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The Master of Go

Page 1

by Yusanari Kawabata




  THE

  MASTER

  OF GO

  YASUNARI KAWABATA

  translated from the Japanese by

  Edward G. Seidensticker

  CHARLES E. TUTTLE COMPANY

  Suido 1-chome, 2-6, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo

  Table Of Contents

  1 6

  2 8

  3 10

  4 12

  5 14

  6 17

  7 20

  8 24

  9 26

  10 28

  11 32

  12 35

  13 38

  14 41

  15 43

  16 45

  17 47

  18 49

  19 51

  20 54

  21 56

  22 59

  23 61

  24 64

  25 66

  26 69

  27 71

  28 74

  29 77

  30 79

  31 81

  32 83

  33 85

  34 88

  35 92

  36 95

  37 98

  38 100

  39 102

  40 105

  41 108

  Introduction

  Mr. Kawabata has described The Master of Go as "a faithful chronicle-novel." The word used, of course, is not "novel" but shōsetsu, a rather more flexible and generous and catholic term than "novel." Frequently what would seem to the Western reader a piece of autobiography or a set of memoirs, somewhat embroidered and colored but essentially nonfiction all the same, is placed by the Japanese reader in the realm of the shōsetsu.

  So it is with The Master of Go. It contains elements of fiction, but it is rather more chronicle than novel, a sad, elegant piece of reportage, based upon a 1938 Go match, the course of which was precisely as described in this "chronicle-novel," and upon which Mr. Kawabata reported for the twin Osaka and Tokyo newspapers that today both bear the name Mainichi.

  Certain elements of fiction are obvious. Mr. Kawabata gives himself a fictitious name, Uragami, and apparently, though the matter could be a small failure of memory, assigns himself a different age from that which is actually his. The Master is known by his own name, or rather his professional name, but, as if to emphasize that the Master is the protagonist, always at the center of things, Mr. Kawabata also assigns the adversary, in real life Mr. Kitani Minora, a fictitious name. The complex treatment of time, with the action beginning and ending at the same point, and the delicate, impressionistic descriptions of setting and season are further justification for the expression "chronicle-novel."

  But the most complex element of fiction probably is in the delineation of the Master himself. Persons who knew him in real life have told us that in addition to being almost grotesquely diminutive, he gave an impression of deviousness and even of a certain foxlike slyness. He had, at least to the casual observer, little of the nobility with which Mr. Kawabata has endowed him. Mr. Kawabata's achievement thus transcends faithful chronicling and becomes fictional characterization of a virtuoso order.

  Shūsai the Master becomes a sad and noble symbol. In what is perhaps the most famous of all his pronouncements, Mr. Kawabata said shortly after the war that henceforward he would be able to write only elegies. The defeat of 1945 was, along with the loss of all his immediate relatives in childhood, one of the great events molding the Kawabata sensibility. He began reworking his chronicle of the 1938 Go match during the war, and did not complete it until nearly a decade after the end of the war. The symbolic reality breathed into its central character makes The Master of Go the most beautiful of his elegies.

  "The invincible Master" lost his final championship match, and at Mr. Kawabata's hands the defeat becomes the defeat of a tradition. It is the aristocratic tradition which, until 1945, was the grounding for morals and ethics in Japan, and for the arts as well. Just as Mr. Kawabata would have nothing of jingoistic wartime hysteria, so he would have nothing of the platitudinous "democracy" and "liberalism" of the postwar years. He was not prepared to turn his back on what was for him the essence of Japan. One was puzzled to know why the flamboyant Mishima Yukio and the quiet, austere Kawabata should have felt so close to each other. Perhaps a part of the secret lies in the aristocratic tendencies the two men shared.

  The game of Go is simple in its fundamentals and infinitely complex in the execution of them. It is not what might be called a game of moves, as chess and checkers. Though captured stones may be taken from the board, a stone is never moved to a second position after it has been placed upon one of the three hundred sixty-one points to which play is confined. The object is to build up positions which are invulnerable to enemy attack, meanwhile surrounding and capturing enemy stones.

  A moment's deliberation upon the chart of the completed game should serve to establish that Black controls major territories at the lower left and the upper right of the board, and that White is strong at the lower right. Black controls a lesser area at the upper left and White at the left center. The upper central regions of the board are delicately divided between the two, and the center and the regions immediately below are neutral. The counting of points is extremely complicated. It is significant that at the end of the match not even the Master himself has the precise count. A very special sort of visual faculty seems required for the final summing up, and, one might say, a sort of kinetic faculty too. Persons who know Go well have been able to give me a reasonably clear account of the 1938 game only by lining the stones up one by one as they were in fact played.

  When, in 1954, The Master of Go first appeared in book form, it was somewhat longer than the version translated here. The shorter version is Mr. Kawabata's own favorite, for it is the one included in the most recent edition of his "complete works." The portions excised from the 1954 version fall between the end of the match and the Master's death.

  I am very greatly in debt to Miss Ibuki Kazuko and Mr. Yanagita Kunio, both of the Chūō Kōron Publishing Company in Tokyo. Out of sheer kindness, they were more help in solving the mysteries of the text and the game than a platoon of paid researchers could have been.

  E.G.S.

  January 1972

  THE MASTER OF GO

  1

  Shūsai, Master of Go, twenty-first in the Honnimbō succession, died in Atami, at the Urokoya Inn, on the morning of January 18, 1940. He was sixty-seven years old by the Oriental count.

  January 18 is an easy day to remember in Atami. "Remember in years to come the moon of this night of this month," said Kan'ichi in the famous scene from Kōyō's melodramatic novel of the nineties, Demon Gold, the parting on the beach at Atami. The night to be remembered is January 17, and the Kōyō festival is held in Atami on the anniversary. The Master's death came the following day.

  Literary observances always accompany the festival. In 1940 they were elaborate as never before, honoring not only Kōyō himself but two other writers whose bonds with Atami had been strong, Takayama Chogyū and Tsubouchi Shōyō. And three novelists, Takeda Toshihiko, Osaragi Jirō, and Hayashi Fusao, who had during the year treated of Atami in their writings, were presented with testimonials by the city. Being at the time in Atami, I attended the festival.

  On the evening of January 17, the mayor gave a banquet at my inn, the Juraku. I was awakened at dawn by a telephone call informing me of the Master's death. I went immediately to the Urokoya to pay my final respects. After breakfast, back at my inn, I went with writers and city officials to lay flowers at Shōyō's grave, and then to the plum orchard, where, in the Bushoan Pavilion, there was another banquet. Slipping out midway through the banquet, I went again to the Urokoya, took pictures of the dead man, and saw the body off to Tokyo.

  The Master
had come to Atami on the fifteenth, and on the eighteenth he was dead. It was as if he had come to Atami to die. I had visited him on the sixteenth and played two games of chess{1} with him. He took a sudden turn for the worse that evening, very shortly after I had left him. Those were his last games of the chess of which he was so fond. I did the newspaper accounts of his last championship match at Go, I was his last adversary at chess, and I was the last to take his picture.

  I came to know him well when the Tokyo Nichinichi Shimbun (now the Mainichi Shimbun) invited me to report on that last match. Even for a match sponsored by a newspaper the ceremonies were elaborate, without equal in the years since. The match began in Tokyo on June 26, 1938, at the Kōyōkan Restaurant in Shiba Park, and ended on December 4, in Itō, at the Dankōen Inn. A single game took almost half a year. There were fourteen sessions. My report was serialized in sixty-four installments.{2} There was, to be sure, a three-month recess, from mid-August to mid-November, because the Master fell seriously ill. It was a critical illness that added much to the pathos. One may say that in the end the match took the Master's life. He never quite recovered, and in upwards of a year he was dead.

  2

  To be quite precise, the match ended at 2:42 on the afternoon of December 4, 1938. The last play was Black 237, by the Master's opponent.

  Silently, the Master filled in a neutral point.

  "It will be five points?" said one of the judges, Onoda of the Sixth Rank, his manner polite and distant. He probably spoke from solicitude for the Master, whom he wished to spare the discomfort of having the board rearranged on the spot,{3} and his defeat by five points made quite clear.

  "Yes, five points," muttered the Master. Looking up through swollen eyelids, he made no motion toward rearranging the board.

  None among the functionaries who crowded the room was able to speak.

  "If I hadn't gone into the hospital we would have had it over with at Hakoné." The Master spoke calmly, as if to relieve the heaviness in the air.

  He asked how much time he had used in play.

  "White - nineteen hours and fifty-seven minutes. Three minutes more, sir, and it would have been exactly half the time you were allowed," said the youth who was keeping the records. "Black used thirty-four hours and nineteen minutes."

  High-ranking players are usually given ten hours of play, but for this match an exception was made and the time allotment increased fourfold. Black still had several hours left, but the thirty-four hours he had used were extraordinary all the same, indeed probably unique in all the annals of the game since the imposition of time limits.

  It was almost three when the game ended. The maid came with tea. The company sat in silence, all eyes on the Go board.

  The Master poured for his opponent, Otaké of the Seventh Rank.

  Since offering the proper words of thanks at the end of the game, the young Otaké had sat motionless, head bowed. His hands rested side by side on his knees, his always pale face was blanched.

  Roused by the Master, who had begun to put away the white stones, he began putting the black stones in their bowl. The Master stood up and, as on ordinary days, nonchalantly left the room. He had offered no comment on the play. The younger player of course had no comment to make. Matters might have been different had he been the loser.

  Back in my room, I looked out the window. With astonishing speed Otaké had changed to a padded kimono and stepped down into the garden. He was sitting on a bench at the far side, all alone, arms tightly folded. His eyes were on the ground. His attitude there in the wide, cold garden, in the approaching twilight of late autumn, suggested deep meditation.

  I opened a glass door at the veranda. "Mr. Otaké," I called. "Mr. Otaké."

  He turned and glanced up at me, as if in annoyance. Perhaps he was weeping.

  I went back into my room. The Master's wife had come in.

  "It has been a long time, and you have been very good to us."

  I exchanged a few remarks with her, and Otaké had already left the garden. With another quick change, he made the rounds, this time in formal kimono, of the Master's room and the rooms of the various managers and organizers. He came to my room as well.

  I went to pay my respects to the Master.

  3

  A day after the end of that half-year contest, the managers and the rest were in a rush to be off. It was the day before the test run on the new Itō railway line.

  With trains coming through just at the holiday season, the main street was bright with festive decorations. I had been in seclusion at the inn, "sealed in a tin can," as the process of keeping the game shut off from the world is described. Now, on the bus for home, the decorations bright around me, I felt liberated, as if I had emerged from a dark cave. The raw earth of the roads around the new station, the flimsy houses - the jumble and disorder of the new town spoke to me of all the vital world outside.

  As the bus left Itō and set out along the coast road, we passed women with bundles of brushwood on their backs. Some carried white-leafed ferns, decorations for the New Year, in their hands, some had ferns tied to their brushwood. I suddenly wanted to be among people. It was as if I had come over a mountain and caught sight of smoke from a village beyond. I longed for the routines of ordinary life, preparations for the New Year and the like. I felt as if I had fled some morbid, distorted world. The women had gathered their firewood and were on their way home for dinner. The sea shone with a light so dull that one could not guess its source. The color, at the edge of darkness, was of winter.

  Even on the bus I thought of the Master. Perhaps my longing for company had to do with my feelings for him.

  The last of the people in attendance on the game had withdrawn, and only the aged Master and his wife were left at the Itō inn.

  "The invincible Master" had lost his last championship match. One would have thought he would be the first to wish to leave; and to recover from the strain of having fought both Otaké and illness, the best thing, one would have thought, would have been an immediate change of air. Was the Master perhaps somewhat vague in these matters? Though all the various organisers, and myself as well, reporter on the game, had come to find the place intolerable and had left as if seeking refuge, the defeated Master stayed behind alone. Would he be sitting there absently as always, leaving the gloom and the weariness to the imagination of others, as if to say that he knew nothing about them?

  His opponent, Otaké of the Seventh Rank, had been among the first to go. Unlike the childless Master, he had a lively house to go back to.

  I believe it was two or three years after the match that I had a letter from his wife in which she said that they now had sixteen people in the house. I wanted to pay a visit. I did call with condolences after his father died and that total of sixteen had been reduced to fifteen. The visit, my first, was rather belated, for it came a full month, I believe, after the funeral. Otaké himself was out, but his wife showed me into the parlor. Her manner suggested that I brought pleasant memories. When we had finished our greetings she stepped to the door.

  "Have them all come in, please."

  There was a rush of footsteps and four or five young people came into the parlor. They formed a row, like children being called to attention. Apparently disciples of Otaké's, they ranged from perhaps eleven or twelve to twenty. Among them was a tall, plump, red-cheeked girl.

  "Now be polite," said Mrs. Otaké, having introduced me.

  They bobbed their heads abruptly. I felt the warmth of the household. There was nothing calculated about die scene, the house was one in which such things came quite naturally. When the young people had left the parlor I could hear them chattering noisily through the house. Mrs. Otaké invited me upstairs, where I had a practice game with one of them. She brought in dish after dish, and in the end my visit was a long one.

  That household of sixteen persons included disciples. Among the younger professional players, no one else kept four or five disciples in his house. In that fact was
evidence of Otaké's popularity and affluence, of course, but perhaps his strongly domestic inclinations and his great attachment to his own children reached out to embrace these others.

  "Sealed in a tin can" during that last match, Otaké would call his wife immediately at the end of a session.

  "Today the Master was good enough to play until...," and he would give her the number of the last play.

  He reported only so much, offering nothing that might hint at the progress of the match. I would hear him make his report and think how much I liked him.

  4

  On the day of the opening ceremony at the Kōyōkan, Black made a single play and White a single play; and the next day took them only up to White 12. The match was then moved to Hakoné. The Master and the various managers and attendants set out together. Real play not having begun, signs of discord still lay in the future. On the evening of our arrival at the Taiseikan in Dōgashima, the Master relaxed with his usual aperitif, something less than a flagon of sake, and talked of this and that with richly expressive gestures; and so the evening passed.

  The large table in the parlor to which we had first been shown seemed to be of Tsugaru lacquer. The talk turned to lacquer, of which the Master had this to say:

  "I don't remember when it was, but I once saw a Go board of lacquer. It wasn't just lacquer-coated, it was dry lacquer to the core. A lacquer man in Aomori made it for his own amusement. He took twenty-five years to do it, he said. I imagine it would take that long, waiting for the lacquer to dry and then putting on a new coat. The bowls and boxes were solid lacquer too. He showed the set at an exhibition and asked five thousand, and when it didn't sell he came to the Go Association and asked them to sell it for three thousand. But I don't know. It was too heavy. Heavier than I am. It must have weighed close to a hundred and twenty pounds." And, looking at Otaké: "You've put on weight."

  "Over a hundred and thirty."

 

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