Featured on PDR in the collection Reciting Pictures: Buddhist Texts for the Illiterate

In the introduction to Elaborations on Emptiness (1996), Donald S. Lopez, Jr. recounts a Japanese story called “Miminashi Hōichi”, about a blind biwa minstrel who can recite the epic thirteenth-century Tale of Heike by heart (a chronicle that exceeds eight hundred pages in its English translation). One day, the young man is approached by the servant of a lord, who asks to hear the concluding episode performed, wherein the last samurai of the Heike bloodline is executed — a segment alone that requires seven nights of recitation. His first six installments are a great success. But before the final session, it is discovered that the blind singer was tricked: he has not been visiting a noble temple in the evenings, as he thought, but an…

Heart Sūtra from Tachibana Nankei's Tōzai yūki

Date

1795

From

Tōzai yūki


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

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Image Size

1400 x 1082

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