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GREAT FIRE CAUSED BY A LADY'S DRESS SOME
120 years ago, in the year of Temmei, a most terrible fire broke out in
the
western corner of Yedo, — the worst fire, probably, that is known to
the
world's history, for it is said to have destroyed no fewer than 188,000
persons. At
that time there lived in Yedo, now Tokio, a very rich pawnbroker, Enshu
Hikoyemon, the proud possessor of a beautiful daughter aged sixteen,
whose name
was O Same, which in this instance is probably derived from the word
'sameru'
(to fade away), for in truth O Same San did fade away. Enshu Hikoyemon loved his daughter dearly, and, he being a widower with no other child, his thoughts and affections were concentrated on her alone. He had long been rich enough to cast aside the mean thoughts and characteristics which had enabled him to reach his present position. From being a hard-hearted relentless money-grubber, Enshu Hikoyemon had become softhearted and generous — as far, at all events, as his daughter was concerned. O Same Sees the Handsome Young Priest One
day the beautiful O Same went to pray at her ancestors' graves. She was
accompanied by her maid, and, after saying her prayers, passed the
Temple of
Hommyoji, which is in the same grounds at Hongo Maru Yama, and there,
as she
repeated her prayers before the image of Buddha, she saw a young
priest, with
whom she fell instantly in love. Thitherto she had had no love-affair;
nor,
indeed, did she fully realise what had happened, beyond the fact that
the
youth's face pleased her to gaze upon. It was a solemn and noble face.
As O
Same lit a joss-stick and handed it to the priest, to be placed before
Buddha,
their hands met, and she felt pass through her body a thrill the like
of which
she had never experienced. Poor O Same was what is known as madly in
love at
first sight, — in love so much that as she arose and left the temple
all she
could see was the face of the young priest; wherever she looked she saw
nothing
else. She spoke not a word to her maid on the way home, but went
straight to
her room. Next
morning she announced to the maid that she was indisposed. 'Go,' she
said, 'and
tell my dear father that I shall remain in bed. I do not feel well this
day.' Next
day was much the same, and so were the next and the next. Hikoyemon,
disconsolate, tried every means to enliven his daughter. He sought to
get her
away to the seaside. He offered to take her to the Holy Temple of Ise
or to
Kompira. She would not go. Doctors were called, and could find nothing
wrong
with O Same San. 'She has something on her mind, and when you can get
it off
she will be well,' was all that they could say. At
last O Same confessed to her father that she had lost her heart to a
young
priest in the Hommyoji Temple. 'Nay,' she said: 'be not angry with me,
father,
for I do not know him, and have seen him only once. In that once I
loved him,
for he has a noble face, which haunts me night and day; and so it is
that my
heart is heavy, and my body sickens for the want of him. Oh, father, if
you
love me and wish to save my life, go and find him and tell him that I
love him,
and that without him I must die!' Poor
Hikoyemon! Here was a nice business — his daughter in love — dying of
love for
an unknown priest! What was he to do? First he humoured his daughter,
and at
last, after several days, persuaded her to accompany him to the temple.
Unfortunately, they did not see the priest in question; nor did they on
a
second visit; and after this O Same became more disconsolate than ever,
absolutely refusing to leave her room. Night and day her sobs were
heard all
over the house, and her father was utterly wretched, especially as he
had now
found out secretly that the priest with whom his daughter had fallen in
love
was one of the most strict of Buddha's followers, and not likely to err
from
the disciplinarian rules of religion. In
spite of this, Hikoyemon determined to make an effort in behalf of his
daughter. He ventured to the temple alone, saw the priest, told him of
his
daughter's love, and asked if a union would be possible. The
priest spurned the idea, saying, 'Is it not evident to you by my robes
that I
have devoted my love to Buddha? It is an insult that you should make
such a
proposition to me!' Hikoyemon
returned to his home deeply mortified at the rebuff; but felt it his
duty to be
candid with his daughter. O
Same wept herself into hysterics. She grew worse day by day. Hoping to
distract
her mind, her father had got made for her a magnificent dress which
cost nearly
yen 4000. He thought that O Same would be vain enough to wish to put it
on, and
to go out and show it. This
was no use. O Same was not like other women. She cared not for fine
raiment or
for creating sensations. She put the costume on in her room, to please
her
father; but then she took it off again, and went back to her bed,
where, two
days later, she died of a broken heart. Hikoyemon
felt the loss of his pretty daughter very much. At the funeral there
must have
been half a mile of flower-bearers. The
superb dress was presented to the temple. Such dresses are carefully
kept; they
remind the priests to say prayers for their late owners as, every two
or three
months, they are being dusted and cleaned. The
Vicar or Head Priest of this temple, however, was not a good man. He
stole this
particular dress of O Same's, knowing the value, and sold it secretly
to a
second-hand dealer in such things. Some
twelve months later the dress was again donated to the same temple by
another
father whose daughter had died of a love-affair, he having bought the
dress at
the second-hand clothes-shop. (This girl died and was buried on the
same day of
the same month as O Same.) The
priest of the temple was not sorry to see the valuable garment return
as a gift
to his church, and, being mercenary, he sold it again. It seemed,
indeed, a
sort of gold-mine to himself and his church. Imagine, therefore, the
feeling
among the priests when, in the following year, in the same month and on
exactly
the same day as that on which O Same and the other girl had died,
another girl
of exactly the same age was buried in their cemetery, having died also
of a
love-affair, and having also worn the splendid dress that O Same was
given,
which was duly presented to the temple, at the conclusion of her burial
service, for the third time. To
say that the chief priest was astonished would be to say little. He and
the
rest of them were sorely perplexed and troubled. There
were the honest priests, who had had nothing to do with the selling of
the
garment, and the dishonest head priest or vicar. The honest men were
puzzled.
The vicar was frightened into thinking honesty the best policy amid the
circumstances. Accordingly, he assembled all the priests of the temple,
made a
hasty confession, and asked for advice. The
priests came to one conclusion, and that was that the spirit of O Same
San was
in the dress, and that it must be burned, and burned with some
ceremony, so as
to appease her spirit. Accordingly a time was fixed. When the day
arrived many
people came to the temple. A great ceremony was held, and finally the
valuable
garment was placed upon a stone cut in the shape of a lotus flower and
lighted.
The
weather was calm at the time; but as the garment took fire a sudden
gust of wind
came, instantly fanning the whole into flame. The gust increased into a
storm,
which carried one of the sleeves of the dress up to the ceiling of the
temple,
where it caught between two rafters and burned viciously. In less than
two or
three minutes the whole temple was on fire. The fire went on for seven
days and
seven nights, at the expiration of which time nearly the whole of the
south and
western portions of Yedo were gone; and gone also were 188,000 people. The
charred remains (as far as possible) were collected and buried, and a
temple
(which now exists), called 'Eko In,' was built at the spot, to invoke
the
blessing of Buddha on their souls. NOTE
BY MATSUZAKI. — At the present day the Eko In Temple is well known.
Games and
wrestling are held there twice a year. Visitors to the temple see the
wrestling-place; but no one asks why the temple was built there. |