From the 11th Chapter
In the "Notes on Martial Laws" it is written that: A helmet is usually thought to be very heavy, but when one is attacking a castle or something similar, and arrows, bullets, large rocks, great pieces of wood and the like are corning down, it will not seem the least bit so.
Once when Master Yagyu was before the shogun on some
business, a number of bamboo swords fell from the ceiling.
He quickly clasped his hands above his head and was not
struck . A person who does not want to be struck by the enemy s arrows will have no divine protection. For a man who does not wish to be hit by the arrows of a common soldier, but rather by those of a warrior of fame, there will be the protection for which he has asked. Wind-bells are things that are used during campaigns in order to know the direction of the wind. For night attacks, fire can be set windward while the attack can be carried out from the opposite direction. Your allies should be mindful of this also. One should always hang wind-bells in order to know the direction of the wind. Lord Aki declared that he would not have his descendants learn military tactics. He said, "On the battlefield, once discretion starts it cannot be stopped. One will not break through to the enemy with discretion. Indiscretion is most important when in front of the tiger's den. Therefore, if one were informed of military tactics, he would have many doubts, and there will be no end to the matter. My descendants will not practice military tactics.'
According to Lord Naoshige's words:
Takeda Shingen once said, "If there was a man who could
kill Lord Ieyasu, I would give him a handsome reward."
Hearing this, a boy of thirteen entered into the service of
Lord Ieyasu and one night when he saw that Ieyasu had
retired, took a stab at his bedding. Lord Ieyasu was actually
in the next room silently reading a sutra, but he quickly
grabbed the boy.
One night some samurai from Karatsu gathered together
and were playing go. Master Kitabatake was watching the
game, and when he offered a suggestion, one man attacked
him with a sword. After the people around them had
stopped the man, Master Kitabatake pinched out the light of the
candle and said, "It was nothing more than my own
indiscretion, and I apologize. The sword hit the go case; I was
not the least bit wounded." There is nothing so painful as regret. We would all like to be without it. However, when we are very happy and become elated, or when we habitually jump into something thoughtlessly, later we are distraught, and it is for the most part because we did not think ahead and are now regretful. Certainly we should try not to become dejected, and when very happy should calm our minds.
These are teachings of Yamamoto Jin'emon:
It is a principle of the art of war that one should simply
lay down his life and strike. If one's opponent also does the
same, it is an even match. Defeating one's opponent is then
a matter of faith and destiny.
When one departs for the front, he should carry rice in a
bag. His underwear should be made from the skin of a
badger. This way he will not have lice. In a long campaign, lice
are troublesome. If a warrior is not unattached to life and death, he will be of no use whatsoever. The saying that "All abilities come from one mind" sounds as though it has to do with sentient matters, but it is in fact a matter of being unattached to life and death. With such non-attachment one can accomplish any feat. Martial arts and the like are related to this insofar as they can lead to the Way. To calm one's mind, one swallows his saliva. This is a secret matter. When one becomes angry, it is the same. Putting spittle on one's forehead is also good. In the Yoshida school of archery, swallowing one's spittle is the secret principle of the art. A certain general said, "For soldiers other than officers, if they would test their armor, they should test only the front. Furthermore, while ornamentation on armor is unnecessary, one should be very careful about the appearance of his helmet. It is something that accompanies his head to the enemy's camp." Nakano Jin'emon said, "Learning such things as military tactics is useless. If one does not strike out by simply closing his eyes and rushing into the enemy, even if it is only one step, he will be of no use." This was also the opinion of Iyanaga Sasuke. In Natsume Toneri's "Military Stories" it is written: "Look at the soldiers of recent times ! Even in long battles there are hardly one or two occasions when blood is washed with blood. One should not be negligent." Toneri was a ronin from the Kamigata area.
To have execution grounds in a place where travelers
come and go is useless. The executions in Edo and the
Kamigala area are meant to be an example for the whole country.
But the executions in one province are only for an example
in that province. If crimes are many, it is a province's shame.
How would this look to other provinces?
Matsudaira Izu no kami said to Master Mizuno Kenmotsu,
"You're such a useful person, it's a shame that you're so
short.''
A certain person was passing by the town of Yae when
suddenly his stomach began to hurt. He stopped at a house
on a side street and asked to use the toilet. There was only
a young woman there, but she took him to the back and
showed him where it was. Just as he was taking off his hakama
and going into the toilet, the woman's husband came
home and accused them both of adultery. In the end, it
became a public matter. In assessing the enemy's castle there is a saying that goes, "Smoke and mist are like looking at a spring mountain. After the rain is like viewing a clear day." There is weakness in perfect clarity. Among the words spoken by great generals, there are some that were said offhandedly. One should not receive these words in the same manner, however. People who have an intelligent appearance will not be outstanding even if they do something good, and if they do something normal, people will think them lacking. But if a person who is thought of as having a gentle disposition does even a slightly good thing, he will be praised by people.
On the fourteenth day of the seventh month in the third
year of Shotoku, there were some cooks in the midst of
preparations for the Ben Festival in the outer citadel of the
castle. One of them, Hara Jurozaemon, unsheathed his
sword and cut off the head of Sagara Genzaemon. Mawatari
Rokuuemon, Aiura Tarobei, Kola Kinbei and Kakihara
Riemen all ran away in confusion. When Jurozaemon sighted
Kinbei and started chasing him, the latter fled to the foot
soldiers' gathering area. There, the daimyo's palanquin
attendant, Tanaka Takeuemon, stood against Jurozaemon
and took away his still drawn sword. Ishirnaru San'emon
chased Jurozaemon, and when they came to the foot
soldiers' area, assisted Takeuemon. Among Takeda Shingen's retainers there were men of matchless courage, but when Katsuyori was killed in the fight at Tenmokuzan, they all fled. Tsuchiya Sozo, a warrior who had been in disfavor for many years, came out alone, however, and said, "I wonder where all the men are who spoke so bravely every day? I shall return the master's favors to me." And he fell alone in battle.
The essentials of speaking are in not speaking at all. If
you think that you can finish something without speaking,
finish it without saying a single word. If there is something
that cannot be accomplished without speaking, one should
speak with few words, in a way that will accord well with
reason . A devotee of the Nembutsu recites the Buddha's name with every incoming and outgoing breath in order never to forget the Buddha. A retainer, too, should be just like this in thinking of his master. Not to forget one's master is the most fundamental thing for a retainer. Men who did well at the time of their death were men of real bravery. There are many examples of such. But people who talk in an accomplished fashion every day yet are agitated at the time of their death can be known not to have true bravery .
In the secret principles of Yagyu Tajima no kami Munenori
there is the saying, "There are no military tactics for a man
of great strength." As proof of this, there was once a certain
vassal of the shogun who came to Master Yagyu and
asked to become a disciple. Master Yagyu said, "You seem
to be a man who is very accomplished in some school of
martial art. Let us make the master-disciple contract after
I learn the name of the school."
Meditation on inevitable death should be performed daily.
Every day when one's body and mind are at peace, one
should meditate upon being ripped apart by arrows, rifles,
spears and swords, being carried away by surging waves,
being thrown into the midst of a great fire, being struck by
lightning, being shaken to death by a great earthquake,
falling from thousand-foot cliffs, dying of disease or committing
seppuku at the death of one's master. And every day without
fail one should consider himself as dead.
People will become your enemies if you become eminent
too quickly in life, and you will be ineffectual. Rising slowly
in the world, people will be your allies and your happiness
will he assured. The warriors of old cultivated mustaches, for as proof that a man had been slain in battle, his ears and nose would be cut off and brought to the enemy's camp. So that there would be no mistake as to whether the person was a man or a woman, the mustache was also cut off with the nose. At such a time the head was thrown away if it had no mustache, for it might be mistaken for that of a woman. Therefore, growing a mustache was one of the disciplines of a samurai so that his head would not be thrown away upon his death. Tsunetomo said, "If one washes his face with water every morning, if he is slain his complexion will not change. " The word "person of the north" comes from a tradition of the correct way of upbringing. A couple will put their pillows in the west, and the man, lying on the south side, will face the north, while the woman, lying on the north side, will face the south.
In bringing up a boy, one should first encourage a sense of
valor. From the time he is young the child should liken his
parents to the master, and learn everyday politeness and
etiquette, the serving of other people, the ways of speech,
forbearance and even the correct way of walking down the
street. The elders were taught in the same fashion. When he
does not put effort into things, he should be scolded and
made to go the entire day without eating. This is also one of
the disciplines of a retainer. |