The 47 Ronin Story

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Authors: John Allyn

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BOOK: The 47 Ronin Story
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Among flowers, the cherry blossom; among men, the samurai,

—Japanese proverb

JAPAN was a country in turmoil at the beginning of the 18th century. It was a time of pageantry and corruption in the Shogun's court in Edo (now Tokyo) and of riotous gaiety in the pleasure quarters of ancient Kyoto, shuttered away from the world of social restraint. The arts flourished; the popular theater was born. Because the merchant class was rising in power it was also the beginning of the end of privilege for the professional warriors, or samurai, who felt their loss keenly, especially since they held the business of money-making in contempt.

In the midst of such bewildering change, eruptions of violence were not unknown. They came most often in the form of rice riots by the farmers who were taxed beyond endurance by the Shogun, the military ruler of all Japan. That they did not occur more often among the samurai was a tribute to the thoroughness of their training and their remarkable self-discipline.

But even a samurai could be pushed too far. Es-

pecially a rash young lord forced into contact with the effete and degenerate ways of the court.

It happened in 1701 in Edo. In a moment of anger and frustration, Lord Asano of Ako lashed out at a corrupt court official and set in motion a chain of events that terminated in one of the bloodiest vendettas in Japan's feudal history. These events shocked the country and brought the Shogun himself to a legal and moral impasse. When it was all over, Japan had a new set of heroes—the forty-seven ronin, or ex-samurai, of Ako.

The historical facts of their deed are plain; the details are hazy. Celebrated in song, story, drama, and motion pictures, many widely differing versions have been produced.

This novel is intended to give an account in English of what might have happened in those colorful days when Japan was secluded from the rest of the world and the old traditions still governed the lives of men.

— John Allyn

9 I 9

March 13, 170 L

The sun completed its route over the Pacific and began to set, reddening the waters around the islands of Japan. To the southwest, on a path near the Inland Sea, a tall man on an unkempt stallion shielded his eyes from the glare as he rode tight-lipped through the pines.

His name was Oishi; he was the chief retainer of the Asano clan, the rulers of this hilly domain. He was returning to the castle at Ako after an all-day horseback tour of the castle town with his master's little daughter, who rode beside him on a pony with a tangled mane.

They made a strange pair. Oishi was a handsome man in his early forties with a high-domed forehead, a square jaw, and an air of quiet authority. His topknot, pleated hakama skirt, and two swords identified him as a samurai, a member of the warrior class. The child was petite and vivacious, bright as a butterfly in

kimono and obi. Yet, in spite of their differences, each was comfortable in the other's presence. The girl was freed from the strict discipline her parents imposed on her; Oishi was freer with a child, especially someone else's, to relax his official manner and even joke a little.

At the moment, as their shabby horses jogged homeward, there was less conversation between them than usual. Oishi was appalled at what he had seen in the town, and the little girl respected his silence.

All his life Oishi had heard the Buddhist edicts against violence and cruelty, but in practice they had always been tempered with common sense. Sometimes one had to kill to defend oneself against an enemy, or, in the case of animals, to get food. Personally, he had always deplored the cruelty in tournaments where dogs were brought down by spears or arrows and he had no objection to such sport being abolished. But the Shogun's new Life Preservation Laws went much too far. Animals were now apparently more privileged than humans and this topsy-turvy manner of thinking had brought the whole country to the brink of economic chaos.

In the town Oishi had seen once thriving farmers begging for jobs because they were not allowed to fight back against the pests that destroyed their crops. Foxes, badgers, birds, and insects ran rampant in the fields while those who had planted the seed stood by helplessly.

Oishi knew that poultry was secretly being sold in the back rooms of some otherwise respectable shops, but on the whole violations of the law were few. Not only was the administrative machinery of the Shogun's government extremely effective in catching lawbreakers, but the penalty for injuring any living

Chapter One

thing was severe. For taking the life of an animal, the punishment was the execution of the "criminal" himself.

There were others who were as badly off as the farmers. The occupations of hunter, trapper, and tanner had become obsolete and these men, too, were crowding the towns, seeking some way to support their families. To their consternation, they found that jobs were scarce and food prices high, boosted out of reach of the common people by the scant supply of farm products. The only commodity seemingly available at a low price was a young girl to sleep with, due to the growing number of farmers' daughters who had been sold into the brothels to tide their families over the bad times.

As always, Oishi had skirted the so-called pleasure quarters when touring the town with Lord Asano's daughter, but now the houses of prostitution were increasing so fast that they spread right out onto the main road and were impossible to avoid. Shocking was the word for it, and he was certainly going to bring it to his master's attention when he returned.

As yet his own class had not felt the economic pinch—the samurai were paid out of funds that came from selling the rice grown on their lords' fiefs at the going high prices—but their lives had been affected by the Shogun's edict in other ways.

There was no more archery practice or competition, because they could not pluck goosefeathers for their arrows. There was no more falconry because all the birds had been set at liberty and even the Shogun's Master of Hawks had been discharged. Horsemanship was becoming a lost art because the horses' hooves could not be pared or their manes clipped under penalty of banishment. But worst of all, in

Oishi's mind, was the general laxity of morals that was spreading from the Shogun's capital down into the provinces.

As the son of a samurai, Oishi had spent his childhood in the study of Confucian ethics as part of the necessary training of a soldier who must learn loyalty as well as fierceness on the field of battle. Because of this, he was shocked at reports that the dancing and play-acting that overran Shogun Tsunayoshi's capital at Edo (Tokyo) was beginning to have a softening effect on the samurai quartered there. He had even heard rumors that samurai had been seen in the Kabu-ki theaters of Kyoto, the city of pleasure as well as of temples, but these he found hard to believe.

Such things had been going on for some time, but Oishi had not been aware of just how bad things had gotten in town until today. He began to compose in his mind the report he would make to Lord Asano, and as he thought of her father he turned toward the little girl riding beside him. She smiled at him but then her expression became more serious. She, too, had noticed a change in the countryside.

"Uncle," she asked him, "why are all the farms so messy looking? They're none of them kept up well at all. Don't you think you ought to report the farmers to my father for not properly doing their jobs?"

Oishi laughed heartily and she was reassured before he spoke that things were not as bad as they seemed. "Let's not blame the farmers until we know their side of it, too, shall we?"

"But what excuse could they have for neglecting their fields so?"

"It's not because they want to neglect them, little daughter. It's the animals they're forbidden to kill by the Life Preservation Laws that are ruining the land."

• 72.

Chapter One

"But why are we forbidden to kill the animals— especially those that annoy us so?"

"Because the Shogun has said it is wrong to take the life of an animal and because we are loyal to our master, your father, and would not think of bringing shame on him by disobeying the orders of his lord, the Shogun."

"But why did he make this hard law in the first place?"

Oishi sighed. As much as the law hurt, he could understand Tsunayoshi's reasons for promulgating it.

"Because more than anything else in the world he wants a child. A sweet, pretty child like you. He lost one you know—a little boy four years old who died. And his priest has told him that in order to have another, he must atone for some sin committed in a previous life—one in which he most likely wantonly destroyed some living thing. You've seen that we don't use dogs in our tournaments any more—that's because our Shogun was born in the Year of the Dog and to kill a dog is now punishable by death."

"Even if one should attack you?"

Oishi mused for a moment. "In that case it might be all right—but it would be a good idea to have witnesses that the dog took the first bite."

He smiled at her and the little girl smiled back, but she was not sure whether he was joking or not. She decided she would ask her father about it when he got home from Edo.

With a shout she kicked her little feet into her horse's flanks and lurched into a gallop. "I'll race you home," she cried, already ten lengths ahead, her long hair flying.

Oishi gave the fierce cry of the attacking warrior and galloped after her. He maintained the distance

• 7i-

between them, and together they moved over the winding road and up the final hill. At the top they came in sight of the castle, far below in the middle of a large plain, strategically located so that invaders could not approach unseen. It was always a spectacular sight with its high stone walls and white tile-topped towers, but on this occasion neither of them paused to appreciate the view.

The sinking sun was throwing long clutching shadows behind them as they raced down the hill toward the gate. It crossed Oishi's mind that when the same sun rose again in the morning it would be the beginning of Lord Asano's last day in Edo. He hoped all was going well at the ceremonies in the Shogun's capital where the etiquette was so unfamihar and demanding. Lord Asano was not noted for his patience and the less he had to participate, the better. Anyway, he would soon know the whole story. As the httle girl entered the gate, well ahead of him as always, and he followed to receive the salutes of the sentries, the thought came again: tomorrow would be the last day.

wvrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvvrrrrrrrr

® n ®

Dawn broke coldly over Edo, the capital city of old Japan. It was to be a bleak, sunless day. The chill wind that rolled down from the high snow-covered mountains rattled the rain doors of the farmhouses on the outskirts, then lifted a billow of dust along the post road from the southwest as it entered the city.

On its way it picked up the stench of human excreta from the rice fields, the incenselike odor of smoke from the charcoal fires in the kitchens of early-rising housewives, and finally the saltiness of the briny sea off the flat waters of Edo Bay.

At ground level the wind lost its force in the narrow alleyways that twisted through the maze of flimsy wooden structures that were both homes and places of business to nearly seven hundred thousand merchants and artisans. Above the tile-topped roofs it continued gustily on toward the higher ground in the center of the city, dipped to cross a rock-Hned moat, and became random among the watchtowers and palaces of Edo Castle where the Shogun Tsuna-yoshi, the supreme ruler of the land, held his court.

As it moved pungently, invisibly along, the wind

.75.

also acquired a sound. Sweeping through a graveyard and the public execution grounds, it startled a mongrel cur and set him howling, which in turn set off others around him until in no time the air was filled with the dismal wailing of a thousand stray dogs. The sound swelled and became more menacing as it forced its way into the hovels of beggars and the mansions of the nobihty, to enter the sleeping ears of poor and rich alike. . . .

Lord Asano, Daimyo of the Province of Ako, still boyishly good-looking at thirty-five, was riding with his chief retainer Oishi through a misty landscape, running down a deadly wild boar that was menacing the farmers. As they moved into the ever thickening fog, an eerie hum began to throb in Lord Asano's ears and his horse reacted nervously. Behind him, Oishi pulled up to a prudent halt, but Lord Asano impatiently spurred his own mount forward and disappeared from sight.

"My Lord Asano!" Oishi called in sudden anxiety, "come back, come back!"

But Lord Asano's stubborn pride would not let him turn back and he pressed on through the dense vacuum of the fog until the unearthly sound became a screech and then a deafening howl. He felt a stab of terror as he was sucked into the sound and lost all sense of direction. In the dazzHng white of the fog he was sightless and felt himself lose his balance and start to fall. The howling grew louder and he knew he must fight for his life to escape the demons that were waiting to devour him. He cried out for help and in that instant he woke in his villa near the Shogun's castle to hear the howling of the dogs of Edo fading away on the wind that had brought it.

"Husband!" his wife cried out as she raised herself

Chapter Two

to watch him struggHng to draw his sword from the scabbard beside him. "What's the matter?"

Fully awake now, he shook his head and threw down the sword. "The dogs," he muttered. "The damned dogs."

"Go back to sleep," she said, as a soothing smile came over her pretty round face. "You should be used to them by now."

"I'll never get used to them, or to anything else about this miserable place."

"Only one more day," she reminded him. "Then we'll go home to Ako and our daughter."

"One more day," he repeated in a tone that was both forlorn and hopeful. "One more rotten day."

He tried to go back to sleep but his heart was still pounding from his nightmare and his eyes would not close. He watched restlessly as the light of dawn slipped through the window shutters and crept across the tatami mats to his bed on the floor. Lord Asano sighed and rolled out of the heavy quilts to stand shivering for a moment in his underclothes, then put on a padded robe to slide open the paper-paneled door and step into the cold corridor beyond.

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