The Timeless Wisdom of Kenko
A 14th-century Japanese essayist's advice for troubled times runs the gamut from quirky to prescient
- By Lance Morrow
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
Around the year 1330, a poet and Buddhist monk named Kenko wrote Essays in Idleness (Tsurezuregusa)—an eccentric, sedate and gemlike assemblage of his thoughts on life, death, weather, manners, aesthetics, nature, drinking, conversational bores, sex, house design, the beauties of understatement and imperfection.
For a monk, Kenko was remarkably worldly; for a former imperial courtier, he was unusually spiritual. He was a fatalist and a crank. He articulated the Japanese aesthetic of beauty as something inherently impermanent—an aesthetic that acquires almost unbearable pertinence at moments when an earthquake and tsunami may shatter existing arrangements.
Kenko yearned for a golden age, a Japanese Camelot, when all was becoming and graceful. He worried that “nobody is left who knows the proper manner for hanging a quiver before the house of a man in disgrace with his majesty.” He even regretted that no one remembered the correct shape of a torture rack or the appropriate way to attach a prisoner to it. He said deliberate cruelty is the worst of human offenses. He believed that “the art of governing a country is founded on thrift.”
One or two of his essays are purely informational (not to say weird). One of my favorites is essay 49, which reads in its entirety: “You should never put the new antlers of a deer to your nose and smell them. They have little insects that crawl into the nose and devour the brain.”
A sailor in rough seas may grip the rail and fix his eye on a distant object in order to steady himself and avoid seasickness. I read Kenko’s essays for a similar reason.
Kenko lived on a different planet—planet Earth in the 14th century. But if you proceed on the vertical from the 14th century to the 21st, you become aware of a time-flex in which his intimations of degeneracy and decline resonate with our own. A kind of sonar: from Kenko our own thoughts bounce back across time with an alienated charm and a laugh of recognition.
Kenko had been a poet and courtier in Kyoto in the court of the emperor Go-Daigo. It was a time of turbulent change. Go-Daigo would be ousted and driven into exile by the regime of the Ashikaga shoguns. Kenko withdrew to a cottage, where he lived and composed the 243 essays of the Tsurezuregusa. It was believed that he brushed his thoughts on scraps of paper and pasted them to the cottage walls, and that after his death his friend the poet and general Imagawa Ryoshun removed the scraps and arranged them into the order in which they have passed into Japanese literature. (The wallpaper story was later questioned, but in any case, the essays survived.)
Kenko was a contemporary of Dante, another sometime public man and courtier who lived in exile in unstable times. Their minds, in ways, were worlds apart. The Divine Comedy contemplated the eternal; the Essays in Idleness meditated upon the evanescent. Dante wrote with beauty and limpidity and terrifying magnificence, Kenko with offhand charm. They talked about the end of the world in opposite terms: the Italian poet set himself up, part of the time, anyway, as the bureaucrat of suffering, codifying sins and devising terrible punishments. Kenko, despite his lament for the old-fashioned rack, wrote mostly about solecisms and gaucheries, and it was the Buddhist law of uncertainty that presided over his universe. The Divine Comedy is one of the monuments of world literature. The Essays in Idleness are lapidary, brief and not much known outside Japan.
Kenko wrote: “They speak of the degenerate, final phase of the world, yet how splendid is the ancient atmosphere, uncontaminated by the world, that still prevails within the palace walls.” As Kenko’s translator Donald Keene observed, there flows through the essays “the conviction that the world is steadily growing worse.” It is perversely comforting to reflect that people have been anticipating the end of the world for so many centuries. Such persistent pessimism almost gives one hope.
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Comments (7)
Found "Kenko," and the small article read give the "reader with wisdom" the thoughts that the overall-"labeled" pessimism, was not truly such, but rather in "finding the depth, meaning and beauty" within what "most persons (and himself, at times), would find to be "sad," (autumn ending, the "covered" moon). Does make one ponder!
Posted by geo mer on November 17,2011 | 01:57 PM
Dan, pretty sure the writer meant that Kenko was
- almost too intelligent to be gloomy
- too much of a Buddhist to be gloomy
Posted by Pernesto on June 28,2011 | 01:16 PM
Thank you for a thought inspiring article. I couldn't avoid missing in your treatment of the subject the names of some of the most representative figures of stoicism, Seneca and Mascus Aurelius. I was not aware of the existence of Kenko and of his writings and now I can see more crearly the pattern of thought and attitude that repeats itself in differnt times and different cultures. Our days, so inclined to look for spiritual panaceas in ever more absurd self improving plans and suystems, ned to return to the classic philosophers and true thinkers like Kenko and forget about searching for easy formulas to get to the "beata vita" of the wise men of yore. Too much immediacy is numbing us to the life of the spirit. And I am not talking of religion.
Posted by Santiago Daydi-Tolson on June 21,2011 | 03:18 PM
Dan, I read that differently: We know that all things and circumstances lack permanence. We understand that a mindful look at unpleasant circumstances first sees the good in all circumstances (there always is good). Thus,since this situation is sure to change, and it is not entirely gloomy then a Buddhist (or intelligent) approach would know "this to will pass". Hence a Buddhist would have an unwillingness to sink into gloom.
This process neither requires nor precludes intelligence.
Posted by stan rodimon on June 7,2011 | 03:37 PM
His comments are as relevant today as yesterday.
Posted by Dolores on June 4,2011 | 04:37 PM
Did Kenko philosophy have anything to do with the reforms in the tea ceremony, of the 17th century?
Posted by Jamesdharp on May 24,2011 | 04:08 PM
Could you explain what exactly you mean by this sentence: "He is almost too intelligent to be gloomy, or in any case, too much a Buddhist"?
Shall I take this to mean that intelligence and the decision to follow a Buddhist practice are incompatible, or does the convoluted language mask some other, subtler shade of meaning?
Posted by Dan Forester on May 24,2011 | 12:25 PM