Matajuro and zanshin





Matajuro was born into the Yagyu family after their clan had already gained a reputation as talented bugeisha. As a boy, his interest in the art of the blade was encouraged. He proved to be a promising but lazy pupil, in danger of never realizing the limits of his potential. In an attempt to shake him from his lethargy, his father banished him from the dojo.

Matajuro was stung by the harshness of the punishment. He was determined to dedicate himself to mastering kenjutsu -- even if only to show his family how wrong they had been -- so he set off to find a worthy master. The young fencers travels took him to the province of Kii, to a region of mountains there threaded with forty-eight magnificent waterfalls, some of them cascading over four hundred feet into a rock-bordered pool where mists swirl constantly. In a thick forest at the foot of the Nachi Falls, the tallest and most beautiful of the cataracts, sits the Kumano Nachi Shrine, the site of ancient and mysterious rituals since time began in Japan.

More importantly, as far a Yagyu Matajuro was concerned, was that, according to rumors he'd heard in sake shops and inns along the highway, a swordmaster of incomparable skill was living near the shrine. After a long journey, the young Yagyu reached the Kumano Shrine, where he was told by the priests to follow a barely visible path even further back into the forest. At the end, the priests said, was a senile hermit named Banzo who was reputed to have once been a swordsman. The track led Matajuro to a ramshackle hut.

"I've come to learn swordsmanship," Matajuro announced confidently, although to no one in particular since there wasn't a sign of another person about. Nervously, he softly added, "How long will it take?"

In the doorway of the hut, Banzo appeared. "Ten years," he said.

"That's too long." The young Yagyu shook his head. "How about if I work

extra hard and practice twice as much?"

"Twenty years," answered Banzo.

Matajuro could guess in what direction the conversation was leading, so wisely he argued no further but simply requested that he be taken as a student, to which the master fully agreed.

It was a peculiar apprenticeship. Matajuro was forbidden to handle a sword or even to speak of fencing. Instead he was put to work cutting firewood, cooking for Banzo, and cleaning the hut chores that lasted every day from before dawn until after he lit the lanterns that chased away the forest's darkness, Rarely did his master speak and never did he mention anything about teaching the boy swordsmanship.

Finally, after a year of ceaseless work, Matajuro grew frustrated, suspecting at last that he had been tricked into becoming nothing more than a servant for the surely demented Banzo. Angrily chopping at a log one day, he nearly convinced himself to find instruction somewhere else. There were plenty of teachers around who would be honored to have a member of the famous Yagyu family as a student -- and plenty of conniving old swordslingers who made slaves of eager, would-be disciples, he concluded bitterly as he eyed the stack of wood still left to be cut. He sank the blade of his axe into a log, as if the cutting could remedy the problems absorbing him. He failed to notice that he was no longer alone until he was sent reeling into the woodpile by a vicious blow. Dazed, he looked up from the ground to find the master brandishing a length of hard green bamboo above him. Wordlessly, Banzo left as silently as he had come, leading Matajuro to conclude that his beating was for inattention to his chores.

The offspring of samurai blood was ashamed of slighting his responsibilities, even if he was plotting to leave the crazy old man. He decided to make the next chore of the day, that of washing Banzo's clothes, his last, but he would do such a good job of it that his master could find no fault with his work. It was couple of hours later, while the boy was scrubbing clothes near the falls, that Banzo struck again, harder this time, driving Matajuro splashing into the water. Behind him, Banzo roared over the dashing of the falls.

"You expect to learn of swordsmanship, but you cannot even dodge a stick!"

Yagyu Matajuros aristocratic pride was once more inflamed. Just as he had left his home to show his father that he could become a great fencer, he resolved to stay at the Nachi Shrine to prove the old master wrong. He began to concentrate, no matter what else he was doing, on keeping himself ready for an attack. Banzo struck five times a day, then ten, then twenty, always when his student was busy at his chores. He was so stealthy that Matajuro's only warning would be a rustle of hakama or the whoosh of the bamboo stick cutting down. Weeding in the garden, washing at the falls, mending the hut's leaky roof, Matajuro would be occupied with one task or another, to find himself suddenly jumping at the slightest unusual noises and missing more and more of the swipes aimed at him.

When Banzo failed to connect his stick to Matajuro's head or shoulders or even to touch him with it a single time for a period of many months, he switched his strategy. In addition to the daytime assaults, he started slashing at Matajuro while the boy slept. Matajuro was forced to redouble his efforts, teaching himself to sleep lightly with his unconsciousness remaining alert. Grimly he realized that the more successful he became at avoiding the bamboo stick, the more frequently his master would appear like a ghost, swinging at him. It was growing increasingly harder for Banzo to catch him unaware, though, for his instincts were sharpened to a level almost supernatural.

On an evening four years after he had first come looking for the sword master at the Nachi Shrine, Matajuro was preparing a meal of chirashizushi, a steamed mixture of rice and vegetables. He was carefully peeling a burdock root for the dish when Banzo struck from behind. Matajuro didn't move from his crouching position by the fire. With one hand, he snatched up a pot lid and fended off the blow. Then returned to his cooking without a pause.

That night, Banzo presented his student with a certificate of proficiency in the art of fencing and a fine old sword, Matajuro needed neither. Without ever taking a formal lesson or even handling a weapon, he had reached the highest peak of the bugei -- the master of zanshin.