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 4 of 4)
That, too, sends a strange little echo back to our time. The magic power the holy man lost was his ability to fly. Our world regained the magic, and it gave us Charles Lindbergh, Hiroshima, global travel, 9/11 and the Nigerian terrorist who, coming into Detroit one Christmas Day, set his underpants on fire.
We are surrounded by magic, some good, some evil and some both at once—an excess of magic, a confusion of it. Solitary Kenko brushed his cranky, acerbic thoughts onto scraps of paper that survived through the centuries only by luck; they might just as well have rotted on the walls or gone out with the trash. But look at our magic now: you can Google Kenko, and if you have a Kindle or Nook or iPad or some other e-reader, you can reassemble all of Kenko or Dante or Montaigne electronically upon a thin, flat screen—from which it may also vanish at a touch, in a nanosecond.
A trompe l’oeil universe: creation and un-creation—poof! Precious writers are miraculously diffused through the Web, you fetch them out of the air itself. And they may disappear more quickly than Kenko’s vanishing blossoms or shrouded moons. The universe is not a solid thing.
Writing is—we have always thought—a solitary and even covert labor. Of course a great writer need not be a hermit. (Shakespeare was not.) I have wondered whether Montaigne or Kenko or (God help us) Dante would have been on Facebook or Twitter, gabbing and texting away in the gregarious solidarities of new social forms. Are there such things as exile or retreat or solitude in the universe of Skype, the global hive? Does the new networking improve the quality of thinking and writing? It undoubtedly changes the process—but how, and how much? We don’t know yet.
Sometimes, oddly enough, it’s easier to write in a noisy room than in silence and solitude; for a time I liked to write while riding up and down Manhattan on the Lexington Avenue IRT—the rattling of the cars and screeching of the rails improved my concentration, and I liked having company as I scribbled away. I was fascinated and strangely soothed by the protocol of the subway, which requires that the faces of all those diverse riders—Asians, Africans, Latinos, Europeans—should, for the duration of the ride, be impassive and unreadable: no eye contact, perfect masks.
Lance Morrow’s books include the essay collection Second Drafts of History.
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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