230
Moving Mirrors
interspersed with ongoing criticism of Tamekane’s verse.
94
At some urg-
ing from the narrator, the monk relates that he has lived in the moun-
tains for the past thirty years, lamenting the decline of poetry.
95
He
equates
waka
with Confucian virtues, in addition to their Buddhist prop-
erties and potential, and assigns them a “helping” role in the context of
ritual music (
reigaku o tasuketsutsu
) before explaining how contemporary
poetic form—in other words, Tamekane’s—deviates from all of these.
96
The speaker then switches to a careful mapping of the relationship among
ritual, music, and the pacification of people, including one’s enemies. In
a rare recourse to the extrapoetic world, he bolsters this position with both
textual and historical precedents, including an account of how the In-
dian ruler King Pasenadi (sixth century BCE) repelled an attack with a
virtuous drum performance.
97
Chinese music, in contrast, is charted as
having been in a state of decline since its inception.
98
Superior music, the
narrator concludes, is what enables the triumph of the “small country”
over the “great.” It is because of (the correct cultivation of )
Dostları ilə paylaş: