Milky Way Railroad. Kenji Miyazawa

Milky Way Railroad - Kenji Miyazawa


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      Kenji Miyazawa

      Milky Way Railroad

      Translated and adapted from the Japanese by Joseph Sigrist and D. M. Stroud

      Illustrated by Ryu Okazaki

      Stone Bridge Fiction

      Stone Bridge Press • Berkeley, California

      Published by

      Stone Bridge Press, Inc., P.O. Box 8208, Berkeley, CA 94707

      tel 510-524-8732 • [email protected] • www.stonebridge.com

      Original Japanese text begun in 1927, published posthumously as Ginga Tetsudo no Yoru.

      Excerpts from this translation were previously published by Japan Quarterly, Tokyo, in 1984.

      Text © 1971, 1984, 1996, 2008 Joseph Sigrist and D. M. Stroud.

      Introduction © 1996, 2008 D. M. Stroud.

      Illustrations © 1996 Ryu Okazaki.

      First Stone Bridge Fiction edition published 2008.

      Cover design by Linda Ronan.

      Text design inspired by D. M. Stroud and Brenda Cossé.

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher.

      Introduction

      Kenji Miyazawa (1896–1933) was Japan’s best-loved children’s writer and one of its three greatest modern poets. He spent most of his brief life in the cold, isolated prefecture of Iwate, hundreds of miles north of Tokyo. Although he was well known in literary circles and published in Tokyo magazines, Miyazawa devoted most of his life to teaching school, when he was not engaged as a chemist and government agricultural agent. To while away the long winters, he created stunningly original poems and a series of beautiful tales for children, one of which is translated here.

      Miyazawa was well informed about most aspects of modern science, yet he devoted many years roaming from temple to temple in search of the Buddhist doctrine that would best accommodate his syncretic religious beliefs. His fascination with Christianity led him to imagine a kind of universal dogma that would fuse Christianity and Buddhism. He seems to have been particularly taken with the relationship between Esoteric Buddhism and the Hermetic doctrines of Giordano Bruno and Tommaso Campanella, which attempted to reconcile Christianity and Renaissance science with alchemy, astrology, and Eastern esotericism. Bruno and Campanella, in turn, were closely associated with the scientific ideas of Galileo, another great hero of Miyazawa’s.

      Milky Way Railroad, probably written in 1927, is a masterpiece of transcendental realism, a children’s science fiction fantasy that expresses in symbolic form many of Miyazawa’s religious and personal beliefs. Its physical setting is the small riverside town of Hanamaki, on the banks of the Kitakami River, where Miyazawa spent most of his life. Hanamaki at that time was connected to the town of Kamaishi by a narrow-gauge railroad, the Iwate Line; the four stations on the galactic railroad in the story correspond to the four actual stops between Hanamaki and Kamaishi.

      The time of year is Tanabata, the seventh night of the seventh month, celebrated by the old lunar calendar in August so that it coincides with Obon, the festival of dead souls. The Tanabata Festival was brought to Japan from China in the eighth century. It commemorates the love of two personified stars, both prominent in the summer sky: the Weaver (Vega, in the constellation Lyra, “Harp”) and the Cowherd (Altair, in Aquila, “Eagle”). The Weaver was a princess who wove the garments of the gods. She lived on the east side of the Milky Way and became so devoted to her husband, the Cowherd, who lived to the west, that she began to neglect her weaving. Her father, the Master of Heaven, condemned the couple to be separated, but he allowed them to meet on one night a year, the night of the Milky Way Festival. According to one version of the story, if the princess’s weaving during the year was satisfactory a boatman would come to ferry her across the Milky Way, but in years when her father was displeased he would cause it to rain, making passage by boat impossible. A flock of magpies would then spread their wings to create a bridge across the river. In some parts of Japan, as in Kenji’s town, during the celebration of Tanabata and Obon small gourds are hollowed out, filled with lighted candles, and set adrift on the rivers to symbolize the boat as well as the soul’s passage to heaven.

      The two separated “lovers” in Miyazawa’s story are both male. They are two friends and schoolmates, the poverty-stricken Giovanni, whose father, a fisherman, is miles away in Hokkaido, and Campanella, whose father is a professor. On the night of the festival, Campanella, against his will, joins the other boys in their mockery of Giovanni, and Giovanni goes off alone to mope at the top of a hill, where he is suddenly transported on a magical train to the Milky Way. While his friends are celebrating the yearly meeting of the Cowherd and the Weaver, Giovanni will be right up there with the stars. And better yet, he’ll find his friend Campanella on the train with him.

      Little does he realize, however, that Campanella has already drowned in the river below and that the train he is on is the train of death. Giovanni is the only one alive and the only one who will return to earth. But for this one night, he is alone with his best friend and nobody will interrupt their reverie. Perhaps Miyazawa was recalling a lost friend of his own or the recent death of his sister, or was describing the relation of the soul and its animus.

      It is certain, however, that this story is a kind of Quest. The hero crosses the bridge of dreams after watching his friends sail the lighted gourds representing dead souls on the river below. Then, after climbing a magic mountain, he is given a ticket that takes him to a second river, the Silver River (as the Milky Way is called in Japanese). There he meets the dead souls themselves and visits Heaven. Later he returns over the same bridge and sees the heavenly river reflected in the river below.

      This bridge fits nicely into the Japanese literary tradition, for the “Bridge of Dreams” (Yume no Ukihashi) is the title of the last book of the eleventh-century classic The Tale of Genji. But Milky Way Railroad is really a compendium of Eastern and Western myth and folklore. Here we have the scholar who sees the universe in a grain of sand, the bird catcher who is a dead ringer for Mozart’s Papageno, the fields of light, the leaping dolphins (a key Hermetic image that, besides being a symbol of Apollo and the oracle at Delphi, is one of the eight auspicious signs of Mikkyo—Tantric Buddhism—and the derivation of one of the three sacred symbols of imperial rule in Japan, the magatama), the flocks of magpies who form the bridge that unites the Weaver and the Cowherd, the Northern and Southern Crosses, and the golden apples of the Hesperides. Miyazawa’s own original mythmaking is at work in his depictions of the observatory, the lighthouse keeper, and the Pliocene beach.

      More than the synthesis of East and West, it is Miyazawa’s attempt to create a literature that fuses the imagery of religion and science that most sets him apart from other writers of his era. Many of his poems are nearly untranslatable, so clotted are they with these fusions of religious and scientific language. But in the purer, simpler vocabulary of Milky Way Railroad, the syncretism is more successful. Indeed, Miyazawa’s playful conceptualizing often seems to anticipate later scientific discoveries. The multiple-mirror telescope in his observatory was not actually built until 1977. Likewise, his galactic Coal Sack suggests a knowledge of black holes that did not emerge until much later, and his speculation about powerful magnetic fields in the Milky Way was replicated by research at the National Science Foundation in 1986.

      A devout Buddhist, Miyazawa was often used by the wartime Japanese regime as a posthumous spokesman for their Shinto-based yamato damashi or “persistence in the face of the unbearable.” Miyazawa, however, was delivering a strong message to children in favor of universal brotherhood and compassion. And it is significant for Japanese readers that he began this story in 1927, the year of


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