In the trembling grey of a spring
dawn, when the birds were whispering in mysterious
cadence among the trees, have you not felt that they
were talking to their mates about the flowers?
Surely with mankind the appreciation of flowers must
have been coeval with the poetry of love. Where
better than in a flower, sweet in its unconsciousness,
fragrant because of its silence, can we image the
unfolding of a virgin soul? The primeval man
in offering the first garland to his maiden thereby
transcended the brute. He became human in thus
rising above the crude necessities of nature.
He entered the realm of art when he perceived the
subtle use of the useless.
In joy or sadness, flowers are our
constant friends. We eat, drink, sing, dance,
and flirt with them. We wed and christen with
flowers. We dare not die without them. We
have worshipped with the lily, we have meditated with
the lotus, we have charged in battle array with the
rose and the chrysanthemum. We have even attempted
to speak in the language of flowers. How could
we live without them? It frightens one to conceive
of a world bereft of their presence. What solace
do they not bring to the bedside of the sick, what
a light of bliss to the darkness of weary spirits?
Their serene tenderness restores to us our waning confidence
in the universe even as the intent gaze of a beautiful
child recalls our lost hopes. When we are laid
low in the dust it is they who linger in sorrow over
our graves.
Sad as it is, we cannot conceal the
fact that in spite of our companionship with flowers
we have not risen very far above the brute. Scratch
the sheepskin and the wolf within us will soon show
his teeth. It has been said that a man at ten
is an animal, at twenty a lunatic, at thirty a failure,
at forty a fraud, and at fifty a criminal. Perhaps
he becomes a criminal because he has never ceased
to be an animal. Nothing is real to us but hunger,
nothing sacred except our own desires. Shrine
after shrine has crumbled before our eyes; but one
altar is forever preserved, that whereon we burn incense
to the supreme idol, ourselves. Our
god is great, and money is his Prophet! We devastate
nature in order to make sacrifice to him. We
boast that we have conquered Matter and forget that
it is Matter that has enslaved us. What atrocities
do we not perpetrate in the name of culture and refinement!
Tell me, gentle flowers, teardrops
of the stars, standing in the garden, nodding your
heads to the bees as they sing of the dews and the
sunbeams, are you aware of the fearful doom that awaits
you? Dream on, sway and frolic while you may
in the gentle breezes of summer. To-morrow a
ruthless hand will close around your throats.
You will be wrenched, torn asunder limb by limb, and
borne away from your quiet homes. The wretch,
she may be passing fair. She may say how lovely
you are while her fingers are still moist with your
blood. Tell me, will this be kindness? It
may be your fate to be imprisoned in the hair of one
whom you know to be heartless or to be thrust into
the buttonhole of one who would not dare to look you
in the face were you a man. It may even be your
lot to be confined in some narrow vessel with only
stagnant water to quench the maddening thirst that
warns of ebbing life.
Flowers, if you were in the land of
the Mikado, you might some time meet a dread personage
armed with scissors and a tiny saw. He would call
himself a Master of Flowers. He would claim the
rights of a doctor and you would instinctively hate
him, for you know a doctor always seeks to prolong
the troubles of his victims. He would cut, bend,
and twist you into those impossible positions which
he thinks it proper that you should assume. He
would contort your muscles and dislocate your bones
like any osteopath. He would burn you with red-hot
coals to stop your bleeding, and thrust wires into
you to assist your circulation. He would diet
you with salt, vinegar, alum, and sometimes, vitriol.
Boiling water would be poured on your feet when you
seemed ready to faint. It would be his boast
that he could keep life within you for two or more
weeks longer than would have been possible without
his treatment. Would you not have preferred to
have been killed at once when you were first captured?
What were the crimes you must have committed during
your past incarnation to warrant such punishment in
this?
The wanton waste of flowers among
Western communities is even more appalling than the
way they are treated by Eastern Flower Masters.
The number of flowers cut daily to adorn the ballrooms
and banquet-tables of Europe and America, to be thrown
away on the morrow, must be something enormous; if
strung together they might garland a continent.
Beside this utter carelessness of life, the guilt
of the Flower-Master becomes insignificant. He,
at least, respects the economy of nature, selects
his victims with careful foresight, and after death
does honour to their remains. In the West the
display of flowers seems to be a part of the pageantry
of wealth, the fancy of a moment. Whither
do they all go, these flowers, when the revelry is
over? Nothing is more pitiful than to see a faded
flower remorselessly flung upon a dung heap.
Why were the flowers born so beautiful
and yet so hapless? Insects can sting, and even
the meekest of beasts will fight when brought to bay.
The birds whose plumage is sought to deck some bonnet
can fly from its pursuer, the furred animal whose
coat you covet for your own may hide at your approach.
Alas! The only flower known to have wings is the
butterfly; all others stand helpless before the destroyer.
If they shriek in their death agony their cry never
reaches our hardened ears. We are ever brutal
to those who love and serve us in silence, but the
time may come when, for our cruelty, we shall be deserted
by these best friends of ours. Have you not noticed
that the wild flowers are becoming scarcer every year?
It may be that their wise men have told them to depart
till man becomes more human. Perhaps they have
migrated to heaven.
Much may be said in favor of him who
cultivates plants. The man of the pot is far
more humane than he of the scissors. We watch
with delight his concern about water and sunshine,
his feuds with parasites, his horror of frosts, his
anxiety when the buds come slowly, his rapture when
the leaves attain their lustre. In the East the
art of floriculture is a very ancient one, and the
loves of a poet and his favorite plant have often
been recorded in story and song. With the development
of ceramics during the Tang and Sung dynasties we hear
of wonderful receptacles made to hold plants, not
pots, but jewelled palaces. A special attendant
was detailed to wait upon each flower and to wash
its leaves with soft brushes made of rabbit hair.
It has been written ["Pingtse”, by Yuenchunlang]
that the peony should be bathed by a handsome maiden
in full costume, that a winter-plum should be watered
by a pale, slender monk. In Japan, one of the
most popular of the No-dances, the Hachinoki, composed
during the Ashikaga period, is based upon the story
of an impoverished knight, who, on a freezing night,
in lack of fuel for a fire, cuts his cherished plants
in order to entertain a wandering friar. The
friar is in reality no other than Hojo-Tokiyori, the
Haroun-Al-Raschid of our tales, and the sacrifice is
not without its reward. This opera never fails
to draw tears from a Tokio audience even to-day.
Great precautions were taken for the
preservation of delicate blossoms. Emperor Huensung,
of the Tang Dynasty, hung tiny golden bells on the
branches in his garden to keep off the birds.
He it was who went off in the springtime with his
court musicians to gladden the flowers with soft music.
A quaint tablet, which tradition ascribes to Yoshitsune,
the hero of our Arthurian legends, is still extant
in one of the Japanese monasteries [Sumadera, near
Kobe]. It is a notice put up for the protection
of a certain wonderful plum-tree, and appeals to us
with the grim humour of a warlike age. After
referring to the beauty of the blossoms, the inscription
says: “Whoever cuts a single branch of this
tree shall forfeit a finger therefor.” Would
that such laws could be enforced nowadays against
those who wantonly destroy flowers and mutilate objects
of art!
Yet even in the case of pot flowers
we are inclined to suspect the selfishness of man.
Why take the plants from their homes and ask them to
bloom mid strange surroundings? Is it not like
asking the birds to sing and mate cooped up in cages?
Who knows but that the orchids feel stifled by the
artificial heat in your conservatories and hopelessly
long for a glimpse of their own Southern skies?
The ideal lover of flowers is he who
visits them in their native haunts, like Taoyuenming
[all celebrated Chinese poets and philosophers], who
sat before a broken bamboo fence in converse with the
wild chrysanthemum, or Linwosing, losing himself amid
mysterious fragrance as he wandered in the twilight
among the plum-blossoms of the Western Lake.
’Tis said that Chowmushih slept in a boat so
that his dreams might mingle with those of the lotus.
It was the same spirit which moved the Empress Komio,
one of our most renowned Nara sovereigns, as she sang:
“If I pluck thee, my hand will defile thee, O
flower! Standing in the meadows as thou art,
I offer thee to the Buddhas of the past, of the present,
of the future.”
However, let us not be too sentimental.
Let us be less luxurious but more magnificent.
Said Laotse: “Heaven and earth are pitiless.”
Said Kobodaishi: “Flow, flow, flow, flow,
the current of life is ever onward. Die, die,
die, die, death comes to all.” Destruction
faces us wherever we turn. Destruction below
and above, destruction behind and before. Change
is the only Eternal, why not as welcome
Death as Life? They are but counterparts one
of the other, The Night and Day of Brahma.
Through the disintegration of the old, re-creation
becomes possible. We have worshipped Death, the
relentless goddess of mercy, under many different
names. It was the shadow of the All-devouring
that the Gheburs greeted in the fire. It is the
icy purism of the sword-soul before which Shinto-Japan
prostrates herself even to-day. The mystic fire
consumes our weakness, the sacred sword cleaves the
bondage of desire. From our ashes springs the
phoenix of celestial hope, out of the freedom comes
a higher realisation of manhood.
Why not destroy flowers if thereby
we can evolve new forms ennobling the world idea?
We only ask them to join in our sacrifice to the beautiful.
We shall atone for the deed by consecrating ourselves
to Purity and Simplicity. Thus reasoned the tea-masters
when they established the Cult of Flowers.
Anyone acquainted with the ways of
our tea- and flower-masters must have noticed the
religious veneration with which they regard flowers.
They do not cull at random, but carefully select each
branch or spray with an eye to the artistic composition
they have in mind. They would be ashamed should
they chance to cut more than were absolutely necessary.
It may be remarked in this connection that they always
associate the leaves, if there be any, with the flower,
for the object is to present the whole beauty of plant
life. In this respect, as in many others, their
method differs from that pursued in Western countries.
Here we are apt to see only the flower stems, heads
as it were, without body, stuck promiscuously into
a vase.
When a tea-master has arranged a flower
to his satisfaction he will place it on the tokonoma,
the place of honour in a Japanese room. Nothing
else will be placed near it which might interfere with
its effect, not even a painting, unless there be some
special aesthetic reason for the combination.
It rests there like an enthroned prince, and the guests
or disciples on entering the room will salute it with
a profound bow before making their addresses to the
host. Drawings from masterpieces are made and
published for the edification of amateurs. The
amount of literature on the subject is quite voluminous.
When the flower fades, the master tenderly consigns
it to the river or carefully buries it in the ground.
Monuments are sometimes erected to their memory.
The birth of the Art of Flower Arrangement
seems to be simultaneous with that of Teaism in the
fifteenth century. Our legends ascribe the first
flower arrangement to those early Buddhist saints who
gathered the flowers strewn by the storm and, in their
infinite solicitude for all living things, placed
them in vessels of water. It is said that Soami,
the great painter and connoisseur of the court of Ashikaga-Yoshimasa,
was one of the earliest adepts at it. Juko, the
tea-master, was one of his pupils, as was also Senno,
the founder of the house of Ikenobo, a family as illustrious
in the annals of flowers as was that of the Kanos
in painting. With the perfecting of the tea-ritual
under Rikiu, in the latter part of the sixteenth century,
flower arrangement also attains its full growth.
Rikiu and his successors, the celebrated Oda-wuraka,
Furuka-Oribe, Koyetsu, Kobori-Enshiu, Katagiri-Sekishiu,
vied with each other in forming new combinations.
We must remember, however, that the flower-worship
of the tea-masters formed only a part of their aesthetic
ritual, and was not a distinct religion by itself.
A flower arrangement, like the other works of art
in the tea-room, was subordinated to the total scheme
of decoration. Thus Sekishiu ordained that white
plum blossoms should not be made use of when snow
lay in the garden. “Noisy” flowers
were relentlessly banished from the tea-room.
A flower arrangement by a tea-master loses its significance
if removed from the place for which it was originally
intended, for its lines and proportions have been
specially worked out with a view to its surroundings.
The adoration of the flower for its
own sake begins with the rise of “Flower-Masters,”
toward the middle of the seventeenth century.
It now becomes independent of the tea-room and knows
no law save that the vase imposes on it. New
conceptions and methods of execution now become possible,
and many were the principles and schools resulting
therefrom. A writer in the middle of the last
century said he could count over one hundred different
schools of flower arrangement. Broadly speaking,
these divide themselves into two main branches, the
Formalistic and the Naturalesque. The Formalistic
schools, led by the Ikenobos, aimed at a classic idealism
corresponding to that of the Kano-academicians.
We possess records of arrangements by the early masters
of the school which almost reproduce the flower paintings
of Sansetsu and Tsunenobu. The Naturalesque school,
on the other hand, accepted nature as its model, only
imposing such modifications of form as conduced to
the expression of artistic unity. Thus we recognise
in its works the same impulses which formed the Ukiyoe
and Shijo schools of painting.
It would be interesting, had we time,
to enter more fully than it is now possible into the
laws of composition and detail formulated by the various
flower-masters of this period, showing, as they would,
the fundamental theories which governed Tokugawa decoration.
We find them referring to the Leading Principle (Heaven),
the Subordinate Principle (Earth), the Reconciling
Principle (Man), and any flower arrangement which
did not embody these principles was considered barren
and dead. They also dwelt much on the importance
of treating a flower in its three different aspects,
the Formal, the Semi-Formal, and the Informal.
The first might be said to represent flowers in the
stately costume of the ballroom, the second in the
easy elegance of afternoon dress, the third in the
charming deshabille of the boudoir.
Our personal sympathies are with the
flower-arrangements of the tea-master rather than
with those of the flower-master. The former is
art in its proper setting and appeals to us on account
of its true intimacy with life. We should like
to call this school the Natural in contradistinction
to the Naturalesque and Formalistic schools. The
tea-master deems his duty ended with the selection
of the flowers, and leaves them to tell their own
story. Entering a tea-room in late winter, you
may see a slender spray of wild cherries in combination
with a budding camellia; it is an echo of departing
winter coupled with the prophecy of spring. Again,
if you go into a noon-tea on some irritatingly hot
summer day, you may discover in the darkened coolness
of the tokonoma a single lily in a hanging vase; dripping
with dew, it seems to smile at the foolishness of
life.
A solo of flowers is interesting,
but in a concerto with painting and sculpture the
combination becomes entrancing. Sekishiu once
placed some water-plants in a flat receptacle to suggest
the vegetation of lakes and marshes, and on the wall
above he hung a painting by Soami of wild ducks flying
in the air. Shoha, another tea-master, combined
a poem on the Beauty of Solitude by the Sea with a
bronze incense burner in the form of a fisherman’s
hut and some wild flowers of the beach. One of
the guests has recorded that he felt in the whole
composition the breath of waning autumn.
Flower stories are endless. We
shall recount but one more. In the sixteenth
century the morning-glory was as yet a rare plant with
us. Rikiu had an entire garden planted with it,
which he cultivated with assiduous care. The
fame of his convulvuli reached the ear of the Taiko,
and he expressed a desire to see them, in consequence
of which Rikiu invited him to a morning tea at his
house. On the appointed day Taiko walked through
the garden, but nowhere could he see any vestige of
the convulvus. The ground had been leveled and
strewn with fine pebbles and sand. With sullen
anger the despot entered the tea-room, but a sight
waited him there which completely restored his humour.
On the tokonoma, in a rare bronze of Sung workmanship,
lay a single morning-glory the queen of
the whole garden!
In such instances we see the full
significance of the Flower Sacrifice. Perhaps
the flowers appreciate the full significance of it.
They are not cowards, like men. Some flowers
glory in death certainly the Japanese cherry
blossoms do, as they freely surrender themselves to
the winds. Anyone who has stood before the fragrant
avalanche at Yoshino or Arashiyama must have realized
this. For a moment they hover like bejewelled
clouds and dance above the crystal streams; then, as
they sail away on the laughing waters, they seem to
say: “Farewell, O Spring! We are on
to eternity.”