
Not long before, at a chrysanthemum-viewing party at the Aoyama Palace, the emperor had impressed Motoda by the soundness and excellence of his opinions, particularly with respect to foreign countries. Motoda had never before heard the emperor speak so eloquently and wished that foreigners could have heard him.
8

The emperor also resumed his frenetic horse riding. His renewed interest was at first welcomed by his advisers, but eventually they decided he was overdoing it, and they feared that out of exhaustion he might fall off his horse. Iwakura Tomomi spoke to him, but to no effect. Even though it rained steadily at the beginning of January 1878, the emperor rode every day on the track inside the palace grounds, not seeming to mind that he was muddy to the shins. The drivers and grooms of the imperial stables were exhausted. On January 12 two
jiho
,
9
Hijikata Hisamoto and Takasaki Masakaze, broached the subject with the emperor. He listened with an amiable look on his face, and when the two men finished speaking, he said, “You have spoken well. From now on I will follow the opinions of the drivers.” The two
jiho
were so impressed by the speediness of his acquiescence that they shed tears of emotion.
10

The next day the emperor went riding with Hijikata. While passing through a pine forest, Hijikata’s horse bolted and he was almost thrown. The emperor at once rode up and asked if Hijikata was all right. He was upset to think that just the day before he had been warned about his riding and now his companion was almost thrown. All who heard his words were struck with admiration for his generous and magnanimous nobility.

A subtle change occurred about this time in Meiji’s relations with other heads of state. His letter to Patrice de Mac-Mahon, the president of France, bore the superscription “Mutsuhito, Emperor of Japan by grace of Heaven, descendant of an unbroken line of ten thousand generations of emperors.”
11
He had not previously used this overpowering title in foreign correspondence. Conversely, the letter sent to him by the emperor of China bore a superscription referring to himself as Great Emperor of the Great Ch’ing Country and to Meiji as Great Emperor of Great Japan,
12
placing the two monarchs on terms of equality, an unprecedented concession from the Chinese court.

Meiji seems to have become consciously aware of Japanese history, whether in terms of the shell mounds discovered in September 1877 by the American scientist Edward Morse, or of the Satsuma Rebellion as an important part of the history of his own reign.
13
He showed renewed interest especially in his ancestors.

The usual court formalities, exchanges of visits and presents, and composition of New Year poems opened the new year of 1878. Toward the end of January, the emperor issued a rescript on the importance of agriculture to the state. Now that all the rebellions had been quelled, the fundamental policies of a well-run state were reiterated.

Only occasionally do we get a hint of problems relating to the throne. The emperor’s professed respect for remonstrances seems to have encouraged the men around him to express (naturally in the most respectful terms) their disapproval of his actions. For example, on February 3 the
jiho
on duty, Yamaguchi Masasada begged permission to appear before the emperor, even though it was a Sunday. Braving the displeasure on the emperor’s countenance, Yamaguchi asked him to observe greater temperance in his drinking, pointing out that the beriberi from which he had suffered during the previous year might well recur.
14
This year, with New Year and other celebrations, the emperor had been overindulging. At a party on January 10 he had kept drinking until 3
A.M.
, and just three days before he granted an audience to Yamaguchi his drinking had continued until 5
A.M.
Yamaguchi implored the emperor not to drink so much, especially late at night.

The emperor took the “remonstration” with good grace, and, it is reported, he was never again seen with a drunken face.
15
There is no indication why Meiji drank so heavily. Various people who knew him testified to his love for drink, even long afterward. General Takashima Tomonosuke, who had served in the Satsuma Rebellion, recalled,

The tone of the palace at the time was one of virility and martial prowess. The emperor drank very heavily. At times he would assemble favorite members of the court and stage drinking parties. I have not much capacity for liquor, and although it embarrasses me to admit it, I always made my escape and hid. But Yamaoka Tessh
ū
and Major Counselor Nakagawa were heavy drinkers, and they would invariably be summoned when the emperor had a drinking party. Nothing gave him greater pleasure than to drink cup after cup of saké, listening to the tales of deeds of bravery that went with the drink. The cup he used at that time was not the usual small size, but one as big as a drinking glass, and he had it filled to the brim.
16

Viscount Hinonishi, who became a chamberlain in 1886, wrote that even after the emperor had drunk his coffee at the end of a meal, he would not withdraw to his private quarters as long as there was any liquor left on the table.
17

Remonstration of a quite different nature was made by the emperor’s chief Confucian adviser, Motoda Nagazane. It was proposed about this time (February 1878) that following European models, forestland be attached to the Crown. But Motoda opposed this plan, arguing that the imperial household depended for its preservation not on land but on the ties with the hearts of the people created by “divine virtue and great benevolence.” He recalled that in ancient times, the government took only a small portion of the products of the land by way of taxes. Then, moving to the rights of the sovereign and the people, Motoda declared that if there was some right that the people, having performed their duties faithfully, deserved to obtain, the sovereign should bestow it. If there was some right that the sovereign, having ruled virtuously, deserved to obtain, the people should offer it. However, in the present instance, the government was trying to take away what should be the property of the people and to make it the private possession of the imperial household. This represented in effect a struggle for advantage between the imperial household and the people on equal terms, and it did harm to imperial authority. A portion of land taxes should be set aside for the maintenance of the imperial household. Then if the government ruled the people with supreme virtue and great benevolence, they would respond with ever greater love for the imperial household. But if the people’s hearts were alienated, even if the imperial household possesses all the land in Japan, the people would fight to take it away.
18

Motoda’s words were heeded, and the plan of co-opting lands for the Crown was not carried out. This instance suggests the power that Confucian remonstration still possessed, but sometimes a would-be remonstrator, enlightened by the emperor’s superior virtue, would withdrew his criticism. On one occasion the emperor asked a chamberlain to have his shoes repaired. The chamberlain secretly conferred with two
jiho
, Sasaki Takayuki and Takasaki Masakaze, asking why the emperor should have commanded that his shoes be repaired rather than discarding them in favor of new ones. They replied that this might seem a trivial matter, but it had important implications for the ruler’s virtue. If the emperor asked to have his shoes repaired because he respected the value of economy, his command was truly to be admired. However, if he were motivated by stinginess, this was most to be regretted. Takasaki asked the emperor his reasons. He replied that he was planning to give the shoes to the acting chamberlain Fujinami Kototada, but noticing that they were a little worn, he had asked to have them repaired so as to spare Fujinami the expense. Takasaki, realizing how much the emperor loved his ministers, wept with emotion.
19

Another aspect of the emperor’s sovereignly virtue was revealed on April 23 when he donated 20,000 yen to T
ō
ky
ō
Prefecture for building a hospital to treat beriberi. Having suffered himself from this disease the previous year, he sympathized with others who were afflicted. If his own illness were to recur, it was likely that the doctors, as usual, would prescribe a change of air. Iwakura Tomomi, foreseeing this, proposed building a detached palace for the emperor at some elevated spot with a healthful atmosphere. The emperor replied, “Yes, a change of air is a good cure. But I am not the only one to suffer with beriberi. This illness is common to our whole people. It would be easy enough for me to move to another place, but surely one can’t expect the whole population to move. For the sake of our entire people, I want to consider other means of preventing this sickness. When I traveled to the north, I noticed that dozens of soldiers in the garrison were suffering from beriberi, even though their post was on high ground. In my opinion, moving to a better place is not enough to escape the disease. I have heard that this sickness does not exist in the West but is found only in our country. If that is true, the cause must be eating rice. I have heard that a physician of Chinese medicine, T
ō
da Ch
ō
an, cures patients by having them eat beans or wheat instead of rice. I am sure there must be something to it. Chinese medicine should not, however, be discarded wholesale as being outdated. Western medicine and Chinese medicine both have their good points. Japanese medicine is not to be discarded either.”
20

Iwakura, struck dumb with admiration, withdrew. Later
Ō
kubo Toshimichi also recommended that the emperor move to another location and received the same reply. One cannot be sure that these were the emperor’s actual words, but it may have been his first recorded pronouncement of this length. The hospital for which he gave money was opened on July 10. He later gave money for the construction of an insane asylum in T
ō
ky
ō
, the first ever built in the city.

The emperor had an aversion to the doctors who remained with him to the end of his life. He particularly disliked being examined. In the previous year when he was suffering from beriberi, he had not told the doctors serving him that he felt unwell, and by the time the doctors learned this, the illness was already far advanced. His strong physique generally permitted him to pay little attention to his health. For their part the court doctors still relied on traditional, sometimes unenlightened, practices. When, for example, Princess Chikako contracted beriberi in August 1877, the best the doctors could do was to recommend a change of air. She accordingly went to Hakone, where she died three weeks later on September 2, in her thirty-third year.
21
This tragic end to the life of an unhappy woman, the sister of an emperor and the wife of a shogun, seems to have intensified Meiji’s distrust of doctors. It was only after two hours of persuasion by Sasaki Takayuki (1830–1910) that he consented to a physical examination.

The various remonstrances of his advisers, and his own willingness to follow (after an initial show of resistance) what they advised, seem to have brought a new maturity to the emperor. Fortunately he was surrounded by men of extraordinary ability who showed the persistence and even courage required to guide the emperor, who had not yet completely thrown off the effects of his early education in the Gosho.

Among these advisers, probably the most gifted, though the least popular, was the interior minister,
Ō
kubo Toshimichi. He was undoubtedly the most powerful man in the government, responsible only to the emperor. Ever since he returned from America and Europe in 1873,
Ō
kubo’s aim had been to strengthen the country politically and economically in order to compete on terms of equality with the advanced countries of the West. His methods were often high-handed, and he had aroused the hatred of adherents of both the right (who blamed him for the rejection of the invasion of Korea and the defeat of Saig
ō
Takamori) and the left (who believed that his conservatism had blocked the advance of people’s rights). He was unjustly accused of leading a life of luxury while the majority of the Japanese (especially the samurai) were in dire financial straits. Disgruntled samurai in all parts of the country, mouthing slogans reminiscent of those used by
sonn
ō
j
ō
i
advocates of the late Tokugawa period, had made
Ō
kubo the particular target of their resentment.

A group of samurai in Kanazawa began to plan his assassination. Kanazawa was an unexpected place for a plot. First, the Kaga domain had played an extremely inconspicuous role in the Restoration. Furthermore, the Maeda family enjoyed the largest income of any daimyo—1 million
koku
—and the city of Kanazawa had developed as a center of cultural activity. This prosperity may explain the lack of turbulent political activity at a time when other parts of Japan were deeply involved in the changes of the first ten years of Emperor Meiji’s reign.

Some samurai in Kanazawa, however, felt frustrated by the conciliatory tactics that had enabled Kaga to thrive at a time when other domains were embroiled in political disputes.
22
They were embittered particularly by the refusal to send Saig
ō
to Korea and sided with him in his unsuccessful war against the government. One architect of the assassination plot, Ch
ō
Tsurahide, journeyed twice to Kagoshima to meet Saig
ō
and to study at a private school.
23
The center of antigovernment activity in Kanazawa was a group of samurai known as the Sank
ō
-ji faction.
24
This faction never possessed the discipline of a political party but advocated the use of militarism and violence to obtain its ends. The leader, Shimada Ichir
ō
(1848–1878), was the central figure in the assassination. At times the Sank
ō
-ji cooperated with a much larger group, the Ch
ū
koku-sha, which favored popular rights. Although the ideals of the two groups were quite dissimilar, they were alike in opposing the oligarchy headed by
Ō
kubo. After the crime, some of the Ch
ū
koku-sha’s populist beliefs were incorporated in the manifesto sent to the newspapers.
25

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