Yoshida
Shoin
The Archetype of Japanese Revolutionaries
by Romulus Hillsborough
If the
tenet of certain age-old philosophies is true that the physical environment
at birth has an ominous effect on the future personality and life of the
newborn child, then perhaps it was the sweltering heat of the Hagi summer
that lit the flame of passion in Yoshida Shoin’s indomitable spirit for
a new and stronger Japan — a passion which would neither be extinguished
by the cold steel of the executioner’s sword some twenty-nine years later,
nor by the passing of nearly one century and a half since his tragic death.
For not only has Choshu’s most beloved samurai been immortalized in the
annals of Japanese history, but his spirit has been sanctified in numerous
hagiographies, his lofty aspirations recorded in copious biographies,
his memory canonized in paintings and statuettes which to this day grace
the alters of countless homes throughout the Yamaguchi countryside where
the charismatic genius came into this world.
Yoshida Shoin
was born the second son of a lower ranking samurai in the village of Matsumoto,
amidst the verdant foothills of the castle town of Hagi, center of the
great domain of Choshu, by the aquamarine Sea of Japan, in the eighth
month of the first year of the Era of Heaven’s Protection — or more simply
put, August 1830.
“He knew nothing of anger,” a former student would recall. “He was kind
to others… and had a polite manner of speech.” Yoshida Shoin was physically
frail, soft-spoken and a master of self-control whose willpower knew no
bounds. He was an avid scholar who denied himself sleep, and who was known
to stand or walk in the snow to keep himself awake for his studies. At
age five Shoin began the formal study of military tactics and the Chinese
classics. By age eight he was studying the Confucian philosophy of Meng-tzu,
and began attending the official college of the Choshu domain. In the
following year he taught at the college. At age ten he won praise from
the Lord of Choshu for his recital of the military classics. At fifteen
he became awakened to the dangerous goings on in the world outside the
sacred Empire of Yamato. In 1848, five years before the arrival of Perry,
he advised the Lord of Choshu to prepare for foreign invasion. In 1851,
his twenty-first year, Shoin accompanied the Lord of Choshu to the Shogun’s
capital at Edo, where he studied under Sakuma Shozan, the most celebrated
Western military scientist in Japan.
Shoin was in Edo when Commodore Matthew Perry of the United States Navy
arrived in June 1853. Perry led a squadron of heavily armed warships into
the bay off the Shogun’s capital, demanding an end of Japanese isolation
and inciting fifteen years of bloody turmoil throughout the island nation.
Shoin learned from Shozan the futility of challenging the modern military
power of the West with Japan’s ancient arts of war. He adopted his teacher’s
belief in the aphorism “Know the enemy” in order to “control the barbarians
through barbarian technology.” But the Tokugawa Shogunate did not have
the wherewithal to reject Perry’s demands. Rather than remain idle while
bumbling Tokugawa officials sealed the fate of the Japanese nation, Shoin,
with the help of his revered teacher, planned drastic measures.
Perry concluded Japan’s first treaty with the United States in March 1854.
Shortly after, his squadron lay in the harbor at Shimoda, one of two ports
opened under the terms of the treaty, from which it would soon depart.
Shoin prepared a letter for Perry, which he and a fellow Choshu samurai
delivered to American officers on land, under the cover of night. Perry
described the incident: [They] “were observed to be men of some position
and rank, as each wore the two swords characteristic of distinction, and
were dressed in the wide but short trowsers of rich silk brocade. Their
manner showed the usual courtly refinement of the better classes, but
they exhibited the embarrassment of men who evidently were not perfectly
at their ease, and were about doing something of dubious propriety. They
cast their eyes stealthily about as if to assure themselves that none
of their countrymen were at hand to observe their proceedings, and then
approaching one of the officers and pretending to admire his watch-chain,
slipped within the breast of his coat a folded paper.”
The “folded paper,” written in “the mandarin Chinese with fluency and
apparent elegance,” and translated by Perry’s interpreter, was as moving
in its humble tone as it was compelling. “Two scholars from Yedo, in Japan,
present this letter for the inspection of ‘the high officers and those
who manage affairs.’ Our attainments are few and trifling, as we ourselves
are small and unimportant, so that we are abashed in coming before you;
we are neither skilled in the use of arms, nor are we able to discourse
upon the rules of strategy and military discipline… we have been for many
years desirous of going over the ‘five great continents,’ but the laws
of our country in all maritime points are very strict; for foreigners
to come into the country, and for natives to go abroad, are both immutably
forbidden.
“…we now secretly send you this private request, that you will take us
on board your ships as they go out to sea.”
Although Perry would never know Yoshida Shoin’s name, his identity or
his ultimate fate, he was sufficiently impressed by the idealistic young
man’s bold attempt to defy “the eccentric and sanguinary code of Japanese
law,” to record an account of it: “During the succeeding night, about
two o’clock a.m… the officer of the midwatch, on board the steamer Mississippi,
was aroused by a voice from a boat alongside, and upon proceeding to the
gangway, found a couple of Japanese, who had mounted the ladder at the
ship’s side, and upon being accosted, made signs expressive of a desire
to be admitted on board.
“They seemed very eager to be allowed to remain, and showed a very evident
determination not to return to the shore.”
Refused by Perry, the two samurai were apprehended by the Japanese authorities,
and confined to a cage. They nevertheless managed to relay a message to
the Americans, “a remarkable specimen of philosophical resignation under
circumstances which would have tried the stoicism of Cato…” The message
begins: “When a hero fails in his purpose, his acts are then regarded
as those of a villain and robber. In public have we been seized and pinioned
and caged for many days… Therefore, looking up while yet we have nothing
wherewith to reproach ourselves, it must now be seen whether a hero will
prove himself to be one indeed.” Shoin’s heroics would become self-evident
soon enough, but first he would be transported to the jail in Edo, and
returned as a prisoner to Hagi.
In summer 1856,
American envoy Townsend Harris of the United States established the first
American Consulate in Japan at a Buddhist temple in Shimoda to negotiate
Japan’s first commercial treaty. Protocol demanded that the shogunate
could only sign a treaty after receiving permission from the Imperial
Court at Kyoto. As a commercial treaty with the United States materialized,
opposition grew among proponents of Expelling the Barbarians, who now
rallied around the Kyoto court. These xenophobes called themselves Imperial
Loyalists. Pitted against them were the proponents of Opening the Country,
led by Ii Naosuke, the powerful Lord of Hikone. Japan split into two factions.
The Loyalists claimed that the Shogun was merely an Imperial agent, who
at the beginning of the seventeenth century had been commissioned by the
Emperor to protect Japan from foreign invasion. They claimed that true
political authority rested with the Emperor, and that the Tokugawa could
only justify its rule by expelling the foreigners. They argued that since
the Shogun was no longer capable of fulfilling this ancient duty, the
Emperor and his court must be restored to power to save the nation. As
a result, the national government developed into a twofold structure:
while the shogunate continued to rule at Edo, the Imperial Court was undergoing
a political renaissance in its ancient capital at Kyoto. When the Edo
authorities petitioned Kyoto to sanction the commercial treaty, they were
flatly refused. In April 1858, Ii Naosuke was appointed Tokugawa Regent,
making him head of the Shogun’s council and arbitrary ruler of the military
government. In June Regent Ii realized a commercial treaty with the United
States without Imperial sanction, and pandemonium ensued.
After spending
over a year in prison, Shoin was placed under house confinement. In November
1857, he established his progressive Sho-ka-son-juku – Village School
Under the Pines – and thereby secured his place in Japanese history.
As samurai throughout Japan ranted and raved and vowed to kill the “traitors”
who had opened the country to the “barbarians,” Yoshida Shoin preached
Imperial Loyalism to young men of the lower rungs of Choshu society at
his academy in Hagi. He professed that the Emperor was the true sovereign
of Japan. He opened his pupils’ eyes to the dangerous situation of the
world outside. But Master Shoin nevertheless supported Tokugawa rule,
and favored Opening the Country to enrich the nation and develop a strong
military. He advocated a union between Kyoto and Edo to protect Japan
from the threat of foreign subjugation. These ideas he instilled in the
minds of his young disciples. And he was only twenty-seven years old.
And he was very successful, for among his disciples were future leaders
of the revolution which was the Meiji Restoration, including two prime
ministers.
No sooner had Shoin heard the news of Ii’s “blasphemy,” than he made a
complete turnabout in his political stance, and became the most radical
of zealots who preached Imperial Reverence and Expelling the Barbarians.
He would now “correct” the lese majesty committed by the evil regent.
He would take part in a plot among radicals from other clans to assassinate
him, but first, in November 1858, he planned to assassinate a Tokugawa
councilor whom Ii had unsuccessfully sent to Kyoto to obtain Imperial
sanction for the commercial treaty.
Shoin’s plan was never realized, for it was determined by the Choshu authorities
that his radicalism threatened the well-being of their daimyo. In December
Shoin was again imprisoned in Hagi. But he would not compromise his ideals,
and from his cell became more and more defiant. “I am sorry to say,” he
wrote to a friend, “but I have no use for the Imperial Court, the shogunate,
or our clan. The only thing I need is…my own meager body.” If neither
Edo, Kyoto or Choshu would take the appropriate measures, then this archetype
of Japanese revolutionaries would. The revolution he envisioned would
be accomplished through the cooperation of lower ranking samurai and men
from the peasant and merchant classes. The notion was preposterous in
1858, but more prophetic perhaps than even Shoin imagined.
Shoin would not live to see the revolution unfold. In the following May
Choshu received orders from the shogunate to send its most dangerous insurgent
to Edo. Shoin reached Edo in June, was imprisoned there in July. He was
questioned by the authorities, who were amazed by his confessions. Defiant
as ever and determined to set the authorities on the proper course, Shoin
not only openly expressed his disdain for the dictatorship of Regent Ii
and his suppression of the Loyalists, but he took it upon himself to divulge
his assassination plans.
Although Shoin’s confession had sealed his fate, even now he did not expect
to die. He was too occupied planning the revolution. What’s more, his
assassination plans had never been realized, and his confession had been
voluntary. “I don’t know what my punishment will be, but I don’t think
it will be execution,” he wrote to his family in June. It wasn't until
mid-October, when three of his comrades were executed, that Shoin realized
his end was near. On October 15 he wrote a death poem. Two days later
he was informed of his death sentence. He was brought to an open courtyard
adjacent to the prison, and led to the scaffold. With perfect composure
he kneeled atop a straw mat, beyond which was a rectangular hole dug in
the rich, dark earth to absorb the blood. Standing nearby was the executioner,
Yamada Asaemon, his long and short swords stuck through the sash at his
left hip. Asaemon, who beheaded thousands during his long, illustrious
career, was duly impressed by Shoin. “Yoshida Shoin died a truly noble
death,” he would tell his son.
Shoin calmly straightened his clothes. He asked for a piece of tissue
paper to clear his nasal passage, then recited his final death poem: “Parental
love exceeds one’s love for his parents. How will they take the tidings
of today?” The executioner now drew his long sword, and with one clean
stroke severed the head of the archetype of Japanese revolutionaries.
Copyright©2003
Romulus Hillsborough
This article originally appeared in the Autumn 2002 issue of Tokyo Journal.
(Romulus Hillsborough is the author of RYOMA - Life of a Renaissance Samurai
(Ridgeback Press, 1999) and Samurai Sketches: From the Bloody Final Years
of the Shogun (Ridgeback Press, 2001). RYOMA is the only biographical
novel of Sakamoto Ryoma in the English language. Samurai Sketches is a
collection of historical sketches, never before presented in English,
depicting men and events during the revolutionary years of mid-19th century
Japan. Reviews and more information about these books are available at
http://www.ridgebackpress.com.)
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