Motomezuka

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Motomezuka
求塚
English title The Sought-for Grave
Written by Kanami
Revised by Zeami
Category 4th — miscellaneous
Characters waki Priest
wakizure Companions
maejite Maiden
nochijite Unai
tsure Two village girls
Place Ikuta, a village in Settsu Province
Time Early spring, 2nd month
Reign of Go-Horikawa
(1221-1232)
Sources Yamato Monogatari
Man'yōshū
Schools Hōshō, Kita, recently Kanze
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Motomezuka (求塚) is a Noh play of the fourth category, written by Kanami and revised by Zeami. The name is either a corruption of, or a pun on, Otomezuka ("The Maiden's Grave"), the original story from episode 147 of Yamato Monogatari. The word motome refers also to courtship.

[edit] Plot summary

A priest from the western provinces, travelling to Kyoto, stops with his companions in the isolated village of Ikuta ("Field of Life") in Settsu Province. They meet a group of village girls who are plucking spring shoots from the snow. When they ask a girl for directions to the famous "Sought-for Grave", she leads them to the place in question and tells the story of Unai.

Two men, Sasada and Chinu, declared their love for Unai in letters she received in the same hour. Unwilling to incur the jealousy of one by favouring the other, Unai declined to make a choice. Her parents had them compete for her hand, but each contest they proposed resulted in a draw.

In torment, Unai drowned herself in Ikuta River. After her funeral the two rivals were inconsolable, and they committed suicide by stabbing each other. Unai's ghost bears the karmic responsibility for their demise.

The priest intones prayers for her soul. She hears the prayers, but they are of no avail; she is unable to escape from the Burning House (the mortal world) and the Eight Great Hells, through which she is relentlessly lashed by her demons.

[edit] Sources

Apart from the Yamato Monogatari, Unai's tomb is mentioned in the Man'yōshū (book 9, 1801-3, 1809-11, and book 19, 4211-2).

[edit] References

  • Donald Keene, ed. Twenty Plays of the Nō Theater. Columbia University Press, New York, 1970. "Motomezuka", translated by Barry Jackman.