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the kojiki
Part 4 - The Beast-Legends
THE WHITE HARE OF INABA
From His Swift-Impetuous-Male-Augustness was descended the
deity Master-of-the-Great-Land. He had eighty deities his brethren; but they all
left the land to the deity Master-of-the-Great-Land. The reason for their
leaving it was this: Each of these eighty deities had in his heart the wish to
marry the Princess of Yakami in Inaba, and they went together to Inaba, putting
their bag on the back of the deity Great-Name-Possessor, whom they took with
them as an attendant. Hereupon, when they arrived at Cape Keta, thev found a
naked hare lying down. Then the eighty deities spoke to the hare, saying: "What
thou shouldest do is to bathe in the sea-water here, and lie on the slope of a
high mountain exposed to the blowing of the wind." So the hare followed the
instructions of the eighty deities, and lay down. Then, as the sea-water dried,
the skin of its body all split with the blowing of the wind, so that it lay
weeping with pain. But the deity Great-Name-Possessor, who came last of all, saw
the hare, and said: "Why liest thou weeping? " The hare replied, saving: "I was
in the Island of Oki, and wished to cross over to this land, but had no means of
crossing over. For this reason I deceived the crocodiles of the sea, saying: '
Let you and me compete, and compute the numbers of our respective tribes. So do
you go and fetch every member of your tribe, and make them all lie in a row
across from this island to Cape Keta. Then I will tread on them, and count them
as I run across. Hereby shall we know whether it or my tribe is the larger.'
Upon my speaking thus, they were deceived and lay down in a row, and I trod on
them and counted them as I came across, and was just about to get on land, when
I said: 'You have been deceived by me.' As soon as I had finished speaking, the
crocodile who lay the last of all seized me and stripped off all my clothing. As
1 was weeping and lamenting for this reason, the eighty deities who went by
before thee commanded and exhorted me, saying: 'Bathe in the salt water, and lie
down exposed to the wind.' So, on my doing as they had instructed me, my whole
body was hurt." Thereupon the deity Great-Name-Possessor instructed the hare,
saying: " Go quickly now to the river-mouth, wash thy body with the fresh water,
then take the pollen of the sedges growing at the river-mouth, spread it about,
and roll about upon it, whereupon thy body will certainly be restored to its
original state." So the bare did as it was instructed, and its body became as it
bad been originally. This was the White Hare of Inaba. It is now called the Hare
deity. So the hare said to the deity Great-Name-Possessor: "These eighty deities
shall certainly not get the Princess of Yakami. Though thou bearest the bag,
Thine Augustness shall obtain her."
MOUNT TEMA
Thereupon the Princess of Yakami answered the eighty deities,
saving: "I will not listen to your words. I mean to marry the deity Great-Name-
Possessor." So the eighty deities, being enraged, and wishing to slay the deity
Great-Name-Possessor, took counsel together, on arriving at the foot of Tema in
the land of Hahaki, and said to him: "On this mountain there is a red boar. So
when we drive it down, do thou wait and catch it. If thou do not wait and catch
it, we will certainly slay thee." Having thus spoken, they took fire, and burned
a large stone like unto a boar, and rolled it down. Then, as they drove it down
and he caught it, be got stuck to and burned by the stone, and died. Thereupon
Her Augustness his august parent cried and lamented, and went up to Heaven, and
entreated His Divine-Producing-Wondrous-Augustness, who at once sent Princess
Cockle-Shell and Princess Clam to bring him to life. Then Princess Cockle-Shell
triturated and scorched her shell, and Princess Clam carried water and smeared
him as with mother's milk, whereupon he became a beautiful young man, and
wandered off. Hereupon the eighty deities, seeing this, again deceived him,
taking him with them into the mountains, where they cut down a large tree,
inserted a wedge in the tree and made him stand in the middle, whereupon they
took away the wedge and tortured him to death. Then on Her Augustness his august
parent again seeking him with cries, she perceived him, and at once cleaving the
tree, took him out and brought him to life, and said to him: "If thou remain
here, thou wilt at last be destroyed by the eighty deities." Then she sent him
swiftly off to the august place of the deity Great-House-Prince in the land of
Ki. Then when the eighty deities searched and pursued till they came up to him,
and fixed their arrows in their bows, he escaped by dipping under the fork of a
tree, and disappeared.
THE NETHER-DISTANT-LAND
The deity Great-House-Prince spoke to him, saying: Thou must
set off to the Nether-Distant-Land where dwells His Impetuous-Male-Augustness.
That great deity will certainly counsel thee." So on his obeying her commands
and arriving at the august place of His Impetuous-Male-Augustness, the latter's
daughter the Forward-Princess came out, and saw him, and they exchanged glances
and were married, and she went in again, and told her father, saying: " A very
beautiful deity has come." Then the great deity went out and looked, and said: "
This is the Ugly-Male-Deity-of-the-Reed-Plains," and at once calling him in,
made him sleep in the snake-house. Hereupon his wife, Her Augustness the
Forward-Princess, gave her husband a snake-scarf, saying: " When the snakes are
about to bite thee, drive them away by waving this scarf thrice." So, on his
doing as she bad instructed, the snakes became quiet, so that he came forth
after calm slumbers. Again on the night of the next day the Impetuous--Male
deity put him into the centipede and wasp-house; but as she again gave him a
centipede and wasp-scarf, and instructed him as before, he came forth calmly.
Again the Impetuous-Male deity shot a whizzing barb into the middle of a large
moor, and sent him to fetch the arrow, and, when be bad entered the moor, at
once set fire to the moor all round. Thereupon, while he stood knowing no place
of exit, a mouse came and said: " The inside is hollow-hollow; the outside is
narrow-narrow." Owing to its speaking thus, he trod on the place, whereupon he
fell in and hid himself, during which time the fire burned past. Then the mouse
brought out in its mouth and presented to him the whizzing barb. The feathers of
the arrow were brought in their months by all the mouse's children. Hereupon his
wife the Forward-Princess came bearing mourning implements, and crying. Her
father the great deity, thinking that the deity Great-Name-Possessor was already
dead and done for, went out and stood on the moor, whereupon the deity
Great-Name-Possessor brought the arrow and presented it to him, upon which the
great deity, taking him into the house and calling him into an eight-foot spaced
large room, made him take the lice off his head. So, on looking at the head, be
saw that there were many centipedes there. Thereupon, as his wife gave to her
husband berries of the muku tree and red earth, he chewed the berries to pieces,
and spat them out with the red earth which he held in his mouth, so that the
great deity believed him to be chewing up and spitting out the centipedes, and,
feeling fond of him in his heart, fell asleep. Then the deity
Great-Name-Possessor, grasping the great deity's hair, tied it fast to the
various rafters of the house, and, blocking up the floor of the house with a
five-hundred draught rock, and taking his wife the Forward-Princess on his back,
then carried off the great deity's great life-sword and life-bow-and-arrows, as
also his heavenly speaking-lute, and ran out. But the heavenly speaking-lute
brushed against a tree, and the earth resounded. So the great deity, who was
sleeping, started at the sound, and pulled down the house. But while he was
disentangling his hair which was tied to the rafters, the deity
Great-Name-Possessor fled a long way. So then, pursuing after him to the
Even-Pass-of-Hades, and gazing on him from afar, be called out to the deity
Great-Name-Possessor, saying: "With the great life-sword and the
life-bow-and-arrows which thou carriest, pursue thy half-brethren till they
crouch on the august slopes of the passes, and pursue them till they are swept
into the reaches of the rivers, and do thou, wretch! become the deity
Master-of-the-Great-Land; and moreover, becoming the deity
Spirit-of-the-Living-Land, and making my daughter the Forward-Princess thy
consort, do thou make stout the temple-pillars at the foot of Mount Uka in the
nethermost rock-bottom, and make high the crossbeams to the
Plain-of-High-Heaven, and dwell there, thou villain! So when, bearing the great
sword and bow, he pursued and scattered the eighty deities, be did pursue them
till they crouched on the august slope of every pass, he did pursue them till
they were swept into every river, and then he began to make the land.
THE WOOING OF THE DEITY-OF-EIGHT-THOUSAND-SPEARS
This Deity-of-Eight-Thousand-Spears, when he went forth to woo
the Princess of Nuna-kaha, in the land of Koshi, on arriving at the house of the
Princess of Nunakaha sang, saying:
"I, The Augustness the Deity-of-Eight-Thousand-Spears, having
been unable to find a spouse in the Land of the Eight Islands, and having heard
that in the far-off Land of Koshi there is a wise maiden, having heard that
there is a beauteous maiden, I am standing here to truly woo her, I am going
backward and forward to woo her. Without having yet untied even the cord of my
sword, without having yet untied even my veil, I push back the plank-door shut
by the maiden; while I am standing here, I pull it forward. While I am standing
here, the nuye sings upon the green mountain, and the voice of the true bird of
the moor, the pheasant, resounds; the bird of the yard, the cock, crows. Oh! the
pity that the birds should sing! Oh! these birds! Would that I could beat them
till they were sick! Oh! swiftly flying heaven-racing messenger, the tradition
of the thing, too, this!"
Then the Princess of Nuna-kaba, without yet opening the door,
sang from the inside, saying:
Thine Augustness, the Deity-of-Eight-Thousand-Spears! Being
maiden like a drooping plant, my heart is just a bird on a sand-bank by the
shore; it will now indeed be a dotterel. Afterward it will be a gentle bird; so
as for thy life, do not deign to die. Oh! swiftly flying heaven-racing
messenger! the tradition of the thing, too, this!
Second Song of the Princess
When the sun shall hide behind the green mountains, in the
night black as the true jewels of the moor will I come forth. Coming radiant
with smiles like the morning sun, thine arms white as rope of
paper-mulberry-bark shall softly pat my breast soft as the melting snow; and
patting each other interlaced, stretching out and pillowing ourselves on each
other's jewel-arms - true jewel-arms - and with outstretched legs, will we
sleep. So speak not too lovingly, Thine Augustness the
Deity-of-Eight-Thousand-Spears! The tradition of the thing, too, this!"
THE CUP PLEDGE
Again this deity's Chief Empress, Her Augustness the
Forward-Princess, was very jealous. So the deity her husband, being distressed,
was about to go up from Idzumo to the Land of Yamato; and as he stood attired,
with one august hand on the saddle of his august horse and one august foot in
the august stirrup, he sang, saying:
When I take and attire myself so carefully in my august
garments black as the true jewels of the moor, and, like the birds of the
offing, look at my breast -though I raise my fins, I say that these are not
good, and cast them off on the waves on the beach. When I take and attire myself
so carefully in my august garments green as the kingfisher, and, like the birds
of the offing, look at my breast -though I raise my fins, I say that these, too,
are not good, and cast them off on the waves on the beach. When I take and
attire myself so carefully in my raiment dyed in the sap of the dye-tree, the
pounded madder sought in the mountain fields, and, like the birds of the offing,
look at my breast though I raise my fins, I say that they are good. My dear
young sister, Thine Augustness! Though thou say that thou wilt not weep - if
like the Rocking birds, I flock and depart, if, like the led birds, I am led
away and depart, thou wilt hang down thy head like a single eulalia upon the
mountain and thy weeping shall indeed rise an the mist of the morning shower.
Thine Augustness my spouse like the young herbal The tradition of the thing,
too, this!"
Then his Empress, taking a great august liquor-cup, and drawing
near and offering it to him, sang, saying:
"Oh I Thine Augustness the Deity-of-Eight-Thousand-Spears!
Thou, my dear Master-of-the-Great-Land indeed, being a man, probably best on the
various island-headlands that thou seest, and on every beach headland that thou
lookest on, a wife like the young herbs. But as for me alas! being a woman, I
have no man except thee; I have no spouse except thee. Beneath the fluttering of
the ornamented fence, beneath the softness of the warm coverlet, beneath the
rustling of the cloth coverlet, thine arms white as rope of paper-mulberry bark
softly patting my breast soft as the melting snow, and patting each other
interlaced, stretching out and pillowing ourselves on each otber's arms-true
jewel-arms, and with outstretched legs, will we sleep. Lift up the luxuriant
august liquor!"
She having thus sung, they at once pledged each other by the
cup with their hands on each other's necks, and are at rest till the present
time. These are called divine words.
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