272
Memories of Mirrors
Conclusion
This chapter took
The Clear Mirror
and
The Mirror of the Gods
as the out-
growths of the two divergent models for
Mirror
writing in the 1290s
discussed in chapte
r
4. Yet whereas the late Kamakura
Mirrors
, particu-
larly
The Mirror of the East
, seemed to be fruits of a vibrant and evolving
historiographic development, both
The Clear Mirror
and
The Mirror of
the Gods
mark the end of their respective paths. As such, they offer an
opportunity to think about why, as a historiographic tool, the
Mirrors
lapse into disuse.
One explanation for this may lie in the changing ends to which the
later
Mirrors
, especially the Muromachi compositions, were put. The old
Mirrors
answered questions: Where was the world headed? How had it
gotten where it was? In earlier and contemporary works, the appeal of a
clearly demonstrated cosmological logic seems to have been very power-
ful. Not only had the
Mirrors
themselves demonstrated this; other works
revealed the absence of such a logic as problematic. One only needs to
think of those historiographic experiments that did not garner a substan-
tial contemporary readership to see this: Jien’s proliferation of ad hoc
principles in
My Humble Thoughts
(chapte
r
3), Chikafusa’s abstruse princi-
ple that mortals could not hope to understand in
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