<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page244" id="page244"></SPAN></span>
<h3>SERMON II</h3>
<h4>(THE SERMONS OF KIU-Ô, VOL. I)</h4>
<p>"If a man loses a fowl or a dog, he knows how to reclaim it.
If he loses his soul, he knows not how to reclaim it. The true
path of learning has no other function than to teach us how to
reclaim lost souls." This parable has been declared to us by
Môshi. If a dog, or a chicken, or a pet cat does not come
home at the proper time, its master makes a great fuss about
hunting for it, and wonders can it have been killed by a dog or
by a snake, or can some man have stolen it; and ransacking the
three houses opposite, and his two next-door neighbours'
houses, as if he were seeking for a lost child, cries, "Pray,
sir, has my tortoiseshell cat been with you? Has my pet chicken
been here?" That is the way in which men run about under such
circumstances. It's a matter of the utmost importance.</p>
<p>And yet to lose a dog or a tame chicken is no such terrible
loss after all. But the soul, which is called the lord of the
body, is the master of our whole selves. If men part with this
soul for the sake of other things, then they become deaf to the
admonitions of their parents, and the instructions of their
superiors are to them as the winds of heaven. Teaching is to
them like pouring water over a frog's face; they blink their
eyes, and that is all; they say, "Yes, yes!" with their mouths,
but their hearts are gone, and, seeing, they are blind,
hearing, they are deaf. Born whole and sound, by their own
doing they enter the fraternity of cripples. Such are all those
who lose their souls. Nor do they think of inquiring or looking
for their lost soul. "It is my parents' fault; it is my
master's fault; it is my husband's fault; it is my elder
brother's fault; it is Hachibei who is a rogue; it is 0 Matsu
who is a bad woman." They content themselves with looking at
the faults of others, and do not examine their own consciences,
nor search their own hearts. Is not this a cruel state of
things? They set up a hue and cry for a lost dog or a pet
chicken, but for this all-important soul of theirs they make no
search. What mistaken people! For this reason the sages,
mourning over such a state of things, have taught us what is
the right path of man; and it is the receiving of this teaching
that is called learning. The main object of learning is the
examination and searching of our own hearts; therefore the text
says, "The true path of learning has no other function than to
teach us how to reclaim lost souls." This is an exhaustive
exposition of the functions of learning.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page245" id="page245"></SPAN></span> That learning has no other
object, we have this gracious pledge and guarantee from the
sage. As for the mere study of the antiquities and annals of
China and Japan, and investigation into literature, these
cannot be called learning, which is above all things an
affair of the soul. All the commentaries and all the books
of all the teachers in the world are but so many directories
by which to find out the whereabouts of our own souls. This
search after our own souls is that which I alluded to just
now as the examination of our consciences. To disregard the
examination of our consciences is a terrible thing, of which
it is impossible to foresee the end; on the other hand, to
practise it is most admirable, for by this means we can on
the spot attain filial piety and fidelity to our masters.
Virtue and vice are the goals to which the examination and
non-examination of our consciences lead. As it has been
rightly said, benevolence and malice are the two roads which
man follows. Upon this subject I have a terrible and yet a
very admirable story to tell you. Although I dare say you
are very drowsy, I must beg you to listen to me.</p>
<p>In a certain part of the country there was a well-to-do
farmer, whose marriage had brought him one son, whom he petted
beyond all measure, as a cow licks her calf. So by degrees the
child became very sly: he used to pull the horses' tails, and
blow smoke into the bulls' nostrils, and bully the neighbours'
children in petty ways and make them cry. From a peevish child
he grew to be a man, and unbearably undutiful to his parents.
Priding himself on a little superior strength, he became a
drunkard and a gambler, and learned to wrestle at fairs. He
would fight and quarrel for a trifle, and spent his time in
debauchery and riotous living. If his parents remonstrated with
him, he would raise his voice and abuse them, using scurrilous
language. "It's all very well your abusing me for being
dissolute and disobedient. But, pray, who asked you to bring me
into the world? You brought me into the world, and I have to
thank you for its miseries; so now, if you hate dissolute
people, you had better put me back where I came from, and I
shall be all right again." This was the sort of insolent answer
he would give his parents, who, at their wits' end, began to
grow old in years. And as he by degrees grew more and more of a
bully, unhappy as he made them, still he was their darling, and
they could not find it in their hearts to turn him out of the
house and disinherit him. So they let him pursue his selfish
course; and he went on from worse to worse, knocking people
down, breaking their arms, and getting up great disturbances.
It is unnecessary to speak of his parents' feelings. Even his
relations and friends felt as if nails were being hammered into
their breasts. He was a thoroughly wicked man.</p>
<p>Now no one is from his mother's womb so wicked as this; but
those who persist in selfishness lose their senses, and
gradually reach this pitch of wickedness. What a terrible thing
is this throwing away of our hearts!</p>
<p>Well, this man's relations and friends very properly urged
his <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page246" id="page246"></SPAN></span> parents to disown him; but
he was an only child, and so his parents, although they
said, "To-day we really will disinherit him," or "To-morrow
we really will break off all relations with him," still it
was all empty talk; and the years and months passed by,
until the scapegrace reached his twenty-sixth year, having
heaped wickedness upon wickedness; and who can tell how much
trouble he brought upon his family, who were always afraid
of hearing of some new enormity? At last they held a family
council, and told the parents that matters had come to such
a pass that if they did not disown their son the rest of the
family must needs break off all communication with them: if
he were allowed to go on in his evil courses, the whole
village, not to speak of his relations, would be disgraced;
so either the parents, against whom, however, there was no
ill-will felt, must be cut by the family, or they must
disinherit their son: to this appeal they begged to have a
distinct answer. The parents, reflecting that to separate
themselves from their relations, even for the sake of their
own son, would be an act of disrespect to their ancestors,
determined to invite their relations to assemble and draw up
a petition to the Government for leave to disinherit their
son, to which petition the family would all affix their
seals according to form; so they begged them to come in the
evening, and bring their seals with them. This was their
answer.</p>
<p>There is an old saw which says, "The old cow licks her calf,
and the tigress carries her cub in her mouth." If the instinct
of beasts and birds prompt them to love their young, how much
the more must it be a bitter thing for a man to have to disown
his own son! All this trouble was the consequence of this youth
casting his heart from him. Had he examined his own conscience,
the storm of waves and of wind would not have arisen, and all
would have been calm. But as he refused to listen to his
conscience, his parents, much against their will, were forced
to visit him with the punishment of disinheritance, which he
had brought upon himself. A sad thing indeed! In the poems of
his Reverence Tokuhon, a modern poet, there is the following
passage: "Since Buddha thus winds himself round our hearts, let
the man who dares to disregard him fear for his life." The
allusion is to the great mercy and love of the gods. The gods
wish to make men examine their consciences, and, day and night,
help men to discern that which is evil; but, although they
point out our desires and pleasures, our lusts and passions, as
things to be avoided, men turn their backs upon their own
consciences. The love of the gods is like the love of parents
for their children, and men treat the gods as undutiful
children treat their parents. "Men who dare to disregard the
gods, let them fear for their lives." I pray you who hear me,
one and all, to examine your own consciences and be saved.</p>
<p>To return to the story of the vagabond son. As it happened,
that day he was gambling in a neighbouring village, when a
friend from his own place came up and told him that his
relations had <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page247" id="page247"></SPAN></span> met together to disinherit
him; and that, fine fellow as he was, he would find it a
terrible thing to be disowned. Before he had heard him half
out, the other replied in a loud voice—</p>
<p>"What, do you mean to say that they are holding a family
council to-night to disinherit me? What a good joke! I'm sure I
don't want to be always seeing my father's and mother's
blubbering faces; it makes me quite sick to think of them: it's
quite unbearable. I'm able to take care of myself; and, if I
choose to go over to China, or to live in India, I should like
to know who is to prevent me? This is the very thing above all
others for me. I'll go off to the room where they are all
assembled, and ask them why they want to disinherit me. I'll
just swagger like Danjurô <SPAN id="footnotetag91"
name="footnotetag91"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote91"><sup>91</sup></SPAN>
the actor, and frighten them into giving me fifty or
seventy ounces of silver to get rid of me, and put the money
in my purse, and be off to Kiôto or Osaka, where I'll
set up a tea-house on my own account; and enjoy myself to my
heart's content! I hope this will be a great night for me,
so I'll just drink a cup of wine for luck beforehand."</p>
<p>And so, with a lot of young devils of his own sort, be fell
to drinking wine in teacups,<SPAN id="footnotetag92"
name="footnotetag92"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote92"><sup>92</sup></SPAN>
so that before nightfall they were all as drunk as mud.
Well, then, on the strength of this wine, as he was setting
out for his father's house, he said, "Now, then, to try my
luck," and stuck a long dirk in his girdle. He reached his
own village just before nightfall, thinking to burst into
the place where he imagined his relations to be gathered
together, turning their wisdom-pockets inside out, to shake
out their small provision of intelligence in consultation;
and he fancied that, if he blustered and bullied, he would
certainly get a hundred ounces of silver out of them. Just
as he was about to enter the house, he reflected—</p>
<p>"If I show my face in the room where my relations are
gathered together, they will all look down on the ground and
remain silent; so if I go in shouting and raging, it will be
quite out of harmony; but if they abuse me, then I shall be in
the right if I jump in on them and frighten them well. The best
plan will be for me to step out of the bamboo grove which is
behind the house, and to creep round the verandah, and I can
listen to these fellows holding their consultation: they will
certainly be raking up all sorts of scandal about me. It will
be all in harmony, then, if I kick down the shutters and
sliding-doors with a noise like thunder. And what fun it will
be!"</p>
<p>As he thought thus to himself, he pulled off his iron-heeled
sandals, and stuck them in his girdle, and, girding up his
dress round his waist, left the bamboo grove at the back of the
house, and, jumping over the garden wicket, went round the
verandah and looked in. Peeping through a chink in the
shutters, he could <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page248" id="page248"></SPAN></span> see his relations gathered
together in council, speaking in whispers. The family were
sitting in a circle, and one and all were affixing their
seals to the petition of disinheritance. At last, having
passed from hand to hand, the document came round to where
the two parents were sitting. Their son, seeing this,
said—</p>
<p>"Come, now, it's win or lose! My parents' signing the paper
shall be the sign for me to kick open the door and jump into
the middle of them."</p>
<p>So, getting ready for a good kick, he held his breath and
looked on.</p>
<p>What terrible perversion man can allow his heart to come to!
Môshi has said that man by nature is good; but although
not a particle of fault can be found with what he has said,
when the evil we have learned becomes a second nature, men
reach this fearful degree of wickedness. When men come to this
pass, Kôshi<SPAN id="footnotetag93"
name="footnotetag93"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote93"><sup>93</sup></SPAN>
and Môshi themselves might preach to them for a
thousand days, and they would not have strength to reform.
Such hardened sinners deserve to be roasted in iron pots in
the nethermost hell. Now, I am going to tell you how it came
about that the vagabond son turned over a new leaf and
became dutiful, and finally entered paradise. The poet says,
"Although the hearts of parents are not surrounded by dark
night, how often they stray from the right road in their
affection for their children!"</p>
<p>When the petition of disinheritance came round to the place
where the two parents were sitting, the mother lifted up her
voice and wept aloud; and the father, clenching his toothless
gums to conceal his emotion, remained with his head bent down:
presently, in a husky voice, he said, "Wife, give me the
seal!"</p>
<p>But she returned no answer, and with tears in her eyes took
a leather purse, containing the seal, out of a drawer of the
cupboard and placed it before her husband. All this time the
vagabond son, holding his breath, was peeping in from outside
the shutters. In the meanwhile, the old man slowly untied the
strings of the purse, and took out the seal, and smeared on the
colouring matter. Just as he was about to seal the document,
his wife clutched at his hand and said, "Oh, pray wait a
little."</p>
<p>The father replied, "Now that all our relations are looking
on, you must not speak in this weak manner."</p>
<p>But she would not listen to what he said, but went
on—</p>
<p>"Pray listen to what I have to say. It is true that if we
were to give over our house to our undutiful son, in less than
three years the grass would be growing in its place, for he
would be ruined. Still, if we disinherit our child—the
only child that we have, either in heaven or upon
earth—we shall have to adopt another in his place.
Although, if the adopted son turned out honest and dutiful, and
inherited our property, all would be well; still, what
certainty is there of his doing so? If, on the other hand, the
adopted son turned out to be a prodigal, and laid waste
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page249" id="page249"></SPAN></span> our house, what unlucky
parents we should be! And who can say that this would not be
the case? If we are to be ruined for the sake of an equally
wicked adopted son, I had rather lose our home for the sake
of our own son, and, leaving out old familiar village as
beggars, seek for our lost boy on foot. This is my fervent
wish. During fifty years that we have lived together, this
has been the only favour that I have ever asked of you. Pray
listen to my prayer, and put a stop to this act of
disinheritance. Even though I should become a beggar for my
son's sake, I could feel no resentment against him."</p>
<p>So she spoke, sobbing aloud. The relations, who heard this,
looked round at one another, and watched the father to see what
he would do; and he (who knows with what thoughts in his head?)
put back the seal into the leather purse, and quickly drew the
strings together, and pushed back the petition to the
relations.</p>
<p>"Certainly," said he, "I have lost countenance, and am
disgraced before all my family; however, I think that what the
good wife has just said is right and proper, and from
henceforth I renounce all thoughts of disinheriting my son. Of
course you will all see a weakness of purpose in what I say,
and laugh at me as the cause of my son's undutiful conduct. But
laugh away: it won't hurt me. Certainly, if I don't disinherit
this son of mine, my house will be ruined before three years
are over our heads. To lay waste the house of generations upon
generations of my ancestors is a sin against those ancestors;
of this I am well aware. Further, if I don't disinherit my son,
you gentlemen will all shun me. I know that I am cutting myself
off from my relations. Of course you think that when I leave
this place I shall be dunning you to bestow your charity upon
me; and that is why you want to break off relations with me.
Pray don't make yourselves uneasy. I care no more for my duties
to the world, for my impiety to my ancestors, or for my
separation from my family. Our son is our only darling, and we
mean to go after him, following him as beggars on foot. This is
our desire. We shall trouble you for no alms and for no
charity. However we may die, we have but one life to lose. For
our darling son's sake, we will lay ourselves down and die by
the roadside. There our bodies shall be manure for the trees of
the avenue. And all this we will endure cheerfully, and not
utter a complaint. Make haste and return home, therefore, all
of you. From to-morrow we are no longer on speaking terms. As
for what you may say to me on my son's account, I do not
care."</p>
<p>And as his wife had done, he lifted up his voice and wept,
shedding manly tears. As for her, when she heard that the act
of disinheritance was not to be drawn up, her tears were
changed to tears of joy. The rest of the family remained in
mute astonishment at so unheard-of a thing, and could only
stare at the faces of the two old people.</p>
<p>You see how bewildered parents must be by their love for
their children, to be so merciful towards them. As a cat
carrying her <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page250" id="page250"></SPAN></span> young in her mouth screens
it from the sun at one time and brings it under the light at
another, so parents act by their children, screening their
bad points and bringing out in relief their good qualities.
They care neither for the abuse of others, nor for their
duties to their ancestors, nor for the wretched future in
store for themselves. Carried away by their infatuation for
their children, and intoxicated upon intoxication, the
hearts of parents are to be pitied for their pitifulness. It
is not only the two parents in my story who are in this
plight; the hearts of all parents of children all over the
world are the same. In the poems of the late learned Ishida
it is written, "When I look round me and see the hearts of
parents bewildered by their love for their children, I
reflect that my own father and mother must be like them."
This is certainly a true saying.</p>
<p>To return to the story: the halo of his parents' great
kindness and pity penetrated the very bowels of the prodigal
son. What an admirable thing! When he heard it, terrible and
sly devil as he had been, he felt as if his whole body had been
squeezed in a press; and somehow or other, although the tears
rose in his breast, he could not for shame lift up his voice
and weep. Biting the sleeve of his dress, he lay down on the
ground and shed tears in silence. What says the verse of the
reverend priest Eni? "To shed tears of gratitude one knows not
why." A very pretty poem indeed! So then the vagabond son, in
his gratitude to his parents, could neither stand nor sit. You
see the original heart of man is by nature bright virtue, but
by our selfish pursuit of our own inclinations the brilliancy
of our original virtue is hidden.</p>
<p>To continue: the prodigal was pierced to the core by the
great mercy shown by his parents, and the brilliancy of his own
original good heart was enticed back to him. The sunlight came
forth, and what became of all the clouds of self-will and
selfishness? The clouds were all dispelled, and from the bottom
of his soul there sprang the desire to thank his parents for
their goodness. We all know the story of the rush-cutter who
saw the moon rising between the trees on a moorland hill so
brightly, that he fancied it must have been scoured with the
scouring-rush which grew near the spot. When a man, who has
been especially wicked, repents and returns to his original
heart, he becomes all the more excellent, and his brightness is
as that of the rising moon scoured. What an admirable thing
this is! So the son thought to enter the room at once and beg
his parents' forgiveness; but he thought to himself, "Wait a
bit. If I burst suddenly into the room like this, the relations
will all be frightened and not know what to make of it, and
this will be a trouble to my parents. I will put on an innocent
face, as if I did not know what has been going on, and I'll go
in by the front door, and beg the relations to intercede for me
with my parents." With stealthy step he left the back of the
house, and went round to the front. When he arrived there, he
purposely made a great noise with his iron-heeled sandals, and
gave a loud cough to clear his throat, and entered
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page251" id="page251"></SPAN></span> the room. The relations
were all greatly alarmed; and his parents, when they saw the
face of their wicked son, both shed tears. As for the son,
he said not a word, but remained weeping, with his head bent
down. After a while, he addressed the relations and said,
"Although I have frequently been threatened with
disinheritance, and although in those days I made light of
it, to-night, when I heard that this family council had
assembled, I somehow or other felt my heart beset by anxiety
and grief. However I may have heaped wickedness upon
wickedness up to the present moment, as I shall certainly
now mend my ways, I pray you to delay for a while to-night's
act of disinheritance. I do not venture to ask for a long
delay,—I ask but for thirty days; and if within that
time I shall not have given proofs of repentance, disinherit
me: I shall not have a word to say. I pray you, gentlemen,
to intercede with my parents that they may grant this delay
of thirty days, and to present them my humble apologies."
With this he rubbed his head on the mat, as a humble
suppliant, in a manner most foreign to his nature.</p>
<p>The relations, after hearing the firm and resolute answer of
the parents, had shifted about in their places; but, although
they were on the point of leaving the house, had remained
behind, sadly out of harmony; when the son came in, and happily
with a word set all in tune again. So the relations addressed
the parents, and said, "Pray defer to-night's affair;" and laid
the son's apologies at their feet. As for the parents, who
would not have disinherited their son even had he not repented,
how much the more when they heard what he said did they weep
for joy; and the relations, delighted at the happy event,
exhorted the son to become really dutiful; and so that night's
council broke up. So this son in the turn of a hand became a
pious son, and the way in which he served his parents was that
of a tender and loving child. His former evil ways he
extinguished utterly.</p>
<p>The fame of this story rose high in the world; and, before
half a year had passed, it reached the ears of the lord of the
manor, who, when he had put on his noble spectacles and
investigated the case, appointed the son to be the head man of
his village. You may judge by this what this son's filial piety
effected. Three years after these events, his mother, who was
on her death-bed, very sick, called for him and said, "When
some time since the consultation was being held about
disinheriting you, by some means or other your heart was
turned, and since then you have been a dutiful son above all
others. If at that time you had not repented, and I had died in
the meanwhile, my soul would have gone to hell without fail,
because of my foolish conduct towards you. But, now that you
have repented, there is nothing that weighs upon me, and there
can be no mistake about my going to paradise. So the fact of my
becoming one of the saints will all be the work of your filial
piety." And the story goes, that with these words the mother,
lifting up her hands in prayer, died.</p>
<p>To be sure, by the deeds of the present life we may obtain a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page252" id="page252"></SPAN></span> glimpse into the future. If
a man's heart is troubled by his misdeeds in this life, it
will again be tortured in the next. The troubled heart is
hell. The heart at rest is paradise. The trouble or peace of
parents depends upon their children. If their children are
virtuous, parents are as the saints: if their children are
wicked, parents suffer the tortures of the damned. If once
your youthful spirits, in a fit of heedlessness, have led
you to bring trouble upon your parents and cause them to
weep, just consider the line of argument which I have been
following. From this time forth repent and examine your own
hearts. If you will become dutiful, your parents from this
day will live happy as the saints. But if you will not
repent, but persist in your evil ways, your parents will
suffer the pains of hell. Heaven and hell are matters of
repentance or non-repentance. Repentance is the finding of
the lost heart, and is also the object of learning. I shall
speak to you further upon this point to-morrow
evening.</p>
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