Monday 6 September 2010

Kwaidan - Lafcadio Hearn

Kwaidan (Stories and Studies of Strange Things) is a collection of tales by a writer who adopted Japan as his country. Lafcadio Hearn was born in Greece, raised in Ireland and worked in the USA, before moving to Japan in his later years. The stories contained in Kwaidan are generally based on old folktales from Japan but perhaps also China.  Some however, are direct accounts of occurences that Hearn himself witnessed and expanded on in his own style.


Highly imaginative in his story-telling but enfused with an unmistakable Oriental psyche, the stories of Kwaidan are very entertaining. As one might expect with folk lore, every story seems to have some sensitive moral sitting quietly behind it. Sometimes the lesson is very obvious, othertimes it is very obscure. 


The story of Aoyagi is a good example of what would appear strange and almost unimaginable to modern man, particularly modern westerners. It is a story that relates much the historical figure of the good smaurai and a deeper lesson that appears right at the end. A heroic and honorable samurai is on a mission for his lord. He falls in love with a strange girl called Aoyagi whom he meets on his travels. Though various hardships befall the pair, they eventually wed and for five happy years dwell together as husband and wife. Suddenly all of a sudden, she cries out in pain and tells the samurai that she is dying. Though she has the appearance of a human women, her soul and heart are infact the belongings of a tree in a forest. Someone was presently cutting the tree down and she cannot continue to live. The story of Aoyagi represents again the importance of nature to the Japanese people. That people and forests are linked to the point of life and death is clearly illustrated in this short folk tale.