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
(Page 2 of 4)
There is consolation in knowing, too, that Kenko was a sailor at the rail, fixing his eye across the water: “The pleasantest of all diversions is to sit alone under the lamp, a book spread out before you, and to make friends with people of a distant past you have never known.” Kenko is like a friend who reappears, after a long separation, and resumes your talk as if he had left the room for just a moment.
Kenko is charming, off-kilter, never gloomy. He is almost too intelligent to be gloomy, or in any case, too much a Buddhist. He writes in one of the essays: “A certain man once said, ‘Surely nothing is so delightful as the moon,’ but another man rejoined, ‘The dew moves me even more.’ How amusing that they should have argued the point.”
He cherished the precarious: “The most precious thing in life is its uncertainty.” He proposed a civilized aesthetic: “Leaving something incomplete makes it interesting and gives one the feeling that there is room for growth.” Perfection is banal. Better asymmetry and irregularity.
He stressed the importance of beginnings and endings, rather than mere vulgar fullness or success: “Are we to look at cherry blossoms only in full bloom, the moon only when it is cloudless? To long for the moon while looking on the rain, to lower the blinds and be unaware of the passing of the spring—these are even more deeply moving. Branches about to blossom or gardens strewn with faded flowers are worthier of our admiration.”
At a time when flowers have been wilting, when assets dwindle and mere vulgar fullness may suggest something as unpromising as a portfolio managed by Bernard Madoff, the eye might appreciate a moon obscured by clouds.
Of houses, Kenko says: “A man’s character, as a rule, may be known from the place where he lives.” For example: “A house which multitudes of workmen have polished with every care, where strange and rare Chinese and Japanese furnishings are displayed, and even grasses and trees of the garden have been trained unnaturally, is ugly to look at and most depressing. A house should look lived in, unassuming.” So much for the McMansion.
In a time of traumatic change, some writers or artists or composers may withdraw from the world in order to compose their own universe—Prospero’s island.
That is how Montaigne, in the midst of France’s 16th-century Catholic-Protestant wars, came to write his Essaies, which changed literature. After an estimable career as courtier under Charles IX, as member of the Bordeaux parliament, as a moderating friend of both Henry III and Henry of Navarre during the bloody wars of religion, Montaigne withdrew to the round tower on his family estate in Bordeaux. He announced: “In the year of Christ 1571, at the age of thirty-eight, on the last day of February, his birthday, Michel de Montaigne, long weary of the servitude of the court and of public employments, while still entire, retired to the bosom of the learned virgins, where in calm and freedom from all cares he will spend what little remains of his life, now more than half run out.... he has consecrated [this sweet ancestral retreat] to his freedom, tranquility and leisure.”
The wood over his doorway was inscribed to read, “Que sais-je?”—“What do I know?”—the pre-eminent question of the Renaissance and Enlightenment. So, surrounded by his library of 1,500 books, he began to write.
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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