38
New Reflections
Shigeki is 180. They are soon joined by an attendant who is approximately
30. Having attracted an audience in the course of their conversation, the
old men decide to while away the time before the lecturer arrives by talk-
ing about the past since, as Yotsugi reasons, “By talking of the past, we
could let the people here grasp ‘That’s how it was. Long ago,
that
’s how
the world was.’”
10
With a sense of purpose, Yotsugi presses forward: “‘I have only one
thing of importance on my mind,’ he went on, ‘and that is to describe
Lord [Fujiwara no] Michinaga’s [966–1027] unprecedented successes to
all of you here, clergy and laity of both sexes. It is a complicated subject,
so I shall have to discuss a fair number of Emperors, Empresses, minis-
ters of state, and senior nobles first. Then when I reach Michinaga him-
self, the most fortunate of all, [the matters of the world will be completely
revealed].’”
11
And without further ado, Yotsugi launches into the narra-
tive. What follows is a series of biographies, subdivided by office: the first
scroll focuses on the imperial family, while scrolls 2–4 offer accounts of
the elite Fujiwara clan whose ministerial successes paved the way for Mi-
chinaga. These are followed by the biography of Michinaga, which is
spread over the last two scrolls, 5 and 6. “Tales of the Fujiwara Clan” (
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