Soseki Natsume 夏目漱石(1867-1916) Born in the eve of Meiji and lived in Meiji and died in Taisho 5. 1 2 Soseki loved making Haiku and Tanka. Soseki wrote more than 2500 Haiku in his life. Soseki Natusme 夏目漱石 すみれほどな 小さき人に 生まれたし (Soseki) 1897 秋の山 南を向いて 寺二つ (Soseki) 1895 若葉して 手のひらほどの 山の寺 (Soseki) 18973 From a Haiku poet to a great writer Soseki wrote more than 2500 Haiku in his life. Soseki Natusme 夏目漱石 すみれほど、小さき人に 生まれたし (Soseki) 1897 A little violet, I wish I were born like you (Translated by Koji) 秋の山 南を向いて 寺二つ (Soseki) 1895 An autumn mountain, looking to the south, two little temples in my eyes (Translated by Koji) 若葉して 手のひらほどの 山の寺 (Soseki) 1897 Shining young leaves, a mountain temple, 4 in my palm (Translated by Koji) Group Discussion and Presentation Question 1: Who is Soseki Natsume? What is he? Question 2: What is the writer’s intention in “Kokoro”? (Key Words and the theme of the novel) Question 3: What is the charm of the work, “Kokoro”? (Characters, Organization and plot) Question 4: What is the nature of K and his conviction? Question 5: What is the nature of Sensei, his view of life? Question 6: What are the views of Sensei’s romantic love? Question 7: What kind of force made K commit suicide? (What is a “True Way” for K?) Question 8: What made Sensei leave this world in peace? (What is Spirit of Meiji for Sensei and Soseki?) 5 Group Discussion and Presentation Question 9: What did you learn from Kokoro (criticism)? (The Power of Confession) (The power of Jealousy) Question 10: Soseki and Shakespeare; Historical Backgrounds Question 11: What is Dramatic Irony in “Kokoro” and Shakespearean works? Question12: What is today’s significance of Soseki’s Kokoro? Question 13: Continue the story after Sensei’s death? Your Mid-term essay: My Criticism on Soseki’s “Kokoro” A4 size at least 2 pages and send it to Koji as an attached file on line by March 31. 6 Grouping for Discussion • Group A: Bryan, Maxime, Jessica, David, Joshua, Emily • Group B: John Paul, Ameria, Ka Rhim, Tim, Hwisun, Vincent • Group C: Alexandra, Andrew, Angela, Kyle, Ji Soo, Yuki • Group D: Jerome, Anna, Richard, Faiza, Aurora, Patrick • Group E: Asim, Alana, Caroline, Kai, Samuel, Kumi 7 8 Soseki’s lodging house in Matsuyama and his own house in Tokyo 9 Soseki was sent to Univ. of London by Japanese Government scholarship from 1900-1902 in order to bring back the advantages of modernization in England. However, he witnessed and learned the loneliness of modernization as a price for freedom, independence and individualism, which affected his works, especially “Kokoro.”. 10 Water painting by Soseki 11 Soseki studied at University of London (1900-1902) Sōseki's lodgings in Clapham, South London 12 姜尚中 Kan San Ju discusses Soseki in his book 『悩む力』. Kan San Ju, a Korean, brought up in Japan and became Prof. of Tokyo Univ. Kan is the most respectful intellectual in Japan. He is familiar with Said, Soseki and Weber. His latest and sensational book “Nayamu Chikara” discusses the greatness of Soseki in comparison with Max Weber in terms of human inner agony and the value of worrying in life. Kan says, “I love Soseki by nature. I am from Kumamoto and there are many historical traces of Soseki in Kumamoto. I am a fan of Soseki ‘s works as he used to teach English at my high school in Kumamoto. 13 Works of Soseki 14 Year 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1912 1914 1915 1915 1916 Japanese title Sōseki's major works English title 吾輩は猫であるWagahai wa Neko dearuI Am a Cat 倫敦塔Rondon TōThe Tower of London薤露行Kairo-kōKairo-kō 坊っちゃんBotchanBotchan草枕KusamakuraThe Three-Cornered World (lit. The Grass Pillow)latest translation uses Japanese title 趣味の遺伝Shumi no IdenThe Heredity of Taste, 二百十日 Nihyaku-tōkaThe 210th Day 虞美人草GubijinsōThe Poppy 坑夫KōfuThe Miner夢十夜Yume Jū-yaTen Nights of Dreams 三四郎 SanshirōSanshiro それからSorekaraAnd Then, a novel 門MonThe Gate 思ひ出す事などOmoidasu Koto nado 彼岸過迄Higan Sugi MadeTo the Spring Equinox and Beyond 行人KōjinThe Wayfarer こころKokoroKokoro One of the Masterpieces. (Q) WHY 私の個人主義Watakushi no Kojin ShugiMy Individualism A famous speech 道草Michi KusaGrass on the Wayside硝子戸の中Garasu Do no UchiInside My Glass Doors English translation, 2002 明暗Mei AnLight and Darkness, a novel Unfinished and died. 15 “Kokoro” represented in Movies. (Q)Why did he visit a grave of K, his best male friend every month? 16 “Kokoro” represented in Movies 17 “Kokoro” represented in Movies 18 “Kokoro” in Manga and Animation 19 The novel, “Kokoro” has always appeared in high school modern Japanese textbooks. “Kokoro” has been read and loved by almost all Japanese people for 98 years. (Q) Why? 20 (Q) What are the key words of this famous novel, “Kokoro”? • Kokoro, True way (精進), Spiritual Aspiration • Individualism and Confucianism • Freedom and independence in Modernization and Filial piety in Confucianism • Guilt (Egoism) and Self-punishment (Suicide) • Spiritual aspiration (True Way) and Reality • Friendship and misanthropy, Divine punishment • Fatal Romantic love triangle • The power of love and jealousy • Dramatic irony and self-analysis • Loneliness in the modern world • Aloofness, isolation from worldly society • Trust and distrust, despair and revenge • The heart of Meiji in Japan 21 • Money and its influence on human nature. 主題 What are the themes of “Kokoro”? ① What is human heart こころ? Human weakness and human destiny in which we cannot live without human relationships, including love and friendship. ②The Testament is not only for Watshi but also for all the people (readers) at that time as universal lesson in life and a warning for modernization. (Kokoro has gone beyond time and space since since 1914. ③ Friendship and a string of compassion between Watshi and Sensei based on trust and respect beyond age and value systems. Sensei is a man in Meiji. Watshi is a new generation living in Taisho era which has more freedom and independence influenced by modernization. ④ Watashi deserves Sensei’s Testament to get. Watshi got material life from his parents and got mental and spiritual life from Sensei. 22 主題 What are the themes of “Kokoro”? ① The psychological conflict between individualism and Confucianism. • (Sensei’s inner conflict between his Individualism and his collectivism influenced by Confucianism and traditional Japan in Meiji era) His individualism was influenced by his education at Tokyo Univ. Westernization and Modernization. • ② Guilt in Romantic Love Triangle and Self-punishment ③ The impossibility of romantic love and fragility of friendship involved in jealousy and egoism. • ④ Timeless psychological analysis of one man’s alienation from society in Meiji era influenced by Westernization and modernization. “Soseki’s intention” (Loneliness in modern world.) • ⑤ Soseki expresses 無常観 in human hearts through the changing attitudes of humans. • 無常観 (Nothing is immortal and perfect and everything is transit and changeable) 23 • Ex. The attitude of the uncle, K and Sensei himself. (Q) What is the charm 魅力of the novel “Kokoro” ? • What are the prerequisite of great fiction? 1 Novel= novelty 2, romance involved in Hero and heroin, 3, The power of confession. Ex. ?? The power of confession echoes from person to person throughout the story. K’s confession of agonized love for Ojosan. Sensei’s inner confession of his passionate love for Ojosan Sensei’s Confession as a Testament as a Monologue and the final dialogue with Watashi. 24 ① (Q) What is the charm 魅力of the novel “Kokoro” ? • (Q) How many characters and personal names are there in Kokoro? (Q) Why are there the first person and second person often in the story? • • • • • • • • ① The narrator = I (私 Watashi) Do (Watashi) I represent the readers in Chapter III? ② Sensei = the protagonist = Soseki himself ? ③ K= Sensei’s best friend with lofty mind: the dark shadow of Sensei’s life ④ Ojaosan(お嬢さん) honorable daughter (Q)Why was she named 静? Manifestation of traditional but modern woman in Meiji. “ What also impressed me was that fact that though her ways were not those of an old-fashioned Japanese woman, she had not succumbed (yield) to the then prevailing fashion of using “modern” words. (p.37) • ⑤ Okusan(奥さん)= traditional Japanese woman, 25 wife of Soldier (Samurai) ② (Q) What is the charm of the Organization in “Kokoro” ? 私 =private person, personal hidden secret against public 公 • ①The narrator = I (私 Watashi) = What Sensei used to be as an innocent young man with sincerity. 昔の無垢な先生 • ②Sensei (The protagonist) • ③ K who used to be an ideal of Sesei became his enemy. • The life story of three different men are interwoven in the narrative of “Kokoro” These three characters experienced their chosen individualism. Sensei said, “ My own past, which made me what I am, is a part of human experience. (p.247) • (Q) What are the individualism of Sensei, K and I? ORGANIZATION: Soseki’s inner dialog in terms of monolog (His testament). 小説の最初の1行目 “I always called him “sensei.” I shall therefore refer to him simply as “Sensei”, not by his real name. (p1) This story is a dialog between Watashi, ( I ) and Sensei from the very beginning to the end until Sensei left this world. これは私が先生に出逢って、先生が死ぬまで私と先生のダイアローグ。 26 ORGANIZATION 構成 Chapter 1 Sensei and I (p1-80) the encounter and friendship with Sensei Chapter 2 My parents and I (p.81-124) Family Chapter 3 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) As the book is narrated in the first person I, “Watashi” the reader feels immediately included in and participant of the story that unfold. The story engulfs human agony between friendship and romantic love. (these are human truth in life)27 The story shows moral guilt and divine punishment ③(Q) What is the charm of the “Kokoro” as a novel based on Soseki’s intention ? (作者の意図) ①Appellation:The effect of appellation in the main character Kokoro: there is no real name except “Shizu” 静 which came from 静子、the wife of General Nogi who followed his husband to the grave. K is the initial of Kokoro. ???? Sensei’s dark shadow Sensei used “私” when he told his past to young “私” Sensei told his inner and hidden world in his Testament as “私” . This is Kokoro itself and the theme and title of the story. This is the depth of this novel and the charm of the organization and 28 the flow of the story. (Q) What is the charm of the “Kokoro” as a novel based on Soseki’s intention ? (作者の意図) ② Soseki succeeded the best dialogue between Sensei and I by using Sensei’s monologue. (A profound monologue enlivens the dialogue.) ③ Soseki’s method of appellation came from Jorge Eliot. (ex. Mr. Fox ) Mr. Kaneda 金田 and his daughter Tomiko 富子 in “I am a Cat” Kiyo, 清 Bochan’s best nurse in “Bochan” ④ 先生は「私」になり、先生の純粋無垢な昔のような 大学 生の「私」に「あなた」と語りかける。一人称、二人称の自問 自答。これは漱石の禅宗の問答の影響。 The effect of the dialog between the first person and the second person based on Zen Buddhism which had an 29 influence on Soseki. (Q) What is the nature of Sensei? 先生の人格 A man capable of love, or I should say rather a man who was by nature incapable of not loving; but a man who could not (p.12) wholeheartedly accept the love of another –such a one was Sensei. • Aloofness, silence, Unapproachable person, misanthropy, • Not sociable but had a strong passion for love “Love affair is a kind of violent passion and later it will be a regret.” • Solitary way and alienation from society, pessimism • “It is not you in particular that I distrust, but the whole of humanity. I can hardly trust others. I do not even trust myself.” suspicious after his uncle’s deception (p.130) • “ This nature of mine led me not only to suspect the motives of individual persons but to doubt even the integrity of all mankind. • “You see, loneliness is the price we have to pay for being born in this modern age, so full of freedom, independence, and our own egotistical selves.” (P. 30) (Sensei is critical of modern age) • “Money. Give gentlemen money, and he will soon turn into a “rogue” 30 (Q) What does Sensei think about money? • When a man dies suddenly, his estate causes more trouble than anything else. • (P.60) • Under normal conditions, everybody is more or less good, or at least, ordinary. But tempt them, and they may suddenly change. That is what is so frightening about me. One must always be on one’s guard.” (p.61) • “Money, ofcourse. Give a gentleman money, and he will soon turn into a rogue.” (p.64)31 Sensei and His Testament ② 親友 K (p.125-248) (Q)What kind of person is K? How do you describe the personality of K? Okusan said htat K was an unapproachable sort of person. (p.178) Having grown up under the influence of Buddhist doctrines, he seemed to regard respect for material comfort as some kind of immorality.(p.176) Indeed, he seemed at times to think that mistreatment of the body was necessary for the glorification of the soul. (p.176) K used to say, “Anyone who has no spiritual aspirations is an idiot.” 精神的に向上心のない者は馬鹿だ。” This words has been echoed between K and Sensei. Consequently this word made K to decide his last action 32 as the final blow by Sensei. Sensei and His Testament ② K (p.125-248) • K and I were friends from the time we were children p.166 • K and I entered the same faculty of Tokyo Univ. • K decided to go against his foster father’s wishes (becoming a medical doctor) and to follow his own inclinations. (p.170) Circumstances had so far made me sympathize with K; but now I was determined to stand by K, whether he was right or wrong. (p.171) • I became a monster of jealousy and got sick and K became humanized after K moved into. • K was expelled from his biological father’s house 勘当 • K used to say,” What was important , he said , was that he should become a strong person through the exercise of will-power. (p.173) • Sensei persuaded him to live with him in the same house. • Okusan said that I would later regret having brought such a 33 person into the house. (P. 174) (Prediction of tragedy) Plots of disinheritance K • K was the second son of a Buddhist priest of Jodo Shinshu.(浄土真宗) • K was an adopted son to become a doctor in the doctor’s family. But he used his money sent by the adopted family in order to study religion and philosophy at Tokyo Univ. to pursue “True Way.” He believed in that “Anyone who has no spiritual aspiration is idiot.” • His biological father punished him by barring him. (expulsion) • This later expulsion by hi adoptive father and biological father intensified K’s distrust of , disillusionment with, and contempt for the world and all humanity. • K was expelled from the family and no financial security. • K was also shocked by the fact that even his biological father cut his relationships and Snesei felt K was more hurtful. Deceit and disinheritance breed both sympathy34and distrust. (Q) What are the views of Sensei’s romantic love? • In all the world I know only one woman. No woman but my wife move me as a woman. And my wife regards me as the only man for her. From this point of view, we should be the happiest of couples. (p.21) • Do you know that there is guilt also in loving? (p.26) • “The friendship that you sought in me is in reality a preparation for the love that you will seek in a woman.”(p.27) • “--that true love is not so far removed from religious faith. Whenever I saw Ojosan’s face, I felt that I had myself become beautiful. Whenever I thought of her, I felt a new sense of dignity welling up inside me. If this incomprehensible thing that we call love can either bring out the sacred in man or, in its lowest form, merely excite one’s bodily passions, then surely my love was of the highest kind. I am made of flesh too. But my eyes which gazed at her, and my mind which held thoughts of her, 35 were innocent of bodily desire. (p.154) 肉を越える神聖な恋 Gender Romantic love Triangles Sensei warmly welcomed K into his lodging house in order to humanize, socialize K and restore his human trust which both of them lost in their family drama. However, serious discord occurred when both Sensei and K fell in love with Ojosan. Imbroglio came about when the irrational jealousy haunted Sensei and he became a green monster like Othello. Sensei tried to destroy K’s hope and human restoration in order to win the love of Ojosan. 静 (Shizu=Ojosan) 先生 Sensei K 36 Gender Romantic love Triangles in the Novel of Natsume Soseki Sorekara (And Then, 1909) Michiyo Hiraoka Daisuke 37 Gender Romantic love Triangles in the Novel of Natsume Soseki Mon (Gate, 1910) Oyone Yasui Sosuke 38 Gender Romantic love Triangles in the Novel of Natsume Soseki Kojin ‘The Wayfarer, 1913 Nao Ichiro Jiro 39 (Q) What are similarities between Sensei and K? ① ② ③ • • • • Both are from the same country, Nigata Prefecture, Japan Sea area Both went to the same secondary school and University of Tokyo Sensei and K had Family Drama and traumatic disinheritance Sensei: Traumatic disinheritance which brought him distrust of men. Personal integrity and family pride were endangered and threatened Mistreatment by his uncles and relatives. K: K was totally expelled by his adoptive and biological fathers, financially, socially and institutionally . • Disillusioned by his own family, Sensei is drawn to and stands by his similarly disillusioned friend, K. ④ Both were brought up in ethical context, especially K was the second son of the 浄土真宗 priest family. “I was born an ethical creature and I was brought up to be an ethical man.” (p. 128) ⑤ Both fell in love with Ojosan ⑥ Both died on his own will. • The only difference was that Sensei was loved by his parents before they died of typhoid fever almost at the same time when Sensei was 18 years old before going to Tokyo. 40 Shizu (静), Ojosan’s entity and Verbal Power (Q) Is “Kokoro” a romantic love story as a pretext for male-male intimacy? (Q) Is this a story about men’s courtship of Ojosan and friendship with each other ended tragically narrated by a young man (Watakushi)? (Q) Was she just a Sensei’s beautiful but constantly infantilized wife? This characterization derives from the simple fact that there are two male narrators, Watakushi and Sensei, and no self-characterization by Shizu. Some literary critics said Shizu (静) is just quiet, peaceful and still just like her own name, which was named after by Soseki. Soseki was aware of the name of 静子, the wife of Genral Nogi who followed him after his death following Meiji Emperor. Koji’s veiw of Shizu: Shizu’s verbal implication proved that she seemed to know Sensei’s agony, his strong will to die and almost everything, except K’s confession of love for her to Sensei. When Sensei said that the spirit of the Meiji era ended with the Emperor’s death and Sensei and others were left behind to live as anachronisms, Shizu suggestged, “ Well then, junshi, is the solution to your problem.( p.245) (Junshi, 殉死 means41 following one’s lord to the grave) (Q)What is the spirit of Meiji? 明治の精神? Rectitude, honesty and loyalty, especially national , social and family loyalty. Bushido is based on the harmony between Zen Buddhism 禅仏教and Shintoism 神道(loyalty, respect for ancestors and filial piety) and Confucianism儒教 Rectitude 義 (ぎ) Respect 尊敬(そんけい) Courage勇 ゆう Benevolence 仁 (じん) Honor 名誉 (めいよ) Honesty 誠 (まこと) Loyalty 忠(ちゅう) Politeness 礼 (れい) Benevolence is man’s mind and Rectitude is his path. Indeed, neither Shakespeare nor the Old Testament itself contains an adequate rendering of Ko (孝), our conception of filial piety, and yet in such conflicts, Bushido never wavered in its choice of loyalty. (Nitobe, 1900) Loyalty includes the duty of loyalty to nation state as well as filial piety to each parents. The sprit of Meiji is national, social and family loyalty and filial piety based on Bushido and Confucianism. 42 (Q) What is “True Way”? (Spiritual Purification) Enlightenment and purification in Buddhism Nothingness is seen not as a state of non-existence as opposed to existence but as an absolute, transcending the opposition of existence and noneexistence, or as an ideal and absolute human state identical to religious enlightenment (Satori) 悟り To eliminate all human desire and reach the stage of enlightenment, it is necessary to realize that all is empty, transient and mutable. Worldly Passion and desires lead human beings into delusion, suffering and anger. The way to emancipate ourselves from the bond of worldly passion and desires. 1. We can feel peace of mind only if our mind can get rid of limitless worldly passion and desires. The causes of delusion and suffering are rooted in the mind’s desires for what we do not have and attachments to possessiveness and materialism. People should learn endurance: they should learn to endure the discomforts of heat and cold, hunger and thirst. They should learn to be patient when receiving abuse and scorn. People should learn to see and to avoid all danger. We should not make friends with evil men. (The teaching of Buddha 1996) You can thin k of “True way” in terms of K’s pet theory;” Anyone who has no spiritual 43 aspiration is an idiot.) The power of Confession ① • K confessed to Sensei his love for Ojosan at the cost of their friendship. 友情の危機を犠牲にしてまで、恋のために 告白。 • (Q) Why did K confess his love for Ojosan to Sensei? • 1. K’s honesty, loyalty and trust with Sensei. • 2 To prevent the loss of friendship • 3 examining their friendship • K might feel or assume Sensei’s display of jealousy is simply a response to K’s shift of affection from their male friendship to a romantic attachment. Kは先生に対 するKの友情が女性への愛でなくなることへの嫉妬と理解して いたかも知れない。Kは先生を信頼していた。 44 The power of Confession ② • (Q) Sensei did not confess his love for the same woman when K confessed his love. Why? • (Q) Why did Sensei hid his feeling and thereby betraying his friendship with K? • 1. Sensei’s inferiority to K • 2 Sensei’s fear that K might ridicule or despise him. • 3. Not to test K but actually to destroy his rival K. • (I confess to you that what I was trying to do was for more cruel than mere revenge. I wanted to destroy whatever hope there might have been in his love for Ojosan. (p.214) • 4. Sensei angered that K chose woman rather than friendship by confessing his love for Ojosan. This goest against K’s conviction that “ Anyone who has no spiritual aspiration is an idiot.” • And K seemed to abandon his claims to “The True Way” of spirituality and thus to betray his own moral self. 45 The Power of Confession without confession ③ (Q) Sensei did not tell K his love for Ojoansa. Why? I told myself that I should be honest with K, and tell him that I too had fallen in love with Ojosan. (p.205) I thought I could hear a voice whispering into my ear:” You ‘ll never get rid of him…”Perhaps I was beginning to think of him as a kind of devil. Once, I even had the feeling that he would haunt me for the rest of my life.” (p.207) 一生呪う He needs kind words, as dry land needs rain. I believe I was born with a compassionate heart. But I was not my usual self then. (p.213) 先生は嫉妬のためにいつもの先生でなかった。 Sensei could not open the sliding door which divided Sensei’s room and K’s room. The door represents the wall of human weakness, not only physically but also mentally. Soseki made most of the power of confession and confession 46 without confession throughout the story, Kokoro. 第一部 ① Sensei and I (p1-80) • (Q) Why did Sensei attract me more than professors at Tokyo Univ? My irresistible desire to become closer to Sensei comes from his loneliness and unapproachable quality. • I feel a certain pride and happiness in the fact that my intuitive fondness for Sensei was later shown to have not been in vain. A man capable of love, or I should say rather a man who was by nature incapable of not loving; but a man who could not wholeheartedly accept the love of another-such a one was Sensei. (p.12) • “I can live with my loneliness, quietly.” (p.15) • “Divine punishment.” Sensei answered, (p.17) 47 ② Sensei and I (p1-80) • I should never have noticed him (sensei) had he not been accompanied by a Westerner. (P.3) (The sign of Westernization) 西洋人と一緒 • His attitude seemed somewhat unsociable. He was always aloof, …he seemed totally indifferent to his surroundings. (P.5) 孤独で孤高な人 • The sea stretched, wide and blue, all around us, and there seemed to be no one near us. P6. ( I could enter Sensei’s world distant from the seashore) “That was the beginning of our friendship.” (p.6) 友情 • It was then that I began to call him “Sensei.” (p.6) 先生と呼ぶこと • I would perhaps find in him those things that I looked for. (P. 8) • 先生の孤独な人格の中に自分を引き付け、自分が求めていたものがある。 • I behaved quite so simply towards others. I did not understand then why it was that I should behave thus towards Sensei only. But now , when Sensei is dead, I am beginning to understand. It was not that Sense dislike me at first. His curt and cold ways were not designed to express his dislike to me, but they were meant rather as a warning to me that I would not want him as a friend. It was because he despise himself that he refused to accept openheartedly the intimacy of others. I feel great pity for him. (P.8) 48 • 先生が死んだ今、私は先生の人を避ける孤独が理解できる。 ③ Sensei and I (Friendship?) (p1-80) • It was Sensei’s custom to take flowers to a certain grave in the cemetery at Zoushigaya (p.9) (every month to K’s grave) • P. 68 is the concluding part of the first chapter which leads us to chapter 2 and especially the last chapter, “Sensei’s Testament.” • (Q) Why did Sensei reconfirm his friendship with me as follows? • Sensei’s face was pale. “ I wonder if you are being really sincere, “ he said, “Because of what happened to me, I have come to doubt everybody. In truth I should like to have one friend that I can truly trst. I wonder if you can be that friend. Are you really sincere? (p.63) • “I have been true to you, Sensei.” I said, “unless my whole life has been a lie.” (p.63) • This conversation was proved in the last chapter p. 128. • For Watashi I, his father is a biological father and Sensei 49 became his spiritual father in life. Sensei and I (Friendship?) (p 128) • In truth, if there had not been such a person as you, my past would never have become known, even indirectly , to anyone. To you alone, then, among the millions of Japanese, I wish to tell my past. For you are sincere; and because once you said in all sincerity that you wished to learn from life itself. (P. 128) • Now, I myself am about to cut open my own heart, and drench your face with my blood. And I shall be satisfied it, when my heart stops beating, a new life lodges itself in your breast. (p. 129) • (Q) What does this sentence reminds you of ? 50 第2部 My parents and I (p.81-124) • I (Watakushi) and my parents. • Watakushi’s father’s serious illness and the good relationships with his father. • Suddenly Watakushi got a very sick letters from Sensei, which shocked Watakushi. • “By the time this letter reaches you. I shall probably have left his world—I shall in all likelihood be dead.” (p.122) 51 第3部 Sensei and His Testament ① 初恋(p.125-248) • Sensei’s first love (p.148-149) 初恋 • I was filled with a new awareness, far greater than any that I had ever experienced before, of the power of the opposite sex. (p.148)初恋のときめき • I had come to distrust people in money matters, but I had not yet learned to doubt love. (p.150) 当 時人間のお金に対する執着に失望していたが、愛に対し て疑うことはまだなかった。 • Sensei felt love of religion towards Ojaosan. • 先生は性愛でなく、お嬢さんに対して、信仰のような愛を感じた。 • Koto = symbol of a young Japanese lady • Flower arrangement = gentleness of women 52 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) • K’s confession of love Kの愛の告白 • And so I was shocked. Imagine my reaction when K, ih his heavy way, confessed to me his agonized love for Ojoasan. I felt as if I had been turned into stone by a gagician7s wand. I could not even move my lips as K had done. • Exactly what the emotion was that I felt then, I am not sure. Perhaps it was fear; or perhaps it was terrible pain. Whatever it was, its physical effect was to make me feel rigid from head to toe, as though I were a pieece of stone or iron. (P. 204) • When finally K stopped talking, I found myself unable to say anything. I want you to understand that I was not silent because I was debating with myself whether I should make a similar confession to K or whether it would be wiser policy to say nothing about my love for Ojosan. (p.204)53 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) (Q) What was the contradiction within Sensei’s mind? Friendship changed into antipathy and hatered Kindness changed into jealousy and stress. Supporting K changed into destroying him. Humanizing K changed into agonizing him. “If his new serenity had come as a result of his contact with Ojosan, then I would find it impossible to forgive him.” (p. 187) Sesnsei gradually hated him because of his self-confidence and lofty mind. Once, I grabbed K’s neck from behind, “What would you do,” I said, “if I pushed you into the sea?” Without looking back, he said:“That would be pleasant, Please do.” (p.186) (Prediction and analogy of this tragedy) 54 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) • The power of jealousy within Sensei • I had scored a victory over K, and my heart was filled with a sense of triumph. (p.194) • I have no intension of denying that I was jealous. (p.199) • After K’s entrance on the scene, however, it was the suspicion that Ojaosan might prefer him to me that was responsible for my inaction. (p.200) • Now is the time, I thought , to destroy my opponent. • I confess to you that what I was trying to do was far more cruel than mere revenge. I wanted to destroy whatever hope there might have been in his love for Ojosan. (p. 214) • I said again :”Anyone who has no spiritual aspiration is an idiot.” I watched K closely, I wanted to see how my words were affecting him. “An idiot…?” he said at last. “ Yes, I’m 55 an idiot.” (p.215) 先生はKに恋などしないで、崇高であってほしかった。恋 をする愚か者になっておしくなかった。 Love and Jealousy in Sensei ’s Kokoro Distrust Suspicion Regret Jealousy Jealousy Love Despair Anxiety Anger Agony 56 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) • (Q) What was the strategy of Sensei to win Ojaosan’s love? • (先生のお嬢さんの愛を得るための戦略) • Sensei secretly tried to get a permission to get marred with Ojaosan from her mother without saying anything about his love for Ojosan to K. • “Okusan,” I blurted out, “ I want to marry Ojosan.” • “All right, “ she said finally, “You may have her”(p.222) 57 Sensei’s agony ① (p.125-248) • Sensei’s inner agony and pain as a betrayer. • I felt very tense that afternoon, it is true; but where was my conscience? I returned to the house. • As usual, I went into K’s room in order to get to mine. It was then that I felt guilty for the first time. (p.224) • “ Are you feeling better now? Have you seen the doctor?” Suddenly, I wanted to kneel before him and beg his forgiveness. It was a violent emotion that I felt then. I think that had K and I been alone in some wilderness, I would have listened to the cry of my conscience. But there were others in the house. I soon overcame the impulse of my natural self to be true to K. I only wish I had been given another such opportunity to ask K’s forgiveness. 58 (p.225) Sensei ‘s Agony ② (p.125-248) • Sensei’s inner agony and pain as a betrayer. • K, then had known about it for over two days, though one would never have guessed this form his manner. I could not but admire his calm, however superficial it may have been. It seemed to me that he was much the worthier of the two of us. I said to myself: “Through cunning, I have won. But as a man, I have lost.” • My sense of defeat then became so violent that it seemed to spin around in my head like a whirlpool. And when I imagined how contemptuous K must be of me, I blushed with shame. I wanted to go to K and apologized for what I had done, but my pride-my fear of humiliation – restrained me. (p.228) 59 • But that night K killed himself. (p.228) Sensei’s Agony ③ (p.125-248) • Sensei’s Agony • Sensei’s agony like Hamlet, “To be or not to be, that is the question” “Should I go on living as I do now, like a mummy left in the midst of living beings, or should I …?” • “I was a coward. And like most cowards I suffered because I could not decide.” (p.125) • “I am an inconsistent person.” (p.126) • When I speak of darkness, I mean moral darkness. For I was born an ethical creature, and I was brought up to be an ethical man.” (p.128) • 倫理的な人間として育ち、倫理的人間だったのに、 • 友を裏切り、罪を犯して、非倫理的な人間になったことへの苦しみー moral darkness • How could I continue to have hope, no matter how forlorn, when the sight of her face seemed always to bring back haunting memories of K? Some times, the idea occurred to me that she was like a chain that linked me to K for the rest of my life. (p.237) 60 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) • Sensei’s shock when K killed himself. • My first thought was, “it’s too late” It was then that the great shadow that would forever darken the course of my life spread before my mind’s eye. And from somewhere in the shadow a voice seemed to be whispering: “It’s too late… It’s too late… My whole body began to tremble.” (p.229) • But even at such a moment I could not forget my own welfare. When I had quickly read it (K’s note for Snesei: will) through, my first thought was: “ I’m safe. “ (I was thinking only of my reputation: at the time when others thought of me seemed of great importance. (p.230) 61 Sensei and His Testament (p.125-248) • Sensei’s shock when K killed himself. • The letter was simply written. K explained his suicide only in a very general way. He had decided to die, he said, because there seemed no hope of his ever becoming the firm, resolute person that he had always wanted to be. • He thanked me for my many kindness in the past: and as a last favor to him, would I, he asked, take care of everything after his behalf for causing her so much trouble. And he wanted me to notify his relatives of his death. In this brief businesslike letter, there was no mention of Ojosan. I soon realized that K had purposely avoided any reference to her. But what affected me most was his last sentence, which had perhaps been written as an afterthought: “Why did I wait so long to die?” (p. 230) 62 Kの自殺の原因 (Q) Why did K killed himself? • 1. His falling in love woman goes against his religious “True Way” and he was ashamed of himself, although he was humanized. • 2 Sensei’s criticism on K by giving back K’s pet theory; “Anyone who has no spiritual aspirations is an idiot” which became the final blow to K’s dicision to kill himself. He found himself idiot within the framework of his conviction, “ Anyone without spiritual aspiration is an idiot.” • 3. His shock when he heard the engagement of Sensei with Ojosan from her mother not from Sensei. (His innocence) • 4.He felt he hurt Sensei by confessing his love for Ojosan in the face of Sensei’s silence. • 5. He has already prepared to die after he could not trust anything except Sensei’s friendship and human warmth. • 6 Then he said suddenly: “Am I prepared…?” Before I could say anything, he added: “Why not? I can will myself…” He seemed to 63 be talking to himself . (p.217) 先生の自殺の原因 Sensei’s suicide • Why did Sensei leave this world? • I felt very strongly the sinfulness of man. It was his feeling that sent me to K’s grave every month, that made me take care of my mother-in-law in her illness and behave gently towards my wife. It was this sense of sin that led me to feel sometimes that I would welcome a flogging even at the hands of strangers. • When this desire for punishment became particularly strong, I would begin to feel that it should come from myself, and not others. Then I would think of death. Killing myself seemed a just punishment for my sins, Finally, I decided to go64on living as if I were dead. (p.243) (Q) Why did sensei want to keep the truth secret from his wife? • I want both the good and bad things in my past to serve as an example to others. But my wife is the one exception- I do not want her to know about any of this. My first wish is that her memory of me should be kept as unsullied as possible. So long as my wife is alive, I want you to keep everything I have told you a secret-even after I myself am dead. (p. 248) The End. • (Q)Why????? • (Q)What did happen to Watashi and Shizu after Sensei’s65 death? Can you continue the story> (Q) 先生の死:What are causes of Sensei’s Suicide? 1. 2. Very complicated as we see in our daily lives and human relationships. However, the indirect trigger was the General Nogi’s self-immolation death on the death Emperor Meji as Sensei was well aware of General Nogi’s agony like his own after the death of K. Eto Jun pointed out a “dual motivation” a personal desire to end his years of egoistic suffering, and a public desire to demonstrate his loyalty to the emperor. (through loyalty to the spirit of the Meiji era.) Direct trigger must be Sensei’s sense of guilt and the death of K, which resulted from his betrayal and his skillful engagement despite the fact that K confessed his love for Ojosan to Sensei. (Escape from his guilt) K restored his integrity by writing nothing about his relationships with Ojosdan in his last note for Sensei when he died. Sensei became a loser and K became a winner in terms of “True Way” based on spirituality and 66 ethical code in Meiji. (Q) 先生の死:What are causes of Sensei’s Suicide? 3 Sensei’s wrong doing by deceiving K and approached Okusan to win the love of Ojosan. 4. Sensei made use of the K’s conviction of ““Anyone who has no spiritual aspiration is idiot.” and put it back to K when he confessed. But actually Sensei suffered from this words for many years after K’s death. (“ Anyone without spiritual aspiration is an idiot.” (精神的に向上心のない者は馬鹿だ。) 5. Sensei repeated again and again deep in his mind,” Where was my conscience?” (良心の呵責) (Self-blame) 6. Whatever the reason, Sensei’s failure to be honest (誠実)with K has brought about the most disastrous consequence as well as Sensei’s 67 unhappy marriage haunted by K’s dark shadow.. (Q) What is the difference between K’s death and that of Sensei? ① K left this world as he could not accept his natural desire of romantic love which goes against his “spiritual aspiration and true way”. ②Snesei left this world by giving love for his mother-in-law as a human as he tried to humanized K’s heart by welcoming him into his lodging house and introducing lovely Ojosan and Okusan under the same roof. ③ Sensei met Watshi ( I ) as the most trustful person who respected him, and, he had a young man whom he can finally confessed everything as a testament. ③ A man capable of love, or I should say rather a man who was by nature incapable of not loving; but a man who could not wholeheartedly accept the love of another –such a one was Sensei. (p.12) 68 The role of Watashi in “Kokoro” both in retrospect and prospect • Sensei & K= (Past), Shizu (Present) , Watashi= (Future) • Anachronism で大人になれなかった先生に対峙して私は成熟し た大人として、静に対して責任を持って接する。 • One speculation and possible prediction is that Watashi will live with Shizu as a mature man, confirming the fact and truth of Sensei’s drama, accepting Shizu as what she was and what she is, and starting family with responsibility to make Shizu happy. • Put yourself in the place of Watashi who got modern education at University of Tokyo in this dramatic tragedy, and you will see the next action that Watashi will take after the death of Sensei for the sake of a beautiful, innocent and emotionally wounded young wife who was left alone in this world as a victim of the man of loneliness in 69 anachronism in Meiji era. What is Soseki’s warning for the problem of modernization 近代化の問題 • You see, loneliness is the price we have to pay for being born in this modern age, so full of freedom, independence, and our own egotistical selves.” (p.30) • In those days, such phrases as “the age of awakening” and “the new life” has not yet come into fashion. But you must not think that K’s inability to discard his old ways and begin his life anew was due to his lack of modern concepts. (p.218) 70 Historical and Cultural background for Kokoro • Japanese society European society Confucianism The collective harmony based on Confucianism and agriculture Individualism The individual values based on Christianity and democratic capitalism In Kokoro, published in 1914, he Soseki expresses deep sorrow about the inevitable growth of individualism at the expense of Confucianism, leading ultimately to irreversible personal social isolation and despair. Like William Faulkner he is a modernist in theme and tone of writing. And like Faulker he is reacting to the rapid changes of his time. In a book on Natusme Soseki, Beongcheon Yu, expresses as follows; “Meiji Japan, in its radical departure from feudal tradition, was as profoundly romantic as Renaissance England, a comparison which has often been suggested by historians. Few artists could escape its pervading romantic spirit in their zealous pursuit of art and life.” 71 (Yu 22.). Sensei’s inner Conflicts between Filial Piety of Confucianism and Individualism • Individualism and freedom influenced by Western modernization • • • • and capitalism Symbolic representation: 1) Sensei’s uncle: a modern entrepreneur as well as an unfaithful husband and selfish guardian of Sensei 2) Sensei: Sensei repeatedly violated the Confucian moral of “Filial Piety” by refusing uncle’s offer of arranged marriage with his daughter. 3) Sensei’s offense against his best friend K, by violating true friendship for the sake of his romantic love for Ojosan. • Collectivism based on Confucian moral ( Sensei’s selfpunishment) • 1) Sensei’s ultimate suicide can finally be explained by his selfpunishment (traditional moral ) which won over Individualism in modernism. • 2) While still alive, Sensei had come to the conclusion that his only choice at that time was to go on living as if he were dead. 72 Collectivism and Individualism Soseki’s Intention in Kokoro • The book “Kokoro” stands as a reminder of destructiveness of individualism. • Soseki described the loneliness of the outcasts as the direct price paid for the pursuit of individualistic tendencies at the expense of the collective. • Soseki concludes that hopelessness, pessimism, and despair seem to be the only certain outcome of the breakdown. • Soseki reveals the didactic purpose of his book to us with Sensei’s comments in his testament. • “To you alone, then, among the millions of Japanese, I wish to tell my past. For you are sincere and because once you said in all sincerity that you wished to learn from life itself. (p.128) 先生は 誠実な「私」=日本人全体に語りかけている 73 (Q) What is the today’s significance of Soseki ?.漱石の今日的意義 We could compare Soseki with Shakespeare in terms of his excellence in dramatic irony and human analysis. I found some similarity between Othelo and Kokoro. We can learn timeless and priceless values and significance through the eyes and the heart of Soseki in Meiji era influenced by the powerful Westernization and Modernization. Soseki already predicted and warned the problems of 2011 in his works in Meiji Era. We can see human loneliness, aloofness, alienation from society, guilt in loving and human agony. Only the works of great writer like Soseki survive through the judge of time. Popular writer will be forgotten when their readers die. However great writer can give some answers to the questions of human loneliness and suffering beyond time and culture. (Nakamura, 2011) 74 江藤 淳の評論 Comments on “Kokoro” by Jun Eto, famous critic of Soseki • Soseki tried to prove the impossibility of love between man and woman rather than exploring the possibility of love. • The significance of “Kokoro” is that Soseki consistently tried to describe the impossibility of love between man and woman with all his intelligence and power, albeit he felt in his bone the absolute necessity of love. • No other novel has ever described so objectively and calmly the hopeless shadow of love between man and woman than the work 75 “Kokoro” Jun Eto (1979) 漱石の理想:「即天去私」と「我執」 • Soseki’s ideal is “Leaving everything to the heaven (The hand of God) and forgetting self ” • However, Soseki has been suffering from his individualism, ego, and personal desire. 76 Collectivism in Confucianism and Individualism in Westernization • Soseki specialized English and English Literature at Tokyo University and graduated with honored bachelor’s degree. However, deep in his mind he said he could not but have a feeling of emptiness. “My only regret was that though I had studied, I had never mastered the heart of things.” (qtd. In Yu 25) This desire to master the heart of things motivates him later to write one of his master works, Kokoro. • He was sent to England as one of the promising young scholars. Overseas to absorb Western way and help Japanese culture expand to new horizons. His experiences in England changes Soseki into a modern Japanese writer and not into an English classicist as he had hoped. • In England he was homesick and longed for the safety and security of the past while understanding all along that life can only move forward, never backwards. The discovery of the self and his individuality was a lonely and painful process. He describes this journey and its consequences in Kokoro. The lonely journey will be part of his entire life. (p.76) • 77 Contrast and Comparison Shakespeare and Soseki Shakespeare (1564-1616) age 52 • Elizabethan Age in England • Colonial rule of the British in Dublin • Religious and political reformation • Outward-going dramatist Soaseki (1867-1916) age 50 Meiji era in Japan Industrial imperialism by USA Modernization of Japan Introvert novelists • similarity • ①The contrast and the conflict between the old and the new • ② Dealing with human truth, such as love, trust, jealousy, guilt, deceit, • sinfulness, punishment in their works of Tragedy. ③ Dealing with what is real in human nature and what is common to all humanity both in their works of Comedy and Tragedy. • ④ Sharp observation of human psychology and human analysis • ⑤ The quality of satire and criticism in Comedies • ⑥ Human weakness such as changes and contradiction caused by • ambition and jealousy in their works of Tragedy 78 The power of jealousy: Kokoro (K and Sensei’s suicides) Othello (Othello Killed his wife and his suicide) Othello Sensei Green Eyes • Othello’s best Soldier Cassio Jealousy and Inferior complex to K made him Irrational Jealousy for Cassio made him Irrational and cruel The most The Faithful designer Beautiful of jealousy Wife Iago Desdimona and selfish Student Trustful I Watashi Honorable Daughter Wife Shizu Sensei’s shadow Sensei’s best friend who became his shadow K 79 Dramatic Irony in Shakespeare and Soseki • In Shakespearian drama, there are many scenes that presents us the dramatic irony in relation to the development of the stream of the drama. Dramatic irony has a dramatic effectiveness on the tragedy or comedy as long as the truth is alive. One of the approaches to the appreciation of Shakespearean drama is to understand the dramatic irony involved in the hero or heroine’s innocence. (Nakamura, 1972) • Dramatic irony can be defined as a dramatic context in which the author, readers and audience know very well but the hero or heroine does not know a fact (human truth), and consequently they are actually suffering from this. (Nakamura, 1972) 80 The parallel between Shakespeare’s play and Soseki’s novels by Peter Milward • In the case of Elizabethan England, it was the religious and political reformation inaugurated by Henry VIII and completed under his daughter Elizabeth I that cut off Englishmen in the present from their mediaeval past and thus exposed them to the sway of European fashions. • In the case of Meiji Japan, it was the restoration of imperial rule and the opening of he country to Western trade and influence that similarly cut off Japanese in the present from their feudal past and thus exposed them to the sway of Western fashions. (Peter Milward) 81 The parallel between Shakespeare’s play and Soseki’s novels by Peter Milward And to these change the attitude of Soseki was much the same as that of Shakespeare in Elizabethan England. When we find in almost all Soseki’s novels from “Wagahai wa neko de aru” onwards is an outspoken satire on the aping of Western manners that came in with Japan’s opening to the West. Not that he himself hated or despised the West. His own novels are sufficient evidence of his willingness to avail himself of Western ideas and influence—but not a the expense of his Japanese identity. . (Peter Milward) 82 The parallel between Shakespeare’s play and Soseki’s novels by Peter Milward • He wanted by all means to remain distinctively Japanese. He prized the traditions of old Japan. Yet at the same time he saw the need of accommodating himself and his writings to the new order, so long as he did not have to sacrifice what was dearest to himself as a Japanese. It was, in fact, in his honest confrontation of his serious problem—that of the relative claims of new and old—that we may say his genius as a novelist, like the genius of Shakespeare as a dramatist, consists. If it led him at times dangerously close to a neurotic condition, the same may be said--and has been said by eminent scholars---of Shakespeare both at the beginning and at the end of his tragic period. (Peter Milward, p.312) 83 Senpai=Kohai in academia • Many students today reading Kokoro for the first time frequently assume a gay relationship between Sensei and Watakushi and, while not ruling out such a possibility, I would point out that the senpai-kohai relationship is a common one in Japan (probably evident in all Asian countries with a Confucian heritage and the bunjin, literatus, or gentleman scholar, tradition). One doesn’t study alone as in the American myth of the lucubrating Abe Lincoln, ubt rather one sees a sensei. The sensei traditionally will require an apprentice who serves variously as errand boy, assistant, ink grinder, and companion. • (p.102) 84 (Q) What is the today’s significance of Soseki ?. 漱石の今日的意義 • Soseki consistently explored the difficulty and impossibility of human love, albeit he also needed the absolute necessity of human love. In こころ、それから、門、the main theme is human agony through the bliss and pain of love in triangle human relations and it ends up with 明暗 when Soseki died. • Soseki could not finalized the story and he left the rest to the reader’s imagination as he passed away while he was writing. 85 Hidden Secret ① The Sliding Door separates Sensei and K • (Q) What does the sliding door which separates Sensei’s room and K’s room symbolize? 先生とKの部屋の仕切りの襖=先生の心の襖 • Sensei’s room= Self 先生の部屋(自己), K’s room= Others (他者) • K is a reflecting mirror of Sensei’s mind (Kは先生の心を写す合わせ鏡 ) • ① At about ten o’clock, the door between our rooms was suddenly opened, and I saw K looking at me from the doorway. “What are you thinking about ?” he said. (p. 202) • ② “Were you asleep?”……. K stepped back into his room and closed the door. (p. 219). • ③ “As I opened my eyes, I saw that the door between K’s room and mine was ajar.” (p. 229) • K left the door open a little for the last communication with Sensei for two nights. Sensei was not aware of that or ignored it. • If Sensei had opened the sliding door of his mind and confessed his passionate love for Ojosan to K like K did, K and Sensei ‘s life would have been different. • Sensei deceived K and himself for the sake of love by ignoring the door of Kokoro. • K=こころ Kの自殺で先生はこころを失う。 86 Hidden Secret ② sin and crucifixion Sensei and I = Jesus Christ and St. John • You wished to cut open my heart and see the blood flow. I was then still alive. I did not want to die. That is why I refused you and postponed the granting of your wish to another day. • Now, I myself am about to cut open my own heart, and drench your face with my blood. And I shall be satisfied it, when my heart stops beating, a new life lodges itself in your breast. (p. 129) • Original Sin= Sensei’s sin ( winning Eve=Shizu by deceiving K) • • • • • • Jesus’ s (compensation)=crucified =Sensei’s suicide As the disciple, St. John drank Jesus’s wine, I (Watashi) drank Sensei’s blood and lodged new life. Jesus said, “I am with you for only a short time, and then I go to the one who sent me. You will look for me, but you will not find me; and where I am, you cannot come.” (JOHN: 7-33, The New Testament) “If I testify about myself, my testimony is not valid. There is another who testifies in my favor, and I know that his testimony about me is valid.” (JOHN 5:31, The New Testament) “ You have sent to John and he has testified to the truth. Not that I accept human testimony; but I mention it that you may be saved.” 87 (JOHN 5:33-34, The New Testament) ③The hidden truth of love in “Kokoro” (in retrospect & prospect) • Evidence ① The first encounter of Watashi with Shizu. (p.16) • “The first time I met Sensei’s wife in the front hall, I thought her beautiful. And each time I saw her after that I was similarly impressed by her beauty.” (p.16) • “My memory of the early part of our acquaintance, then, consists of nothing more than the impression of her beauty. (p.16 ) • Evidence ② • • • • The number of letters. Sensei wrote two letters. “I received from him only two pieces of correspondence that might strictly be called “letters.” One of them was the simple letter that I have just mentioned, and the other was a very long letter which he wrote me shortly before his death.”(p. 48) But Watashi received another letter. Who wrote? I received from them a letter with a maple leaf enclosed. (p.18 ) A letter with a maple leaf enclosed at that time means close friendship, intimacy, warm closeness and affection 88 ③The hidden truth of love in “Kokoro” (in retrospect & prospect) • Evidence③ p.33-p.43 The private and serious conversation • • • • • • • between Watashi and Shizu when Sensei was out. (10 pages) “I was deeply impressed by her capacity for sympathy and understanding.” (p.37) “True, being a man, I felt an instinctive yarning for women. “(P. 38) “I did not even feel, when I was with her, that intellectual gulf which so often separates men from women.” (p. 38) (Respect for Shizu) “As Sensei’s wife said this, I noticed that there were tears in her eyes.” (p.39) I tried, as far as I was able, to comfort Sensei’s wife. And it seemed that she was trying to find some comfort in my company. (p.42) Soseki’s belief that “Pity’s akin to love,” reflects throughout his works and Watashi’s compassion for Shizu in “Kokoro” is one of them. Soseki wrote “Pity’s akin to love” in the works of “Sanshiro” and we found many love stories in which compassion can transform into love 89 in his works. (And Then, Gate, The Wayfarer, Lights and Darkness) ③The hidden truth of love in “Kokoro” (in retrospect & prospect) • Evidence ④ Shizu’s unhappy marriage life • Sensei wrote “It was my wife who unwittingly reminded me of harsh reality every time we were together. How could I continue to have hope, no matter how forlorn, when the sight of her face seemed always to bring back haunting memories of K? (p.237) • * Shizu’s doublt about man. • My wife once asked me: “ Can’t a man’s heart and a woman’s heart ever become a part of each other, so that they are one?” (p.242) • Evidence ⑤ Sensei knew Shize would be left alone when he died. • My mother- in-law did. There remained only my wife and myself. My wife said to me:” In all the world, I now have only you to turn to.” • I looked at her, and my eyes suddenly filled with tears. How could I, who had no trust in myself, give her the comfort she needed? I thought her a very unfortunate woman. (p. 241) • Evidence ⑥ Sensei’s last words are very selfish as a man who passionately proposed a woman. 90 • “So long as my wife is alive, I want you to keep everything I have told you a secret—even after I myself am dead. (p.248) The hidden truth of love in “Kokoro” • Evidence ⑦ • “It would be so nice if we had children.” Sensei’s wife said to me.” “Yes, wouldn’t it ?” I answered. But I could feel no real sympathy for her. At my age, children seemed an unnecessary nuisance. (p. 17) • (translated by Ewin McClellan in 1957) • “子供を持った事のないその時の私は、子供をた だうるさいもののように 考えていた。(原文) • 91 The hidden truth of love in “Kokoro” both in retrospect and prospect • Evidence ⑦ • “It would be nice if we had children, you know,” she said, turning to me. • “Yes, I’m sure.” I replied. But I felt no stir of sympathy at her words. I was too young to have children of my own and regarded them as no more than noisy pets. (P. 18. Translation by Meredith Mckinney in 2010) • “子供を持った事のないその時の私は、子供をた 92 だうるさいもののように 考えていた。(原文) Translation problem. • I, who did not have any children at that time, thought they are an unnecessary nuisance. • (Koji’s translation) • We can imagine from Japanese original sentence, (not English translation by McClellan) that Watashi who is writing this today seems to have children. Whose children? • “We’ll never have one of our own, you know,” said Sensei. “Divine punishment,” Sensei answered, and laughed rather loudly (p.17) • (Can Watashi accept Sensei’s justification?) 93 Gender Romantic love Triangles caused by jealousy in the Novel of Natsume Soseki Kokoro (The heart, 1914) 静 (Shizu=Ojosan) 先生 Sensei K 94 Gender Romantic love Triangles caused by compsssion in the Novel of Natsume Soseki Kokoro 95 漱石の今日的意義 • 最近、青春時代に読んだ漱石の「三四郎」「こころ」「それから」、 「門」を読み返し、漱石の人間分析の鋭さと人生の明暗をしみじみ 感じました。これらの作品において、主人公こそ異なりますが、漱石 は一貫して愛の不可能性と絶望的陰影を描いているように思えまし た。人と「心」との出遭いは人生を豊かにし、人の「心」との別れは人 生をより深くします。 • 江藤淳は「こころ」を中心として、漱石のことを「人間的愛の絶対的 必要性を痛切に感じながら、それが同時に絶対的に不可能である ことを、全ての智力を傾けて描いていた奇妙な男の姿が、これらの 作品の行間から浮かび上がってくる。」(1974年. p.153)と評す。 • 漱石は明治維新の前の年1867年に生まれ、1900年からロンドン大 学へ留学し、異文化不適用で心の病に苦しみました。それは彼が 西洋かぶれでなく、真の日本人だったからかもしれません。漱石は 帰国後、近代化と西洋文明のもたらす心の問題を作品を通して警 鐘しています。「我輩は猫である」や「坊ちゃん」に見られる風刺的喜 劇から「こころ」にみられる悲劇を描き、国際的な漱石に関する英語 の論文では、人間分析と観察力の観点から高く評価され、英国のシ エイクスピアと比較されて論じられております。特に1916年に最後 の長編作品「明暗」を書きながら途中でペンを折り、50歳で死んで 行った漱石が、死ぬ2年前に書いた作品「こころ」の構成力と、第3 96 章の「先生の遺言」はすさまじいパワーを感じます。 漱石の今日的意義 • 還暦を過ぎて、漱石に再び向き合い、読書を通して故人と親しくさせ ていただけることを感謝しています。最近一つ理解できた漱石の価 値は、近代化の波に日本社会と日本人の多くが翻弄されたあの明 治の時代にあって、一見時流に超然としていたかに見える漱石が、 実は最も鋭く日本人の心の危機感を察知し、作品を通して、我々に 「我執」の問題点を警鐘していることです。漱石は時空を超えて、百 年後の日本人にも「日本人のアイデンティティ」や「日本人の心」の 本質を失わないように警告しているように思われます。 • 孤高に生き、「即天去私」を理想とする漱石が、その理想と自分自身 の「我執」との葛藤に苦しんだことは、きわめて人間的であり、「即天 去私」の悟達を超える価値があると思います。漱石の価値は己の 「我執」から生まれる苦しみを作品の中の主人公を通して、誠実に 表象したことであり、まさに「実存」そのものであります。さらに、漱石 の偉大さは、時代を超えて、その作品の多くが個人主義を標榜して きた西洋人に愛され、欧米の大学の博士論文になり、さらに、グ ローバル化に翻弄される今のアジアの多くの学徒達にも広く読まれ ていることだと思います。 97
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