252
Memories of Mirrors
planation for historical change. This works on multiple levels. It can be
seen most obviously in the rhetoric of precedent and promise of causality
that are featured in the preface. The famous opening lines read: “The Jeta-
vana Temple bells/ ring the passing of all things./ Twinned sal trees,
white in full flower,/ declare the great man’s certain fall./ The arrogant
do not long endure:/ They are like a dream one night in spring./ The bold
and brave perish in the end:/ they are as dust before the wind.”
36
The au-
dience knows at once that the tale to follow will be illustrative of the
timeless truths set forth here.
37
These are very basic principles that order
all historical change.
At the same time, however, as Vyjayanthi Selinger demonstrates in
her analysis of the
Heike
texts’ “representational mechanisms,” this is more
than just the promise of laws that the early
Mirrors
in particular offer.
Instead, multiple elements of the work can be read as generative of
“order.”
38
The specifics of Selinger’s analysis are nontextual phenomena
and the implied belief systems that render their treatment in the
Heike
meaningful: bodies, behaviors, symbolically charged weaponry, and even
modes of movement. Closely examining the depiction of these objects and
practices, she shows them to be “expressive devices through which his-
torical change is explained,” an approach that highlights the deeply po-
litical nature of textualizing the past.
39
The sheer variety of means for
manifesting order that Selinger interrogates demonstrates that the
Heike
texts attest to or enable a regulated world in ways that do not always dove-
tail with the methods of the
Mirrors
. Yet in the commitment to histori-
cal change as fundamentally principled—discernible not only in the le-
gitimating orders that Selinger locates but also explicitly in the
Heike
’s
opening lines, the work’s vision of the past accords with the positions
36. Ichiko,
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