Aki no Yo no Naga Monogatari
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Aki no Yo no Naga Monogatari (秋夜長物語) is a Japanese otogi-zōshi from the Nanbokuchō period.
Aki no Yo no Naga Monogatari is a work of the otogi-zōshi genre.[1]
The work's author is unknown.[1] A 1716 printed edition attributes the work to the fourteenth-century monk and Confucianist Gen'e-hōin, but this is dubious.[1] Its writing style resembles that of the famous war chronicle Taiheiki,[1] and an old manuscript of the work, the Eiwa-bon dating to 1377, is written on the reverse of a copy of the Taiheiki.[1] Ryūshin Matsumoto, in his article on Aki no Yo no Naga Monogatari for the 1983 Nihon Koten Bungaku Daijiten, speculated that on this basis the attribution to Gen'e may not be without merit.[1]
Based on the existence of the Eiwa-bon, the work must date to the Nanbokuchō period at the latest.[1]
Plot
The Enryaku-ji monk Keikai (桂海) visits Mii-dera and falls in love with Umewaka (梅若), the son of the Hanazono Minister of the Left (花園左大臣), but Umewaka is carried off by a tengu.[2] The monks of Mii-dera, searching for the boy, fight with Enryaku-ji and burn the temple building.[2] Umewaka returns safely, but learning what has happened he commits suicide.[2] Keikai mourns for Umewaka and turns for comfort to the revered Tendai monk Sensei-shōnin (瞻西上人).[2]