Translated from Japanese by Yoko Danno
[N.B. Yoko Danno’s Songs and Stories of the Kojiki is the
first English translation to capture the full sweep & ferocity of the founding
Japanese epic. The work as such was originally
published by Ahadada Books in 2008 & has just been reissued by Red MoonPress in Winchester , VA. Born,
raised & educated in Japan ,
Danno has been writing solely in English for almost forty years. She continues to live & work in Kobe . (J.R.)]
The
Deities on the Heavenly High Plains said to Izanaki the Inviting Male Deity and
Izanami the Inviting Female Deity, “This land is still floating like a
jellyfish. Give shape to it and solidify it.”
The
Heavenly Deities sent out the two, giving them the Heavenly Jeweled Spear.
Entrusted with this mission, the young Deities departed and stood on the Heavenly Floating Bridge between heaven and
earth. They lowered the Spear and stirred the muddy seawater with a churning
sound, ko-o-ro, ko-o-ro, and lifted it up. The thick salt water dripping
from the tip of the holy Spear piled up and became an island. This island is
called Onogoro-jima. The two went down there and brought into being the
Heavenly Pillar and a spacious palace for their wedding.
At this time Izanaki the Inviting Male Deity
asked Izanami the Inviting Female Deity, “How is your body made?”
“My body is finely made,” the Female Deity
answered, “but has one place which is insufficiently made.”
“My
body is finely made, too,” the Male Deity said, “but has one place which is
excessively made. Therefore I would like to produce land by inserting the place
which is excessive in my body into the place which is insufficient in your
body. What do you think of giving birth to the land like this?”
“That
sounds good to me,” the Female Deity answered.
“Well,
shall we,” said the Male Deity, “you and I, walk around this Heavenly Pillar,
and mate with each other where we meet? Do you agree?”
The
Female Deity consented. After the two promised thus, the Male Deity said, “Then
you walk around from the right, and I will walk around from the left to meet
you.”
They
agreed and each walked around the Heavenly Pillar, and then the Female Deity
spoke first: “What a handsome man you are!”
Then
afterwards the Male Deity said, “What a beautiful woman you are!”
After
each spoke thus, the Male Deity said to the Female Deity, “It is not right that
the woman spoke first.”
The
Male and Female Deities, however, mated in the holy bed. The Female Deity gave
birth to a leech-like, boneless child. They placed the child in a boat woven
with reed and cast it off shore. Next, she gave birth to a weakling island,
Awa-shima, which was not recognized as their proper child, either.
The
two Deities consulted each other and said, “Our children who have just been
born are deficient. We’d better return to heaven and report this to the
Heavenly Deities.”
Immediately
they returned together to heaven and asked for advice. The Deities in heaven
performed a grand divination by heating the blade-bone of a deer. Observing the
cracks, they said, “The children were born deficient because the woman spoke
first. Descend again, and say it once more.”
Therefore
the Male Deity Izanaki and the Female Deity Izanami descended again and circled
round the Heavenly Pillar as they had done before.
Then
the Male Deity Izanaki spoke first: “What a beautiful woman you are!” The
Female Deity Izanami said afterward, “What a handsome man you are!”
After
each spoke thus they wedded again.
Izanaki and
Izanami Give Birth to Fourteen
Islands
After
that time Izanaki and Izanami bore many fine islands. The first island born was
Awaji . Next was Iyo. This island has one body
and four faces, each with a name: E-hime, a fine woman; Ihiyori-hiko, a man
possessed by a food spirit; Oho-getsu-hime, a woman in charge of food; and
Takeyori-wake, a brave-spirited man. Then the couple bore the triple island of Oki ,
and next, the island
of Tsukushi . This island
also has one body and four faces, each with a name describing the brilliance of
the sunshine. Then they bore the island
of Iki , the island
of Tsushima and the island of Sado ,
and next, the main island thick with grain plants, the Great Yamato
Island . These eight
islands which were born first are called collectively the Great
Land of the Eight Islands .
After
giving birth to these islands, Izanaki and Izanami returned to the island of Onogoro . On their way home they bore six
more islands including twin islands.
Izanaki and Izanami Give Birth to Thirty-Five Deities
After
Izanaki and Izanami had finished giving birth to the various islands, they
started bearing deities. The first deity born was the great-task-carrying-out
deity. Next born were the male deity of rock and soil and the female deity of
stone and sand. Then the deity of great doors, the roof-thatching deity, the
deity in charge of the safety of houses and the deity who protects houses from
storms were born. Next they bore the sea deity Oho-watatsumi and a couple of
river-mouth deities, Akitsu-hiko and Akitsu-hime.
Akitsu-hiko
and Akitsu-hime rule respectively rivers and seas. They joined forces and gave
birth to the bubble-sinking male deity Awa-nagi and the bubble-rising female
deity Awa-nami. Next were born the surface-calming male deity Tsuru-nagi and
the surface-rippling female deity Tsuru-nami. They bore next a pair of deities
who distribute water at the watershed and a pair of deities holding ladles to
draw water.
In
the meantime, Izanaki and Izanami continued their labor. They gave birth to the
wind deity Shinatsu-hiko, the tree deity Kukunochi, the mountain deity
Oho-yamatsumi and the female plain deity Kayano-hime.
The
coupled deities Oho-yamatsumi and Kayano-hime, who rule respectively mountains
and plains, gave birth to a pair of soil deities, a pair of fog-and-mist
deities, a pair of valley deities and a couple of deities who protect strays in
the mountains.
Izanaki
and Izanami still continued their labor. They gave birth to Tori-fune, the
deity of the heavenly ship as fast as a bird and made of camphor wood as hard
as rock. Next they bore the female deity Oho-getsu-hime who is in charge of
food. Next was born the burning deity Kagu-tsuchi.
Izanami Dies
When
Izanami was delivered of the fire deity Kagu-tsuchi, her genitals were severely
burnt and she was seriously ill in bed. She vomited and in her vomit a pair of
ore deities came into being. In her excrement arose a pair of clay deities, and
in her urine the female deity who controls irrigation water and the young deity
full of procreative force whose daughter is the food goddess Toyo-uke.
Then,
at last, Izanami, who had given birth to the fire deity Kagu-tsuchi, passed
away.
“I
have exchanged the life of my beloved wife for just one child!” Izanaki greatly
lamented. Crawling around the head and feet of his wife, he wailed. From his
tears arose the female weeping deity Naki-sawame, who dwells at the foot of the
trees on the hill of the holy Kagu
Mountain . Izanaki buried
his wife on Mount Hiba at the border between the land
of Izumo and the land of Hahaki .
[EDITOR’S NOTE. As the
oldest surviving Japanese book, the Kojiki,
or “Record of Ancient Things,” completed on “the twenty-eighth day of the first
month of the fifth year of Wado” (A.D. 722) is an attempt to keep a grip on
matters already at some distance from the compilers & to establish the
“origins” of the Japanese court & nation on (roughly) native grounds. It is, at the same time, “a compilation of
myths, historical & pseudo-historical narratives and legends, songs,
anecdotes, folk etymologies, and genealogies.”
(Thus: Donald L. Philippi, the composer of a previous translation.) Like other such works it begins with the generations of the gods &
follows their creation of -- & descent into – this-place-here. The fecundity & sexuality of those early
gods – like Izanaki and Izanami in the present instance –is an example of
surreality (= poesis) as an attempt to comprehend & thereby to possess the
world.]
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