Aya No Tsuzumi | ||
AYA NO TSUZUMI
(THE DAMASK DRUM)
ATTRIBUTED TO SEAMI, BUT PERHAPS EARLIER.
- A Courtier.
- An Old Gardener.
- The Princess.
PERSONS
I am a courtier at the Palace of Kinomaru in the country of Chikuzen. You must know that in this place there is a famous pond called the Laurel Pond, where the royal ones often take their walks; so it happened that one day the old man who sweeps the garden here caught sight of the Princess. And from that time he has loved her with a love that gives his heart no rest.
Some one told her of this, and she said, "Love's equal realm knows no divisions," [1] and in her pity she said, "By that pond there stands a laurel-tree, and on its branches there hangs a drum. Let him beat the drum, and if the sound is heard in the Palace, he shall see my face again."
I must tell him of this.
Listen, old Gardener! The worshipful lady has heard of your love and sends you this message: "Go and beat the drum that hangs on the tree by the pond, and if the sound is heard in the Palace, you shall see my face again." Go quickly now and beat the drum!
Gardener
With trembling I receive her words. I will go and beat the drum.
Courtier
Look, here is the drum she spoke of. Make haste and beat it!
Gardener
They talk of the moon-tree, the laurel that grows in the Garden of the Moon. . . . But for me there is but one true tree, this laurel by the lake. Oh, may the drum that hangs on its branches give forth a mighty note, a music to bind up my bursting heart.
But then tolls in
A heavy tale of day linked on to day,
Chorus
speaking for the Gardener.
But now, a watchman of the hours, I beat
The longed-for stroke.
Gardener
I was gaunt as an aged crane;
And upon all that misery
Suddenly a sorrow was heaped,
The new sorrow of love.
The days had left their marks,
Coming and coming, like waves that beat on a sandy shore. . .
Chorus
The echo of the drum shall roll.
Gardener
Yet even now I wake not
From this autumn of love that closes
In sadness the sequence of my years.
Chorus
Tears gather in my eyes, to fall
Scattered like dewdrops from a shaken flower
On my coarse-woven dress.
See here the marks, imprint of tangled love,
That all the world will read.
Chorus
Than by remembrance. But all in this world
Is as the horse of the aged man of the land of Sai; [2]
And as a white colt flashes
Past a gap in the hedge, even so our days pass. [3]
And though the time be come,
Yet can none know the road that he at last must tread,
Goal of his dewdrop-life.
All this I knew; yet knowing,
Was blind with folly.
Gardener
"Wake, wake," he cries, —
Chorus
"Wake from the sleep of dawn!"
And batters on the drum.
For if its sound be heard, soon shall he see
Her face, the damask of her dress . . .
Aye, damask! He does not know
That on a damask drum he beats,
Beats with all the strength of his hands, his aged hands,
But hears no sound.
"Am I grown deaf?" he cries, and listens, listens:
Rain on the windows, lapping of waves on the pool —
Both these he hears, and silent only
The drum, strange damask drum.
Oh, will it never sound?
I thought to beat the sorrow from my heart,
Wake music in a damask drum; an echo of love
From the voiceless fabric of pride!
In the obstinate clouds of a rainy night
Is the sound of the watchman's drum,
To roll the darkness from my heart.
Chorus
It was yesterday, and it is to-day.
Gardener
Chorus
Gardener
Chorus
Whom love has joined
Not even the God of Thunder can divide?
Of lovers, I alone
Am guideless, comfortless.
Then weary of himself and calling her to witness of his woe,
"Why should I endure," he cried,
"Such life as this?" and in the waters of the pond
He cast himself and died.
Gardener leaves the stage.
Enter the Princess.
Courtier
I would speak with you, madam.
The drum made no sound, and the aged Gardener in despair has flung himself into the pond by the laurel tree, and died. The soul of such a one may cling to you and do you injury. Go out and look upon him
Princess
speaking wildly, already possessed by the Gardener's angry ghost, which speaks through her. [4]
In the noise of the beating waves
I hear the rolling of a drum.
Oh, joyful sound, oh joyful!
The music of a drum.
Courtier
This lady speaks as one
By phantasy possessed.
What is amiss, what ails her?
Princess
Can a damask drum give sound?
When I bade him beat what could not ring,
Then tottered first my wits.
Chorus
A wave stirred.
Princess
Chorus
The voice of the Gardener is heard; as he gradually advances along the hashigakari it is seen that he wears a "demon mask," leans on a staff and carries the "demon mallet" at his girdle.
Gardener's Ghost
Chorus
Ghost
Clings even now when neither wrath nor weeping
Are aught but folly.
The anger of lust denied
Covers me like darkness.
I am become a demon dwelling
In the hell of my dark thoughts,
Storm-cloud of my desires.
Ghost
Though the brooks run dry,
Never shall the place be shown
Of the spring that feeds my heart." [5]
So I had resolved. Oh, why so cruelly
Set they me to win
Voice from a voiceless drum,
Spending my heart in vain?
And I spent my heart on the glimpse of a moon that slipped
Through the boughs of an autumn tree. [6]
Chorus
Ghost
Chorus
"The quick beat, the battle-charge!
Loud, loud! Strike, strike," he rails,
And brandishing his demon-stick
Gives her no rest.
"Oh woe!" the lady weeps,
"No sound, no sound. Oh misery!" she wails.
And he, at the mallet stroke, "Repent, repent!"
Such torments in the world of night
Abōrasetsu, chief of demons, wields,
Sears sinful flesh and shatters bones to dust.
Not less her torture now!
"Oh, agony!" she cries, "What have I done,
By what dire seed this harvest sown?"
Ghost
Chorus
I know it now.
By the pool's white waters, upon the laurel's bough
The drum was hung.
He did not know his hour, but struck and struck
Till all the will had ebbed from his heart's core;
Then leapt into the lake and died.
And while his body rocked
Like driftwood on the waves,
His soul, an angry ghost,
Possessed the lady's wits, haunted her heart with woe.
The mallet lashed, as these waves lash the shore,
Lash on the ice of the eastern shore.
The wind passes, the rain falls
On the Red Lotus, the Lesser and the Greater. [7]
The hair stands up on my head.
"The fish that leaps the falls
To a fell snake is turned," [8]
Such, such are the demons of the World of Night.
"O hateful lady, hateful!" he cried, and sank again
Into the whirlpool of desire.
Aya No Tsuzumi | ||