Takani Megumi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A headshot of Takani Megumi from the Rurouni Kenshin anime series.
Enlarge
A headshot of Takani Megumi from the Rurouni Kenshin anime series.

Takani Megumi (高荷 恵 Takani Megumi) is a fictional character created by Nobuhiro Watsuki for the popular manga and anime, Rurouni Kenshin. Megumi is the youngest daughter of Takani Ryūsei, a well-known doctor in Aizu which was an important province supporting the Tokugawa Shogunate. During the Boshin Wars, Megumi's father died and the rest of her family went missing, leaving her as the sole survivor. Megumi means "Blessing" in Japanese.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Takani Megumi was born in December 1857 during the Bakumatsu period of Japan. That would make her twenty-two years old (by East Asian age reckoning) during the start of the anime. Like the rest of her family, she is adept at renguku, a type of medical practice that combined elements of Western and Eastern medicine. The fact that Megumi bore the last name 'Takani' spoke of her family's higher class level - peasants during that time were forbidden to carry family names.

Megumi was portrayed both in the anime and in the manga as having long, dark hair and dark eyes. In the anime particularly, she usually wore a blue haori worn over a lavender kimono.

Sometimes, Megumi appears to have fox ears popping out of her head, an allusion to her nickname kitsune, which means "fox". Sanosuke especially likes to call her kitsune-onna (Vixen in the English manga, which is the name of a female fox) meaning Fox Lady, though Yahiko and Kaoru sometimes call her this as well. The nickname actually has two meanings: 'Fox' to describe Megumi's wily ways and 'fox' like in a compliment - "foxy lady" or beautiful woman.

Like Kaoru, Megumi is a strong-willed woman, but she is also depicted as a more mature and cunning compared to the younger Kaoru. Initially, Watsuki had intended to introduce her as a minor character, the only other woman that Kaoru interacts with, and to make her unique by giving have special skills.

[edit] Background

Megumi's family were a well-known family of doctors throughout Aizu (now the Fukushima prefecture), though were considered unusual because every generation of the family went into medicine and allowed both women and children to study medicine as well. They were highly ranked doctors in the social hierarchy, but despite the fierce discrimination present in the Edo period, they believed in equal treatment of all sick patients and were devoted to their treatment regardless of social status. The family's ideals was that the true purpose of medicine was life and found rigid system preference for the samurai class offensive to their profession.

Takani Ryuusei, Megumi's father, was an extreme believer of this ideal and courageously left Aizu with his family to Nagasaki to study western medicine. When the family returned through special permission, the province was at war. Megumi's family left her behind to serve as doctors on the battlefield. Her father died on the front while her mother and two brothers disappeared.

Being educated in herbal and Western medicine (renguku), Megumi eventually became an assistant to a prominent physician with the intention of training to become a full-fledged doctor herself. However, it turned out that the man she worked for was not the best of men. He was in turn working for a man named Takeda Kanryū who ran an opium syndicate in Tokyo.

Takeda commissioned the doctor to produce a new kind of opium which they then called "Spider's Web." The formula for the Spider's Web was a little different in that it uses half the normal dose of poppy juice but is twice as effective as the regular drug. While working for the doctor, Megumi learned the secrets of the formula and later, when Takeda killed the doctor, he forced her to use the formula to make more opium.

[edit] Story

[edit] Tokyo Arc

Megumi deeply regretted her dishonorable life under Takeda's tyranny, which was a far cry from the relative nobility of her previous life when her family was still alive. She was guilt-racked at having been forced to create opium but could do little else. Finally, she decided to leave Takeda's mansion and escaped the Oniwabanshuu.

When Megumi first appears (eps 8 of the anime, A New Battle: The Beautiful Girl from Nowhere; volume 2 of the manga), she is a troubled woman running from a group of men (the Oniwabanshuu onmitsu, which included Besshimi). To escape her pursuers, she ended up in a gambling house where Himura Kenshin and Sagara Sanosuke were playing dice with a couple of friends. Megumi asks for their help and later she accompanies them back to the Kamiya dojo, where Kamiya Kaoru was waiting and fuming over the fact that Kenshin had brought a female stranger into her home. Sensing Kaoru's jealousy, Megumi plays the flirt and makes several advances to Kenshin, which he handles nervously and refrains from submitting to. Megumi's personality as a shrewd, flirtatious woman was established and her act of purposely making Kaoru jealous was a prevailing theme throughout the series whenever her character appeared.

Megumi manages to encroach herself to Kenshin's group, which included Myōjin Yahiko, Kamiya Kaoru, and Sagara Sanosuke, when she saves Yahiko from being poisoned after he takes a dart meant for her. However, Sanosuke becomes especially suspicious of her when he discovers she is carrying around opium, the same drug that killed his usually healthly friend Yoita. The Oniwabanshū discovers Megumi's whereabouts and send men to kidnap her or attack her newfound friends. To prevent further bloodshed, Megumi decides to voluntarily return to Takeda's mansion. She meets the feared leader (okashira) of the Oniwabanshū, Shinomori Aoshi, who gave her a tanto with which she could commit suicide. Understanding Megumi's predicament, he had given her the choice to end her dishonorable life through death. But before she could use the tanto, Sanosuke, Kenshin, and Yahiko arrived and stopped her.

Megumi was later told by Kenshin that she could make up for her past mistakes by continuing to live and help people. He told her that she had a gift of healing and that she could save more with that gift. Megumi believed him and came to work under the guardianship of Genzai-sensei.

[edit] To Save a Small Life

The fourteenth episode of the anime, To Save a Small Life: The Challenge of Doctor Megumi, features Megumi and is intended to add depth to Megumi's character and strengthen the relationship between her and Sanosuke. It has little to do with plot advancement and has no manga equivalent. In this episode, Genzai-sensei hurt his back, leaving his assistant, Megumi to run the clinic and take care of his patients. But then the yakuza began spreading false rumors about her which was further strengthened when she refused to help a man in the street purportedly suffering from stomach pain. When asked why she did not help, Megumi said that he was faking.

Not to put down, the yakuza now had a mysterious man who was said to have miraculous powers working for them. The yakuza also kidnapped Megumi's patient, a young child with a serious chest condition. As Megumi tried to save the child, the yakuza threatened her and at that time, Sanosuke arrived, followed by Kenshin. The episode ended with the clinic back in prosperity and Genzai-sensei musing on how Megumi could cure all kinds of illness, except love sickness.

[edit] Kyoto Arc

Shishio Makoto, the primary antagonist, appears in Kyoto with the intention of conquering Japan. Kenshin is tasked by the Meiji government of Japan to go to Kyoto and stop Shishio and his Juppongatana. A reluctant Kenshin takes up the dangerous mission because he feels it is his duty and leaves Tokyo behind, saying good-bye only to Kamiya Kaoru.

After Kenshin leaves, Kaoru becomes depressed for days and refuses to get up from her futon, causing her her friends to worry. It is Megumi who finally convinces her to get off her bed and go after Kenshin, under the pretext of giving him some of her special medicine. She asserts to Kaoru that when Kenshin left, he said goodbye only to her, which meant that Kenshin felt Kaoru was more important to him than anyone else he left behind, including Megumi herself. While Kaoru and Yahiko head for Kyoto, Megumi remains behind to watch over the Kamiya dojo. Shortly afterwards, she receives a visit from Shinomori Aoshi.

The depth of her feelings for Kenshin were never explicitly revealed as it seems that she only flirted with him to make Kaoru jealous. However, there are times when she appears to have deeper feelings for him as well, albeit one-sided. This was confirmed in the end of the Kyoto arc: Megumi finally goes to Kyoto to check on Kenshin and his friends after the battle, and during a small tour through the city she tells Kaoru that Kenshin's body is seriously worn-out, and finally asks her to take the best care of him.

[edit] Jinchu Arc

In the manga-only Jinchu arc, Megumi finds her hands full at the Genzai clinic caring for the people hurt during Yukishiro Enishi's Jinchuu (Man's Punishment) on Kenshin.

When Kenshin's past is revealed to his friends, Megumi reassures Kaoru in her typical manner that Kaoru should not believe that she is merely replacing Kenshin's first wife, Yukishiro Tomoe, in his heart. After treating Kenshin and Sanosuke's injuries, she acts as the doctor at the Kamiya dojo when Enishi finally attacks. When the battle ends with the death of Kaoru, a grief striken Megumi examines Kaoru's body before allowing it to be prepared for burial.

Following this event, Shinomori Aoshi and Makimachi Misao arrive from Kyoto, apparently too late to aid their friends. Aoshi, hearing the events that unfolded, soon deduces that Kaoru is likely not dead and orders Kaoru's body to be exhumed because it is likely a very intricately made doll. Megumi is outraged that he would be heartless enough to suggest the act, asserting she examined the body herself, but Aoshi counters her argument by remarking that the doll would likely fool even an expert medical practitioner and her judgment was likely clouded with emotion. After some persuasion from Yahiko, the body is exhumed; Megumi confirms the body is real until it is broken open and wires are pulled.

Following this revelation, Megumi remains at the Genzai clinic as the search for Kaoru begins. When Yahiko, Sanosuke, and a renewed Kenshin are injured again, she treats them (while angrily chastising Sanosuke for using his badly injured right fist again, which she had previously warned him never to use after the events of the Kyoto arc). She travels with the group to Enishi's island in case they need medical attention as they prepare to rescue Kaoru. In a moment of comic relief, she throws her medicine cabinet at Sanosuke when he uses his right fist again, prompting him to remark that even she is joining the battle and using her cabinet as a weapon, though he wonders what side she is on.

[edit] Manga Ending

In the last volumes of the manga, it was revealed that Megumi eventually returned to her home province of Aizu. An influential family there was a friend of her late father's and they owned the hospital (Sanada Hospital) where Megumi hoped to practice. As the Kenshin-gumi said their farewells at the train station, a police squad came looking for Sanosuke for a crime he purportedly committed. Sanosuke promptly left the country to seek his own adventures. With the exception of Kaoru and Kenshin, none of the Rurouni Kenshin pairings were ever really resolved by creator, Watsuki, leading fans to speculate about who ended up with whom.

[edit] Seiyu

When the Rurouni Kenshin series was first aired in Japan, Megumi's character was played by Japanese seiyū, Mika Doi (alias, Mika Itou). The English version of the series had Jane Alan voicing the character. Rebeca Robinson also voiced Megumi for the DVD release of Samurai X: Reflection.

Rurouni Kenshin (Samurai X)
Characters
Himura Kenshin | Kamiya Kaoru | Sagara Sanosuke | Myōjin Yahiko | Takani Megumi | Shinomori Aoshi| Makimachi Misao| Minor characters
Terms and Historical references
Samurai | Shinsengumi | Battousai | Meiji period | Saitō Hajime | Four Hitokiri of the Bakumatsu | Ishin Shishi | Three great nobles
In other languages