Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852’1912 (56 page)

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Authors: Donald Keene

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BOOK: Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852’1912
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On April 27 Saig
ō
dispatched a consular official to Amoy with a letter for local officials in which, after expressing neighborly friendship for China, he explained that he was about to set sail for Taiwan in order to fulfill the mission imposed on him by the emperor. His ships would pass territory under Chinese control, but since he had no hostile intentions toward them, he asked them not to interfere. He intended to subdue the unruly natives and make sure they would never again commit outrages against Japanese. He requested that if the savages attempted to take refuge in the areas of Taiwan controlled by the Chinese, they would be arrested and the Japanese informed.

Saig
ō
was impatient to start out for Taiwan but felt obliged to wait for permission from T
ō
ky
ō
. Finally on May 2 he decided he could wait no longer. More than a thousand soldiers boarded four warships that headed for Taiwan. L kuma followed on May 17. His departure from Nagasaki had been delayed by negotiations to purchase an American and a British merchant ship to be used in the operation.
44

The Chinese were naturally highly displeased that the Japanese had invaded an island that they considered to be their own territory and repeatedly demanded that the Japanese troops be withdrawn. The Chinese, announcing that both Taiwan and Ry
ū
ky
ū
were Chinese possessions, sent two warships to Taiwan which arrived on May 22. The captain of one of the ships met Saig
ō
and asked for a reply to this declaration. Saig
ō
answered that all discussions of the matter were in the hands of the Japanese minister to China, Yanagihara Sakimitsu. As far as he was concerned, the operation against the natives had been more or less concluded. His soldiers were suffering from the heat, and he was waiting only for the command to return to Japan for a triumphant welcome.

Although Saig
ō
had claimed that the operation against the savages was more or less over, the Japanese troops did not immediately leave Taiwan. They continued to battle not only the savages but also the tropical heat and disease. Negotiations with China for disposing of the Taiwan problem continued., with the Japanese anticipating that they might be broken off at any time. In that case, should Japan declare war on China? Most army leaders, including Yamagata Aritomo, opposed a war, contending that Japan was not yet ready, but two generals insisted that Japan had nothing to fear. They averred that even while China was resorting to delaying tactics, it was frantically arming for war and that Japan must not let China gain the advantage. The Court Council, meeting on July 9, announced that it intended to strive for a peaceful solution with China, but if this failed, there would be no alternative to war.
45

The possibility of a war with China, the model for Japanese civilization for more than a thousand years, naturally caused extreme anxiety, even though some men argued that China was no longer the old China and that Japan therefore must perform necessary tasks—such as educating the Taiwanese natives—in place of a weak and inefficient China.
46

On August 1 the emperor commanded
Ō
kubo Toshimichi to go to China to negotiate the issue of Taiwan with the Chinese government. Negotiations did not proceed smoothly. On October 2 the Chinese rejected a Japanese request for an audience with the emperor, declaring that it was insulting for the Japanese to request an audience even as they were massing their troops for an attack. On October 10
Ō
kubo delivered what was intended as a final ultimatum, but the Chinese stalled again. Both sides continued to repeat the same arguments.

Finally, however, on October 31 China and Japan agreed to a treaty. It provided that the Chinese would recognize that the Japanese move into Taiwan had been justified; that the Chinese would pay an indemnity for the loss of Japanese lives and for the costs the Japanese had incurred in building roads, erecting buildings, and the like; that acrimonious documents exchanged between the two countries would be destroyed; and that the Chinese would ensure the sea-lanes’ safety from attacks by the Taiwan savages. The departure of Japanese troops from Taiwan was set for December 20.
47

Ō
kubo returned from China on December 9 and was granted an audience with the emperor along with other officers who had served prominently in the campaign on Taiwan. The emperor thanked all of them and gave them gifts. On the thirteenth, Madenok
ō
ji Hirofusa, the acting minister of imperial household affairs, presented
Ō
kubo with 10,000 yen in gold, but
Ō
kubo declined the gift, saying that the successful conclusion of a treaty with China was owing not to his own merit but to the guidance of the emperor. He also mentioned the great expense that had been involved in pacifying the Taiwan savages and noted that the imperial palace had yet to be rebuilt.

On December 23 the emperor, at last yielding to many urgent requests, authorized the rebuilding of the imperial palace, not for his own pleasure, but because the temporary palace was so cramped official functions could not be carried out properly.

The year ended cheerfully. The dangerous rebellion in Saga had been put down with minimal government losses, and the invasion of Taiwan had achieved its real purpose, to make the Chinese admit that Okinawa was Japanese territory; but neither success was a full resolution of the issues involved. The Saga rebellion was a prelude to the much more serious Satsuma Rebellion, and in another twenty years, the dispute with China would lead to the Sino-Japanese War.

The last document of the seventh year of Meiji was a memorial presented to the throne on December 31 by Iwakura Tomomi, in which he outlined the many changes that had occurred since the arrival of Commodore Perry’s fleet in 1853. The felicitous developments, such as
haihan chiken
and the sending of the Iwakura mission to America and Europe, were attributed to the emperor’s ceaseless pondering of the needs of the country; but there were also many unfortunate events. Indeed, it might be said that only now, after twenty years of turmoil, was the country at peace and the surrounding seas calm. Iwakura’s memorial concluded with the prayer that the emperor would devote himself even more intensely to nurturing his ministers’ talents so that together they might realize the vision he had entertained ever since the beginning of his reign of restoring the grandeur of Japan.
48

Chapter 26

The eighth year of Meiji’s reign, 1875, was one of the quietest. After the customary New Year observances on January 1, he went the next day to visit the Aoyama Palace and pay his respects to the empress dowager. On the fourth he went to the Sh
ō
in to be present at the commencement of state business for the year. Prayers were offered that day to the Great Shrine of Ise, the Kamo Shrines, and the Hikawa Shrine, followed by reports from the different ministries on such subjects as the number of policemen stationed throughout the country “for the protection of the people” and the forthcoming inauguration of postal money orders. Many schools had been built during the previous year, and there were now 1,297,112 elementary-school pupils, approximately one-twenty-fourth of Japan’s entire population. Finance Minister
Ō
kuma Shigenobu offered the prime minister a budget for the coming six months that anticipated a surplus of nearly 40 million yen of revenues over expenditures.
1
In short, all seemed to going well in Japan.

As part of his continuing education, the emperor would hear in 1875 lectures delivered each month by Fukuba Bisei, Motoda Nagazane, and the newly appointed Nishimura Shigeki (1828–1902).
2
He also had calligraphy instruction from Motoda and Ch
ō
Hikaru.

The emperor’s days were otherwise occupied with performing ceremonies (such as the observances on the anniversaries of the deaths of previous emperors), giving audiences to foreign diplomats, rewarding Japanese for meritorious deeds, observing military drills, and composing poetry. The emperor’s poem at the first poetry gathering of the year was on the theme “Capital and Country Greet the New Year.” The expression is not complicated:

 
miyako ni mo
In the capital
t
ō
ki sato ni mo
And in distant villages
atarashiki
People are busy now
onaji toshi woba
Welcoming the beginning
uchimukaetsutsu
Of the same New Year.
3
 

On January 21 his second daughter was born to the
gon no tenji
Yanagihara Naruko.
4
The delivery was in a building specially constructed on the grounds of the Aoyama Palace. After the disappointment of two stillborn babies, the newborn baby seemed to be healthy, to everyone’s immense relief. During the next few days a stream of visitors came to the palace to offer congratulations. On the twenty-seventh, the emperor bestowed on the little princess the name Shigeko.
5
She would live in the Ume Goten (Plum-tree Palace) and for this reason would also be known as Umenomiya. The birth and naming were reported to the gods, and a banquet was held in the palace. Toasts were offered to the long life of the princess and to the greater and greater flourishing of the imperial line. The emperor asked the guests to share his joy.

In February there was a smallpox epidemic. The emperor and empress were vaccinated, which served to give Japanese, who might have otherwise feared an injection of foreign medicine, the courage to have themselves inoculated as well. Even little Princess Shigeko was vaccinated. On February 20 she paid her first visit to the palace, accompanied by her mother, Naruko, her grandfather Yanagihara Mitsunaru, and her uncle Yanagihara Sakimitsu. From this time on, she was frequently taken to the palace. No doubt her father was eager to see the princess as often as possible, but keeping her in the palace would have violated precedent. Meiji was obliged to follow the same custom that had required his own parents to leave him as a small child with his grandparents in the Nakayama household. It was understood that Shigeko would remain with her grandparents until the age of five.

The princess’s mother, Yanagihara Naruko, was the most notable of Meiji’s concubines. Writing in 1912 about the ladies of Meiji’s court, Sait
ō
Keish
ū
described “Sawarabi no tsubone” (her “Genji name”)
6
as a model for all women officials in the palace.
7
Sait
ō
declared that she was not only beautiful but extremely intelligent; moreover, despite being exceptionally strict in her behavior, she was also gentle. Everyone in the
ō
oku
admired her and agreed it was impossible to find fault with her behavior.

Like the other ladies who served as
gon no tenji
, Naruko was a shadowy presence even in the palace. Unlike court ladies of other ranks, who were encouraged to exercise and occasionally accompanied the empress on excursions, a
gon no tenji
rarely left her quarters within the palace and, never being exposed to sunlight, was likely to have a pallid complexion.
8
Their ranks were higher than those of most ladies of the emperor’s entourage (a few were later promoted to
tenji
and rose as high as the first rank), but a somewhat clandestine air surrounded them. Yamakawa Michiko, whose position at the court was considerably inferior to that of a
gon no tenji
, wrote, “
Gon no tenji
are what in vulgar parlance are known as mistresses. Their main task was to look after the emperor, and when he went to the
ō
oku
, they would take turns at serving by his side.”
9

Gon no tenji
took care of the emperor’s personal needs, attending him, for example, when he dressed or took a bath. But their most important function, as Yamakawa Michiko implied, was serving in his bed. This special duty was officially recognized: they were the only court ladies to receive an allowance for cosmetics.
10
The choice of just which
gon no tenji
would sleep with the emperor on a particular night was made not by him but by the senior court lady.
11
He seems not to have had strong preferences among his sleeping partners. If the emperor took a dislike to a concubine, she soon left his service, but this happened rarely. The fact that his last eight children (born between 1886 and 1897) were all born of his union with the
gon no tenji
Sono Sachiko suggests that he preferred her to the others, but it may be simply that she was exceptionally fecund. Several
gon no tenji
, including Ogura Fumiko, never bore him any children.
12

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