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The Evolution of Tea
Tea
is a work of art and needs a master hand to bring out its noblest
qualities. We have good and bad tea, as we have good and bad paintings
– generally the latter. There is no single recipe for making
the perfect tea, as there are no rules for producing a Titian or a
Sesson. Each preparation of the leaves has its individuality, its
special affinity with water and heat, its hereditary memories to
recall, its own method of telling a story. The truly beautiful must be
always in it. How much do we not suffer through the constant failure of
society to recognise this simple and fundamental law of art and life;
Lichihlai, a Sung poet, has sadly, remarked that there were three most
deplorable things in the world: the spoiling of fine youths through
false education, the degradation of fine paintings through vulgar
admiration, and the utter waste of fine tea through incompetent
manipulation.
Like Art, Tea has its periods and its
schools. Its evolution may be roughly divided into three main stages:
the Boiled Tea, the Whipped Tea, and the Steeped Tea. We moderns belong
to the last school. These several methods of appreciating the beverage
are indicative of the spirit of the age in which they prevailed. For
life is an expression, our unconscious actions the constant betrayal of
our innermost thought. Confucius said that "man hideth not." Perhaps we
reveal ourselves too much in small things because we have so little of
the great to conceal. The tiny incidents of daily routine are as much a
commentary of racial ideals as the highest flight of philosophy or
poetry. Even as the difference in favourite vintage marks the separate
idiosyncrasies of different periods and nationalities of Europe, so the
Tea-ideals characterise the various moods of Oriental culture. The
Cake-tea which was boiled, the Powdered-tea which was whipped, the
Leaf-tea which was steeped, mark the distinct emotional impulses of the
Tang, the Sung, and the Ming dynasties of China. If we were inclined to
borrow the much-abused terminology of art-classification, we might
designate them respectively, the Classic, the Romantic, and the
Naturalistic schools of Tea.
The tea-plant, a native of southern
China, was known from very early times to Chinese botany and medicine.
It is alluded to in the classics under the various names of Tou, Tseh,
Chung, Kha, and Ming, and was highly prized for possessing the virtues
of relieving fatigue, delighting the soul, strengthening the will, and
repairing the eyesight. It was not only administered as an internal
dose, but often applied externally in form of paste to alleviate
rheumatic pains. The Taoists claimed it as an important ingredient of
the elixir of immortality. The Buddhists used it extensively to prevent
drowsiness during their long hours of meditation.
By the fourth and fifth centuries Tea
became a favourite beverage among the inhabitants of the Yangtse-Kiang
valley. It was about this time that the modern ideograph Cha was
coined, evidently a corruption of the classic Tou. The poets of the
southern dynasties have left some fragments of their fervent adoration
of the "froth of the liquid jade." Then emperors used to bestow some
rare preparation of the leaves on their high ministers as a reward for
eminent services. Yet the method of drinking tea at this stage was
primitive in the extreme. The leaves were steamed, crushed in a mortar,
made into a cake, and boiled together with rice, ginger, salt, orange
peel, spices, milk, and sometimes with onions! The custom obtains at
the present day among the Thibetans and various Mongolian tribes, who
make a curious syrup of these ingredients. The use of lemon slices by
the Russians, who learned to take tea from the Chinese caravansaries,
points to the survival of the ancient method.
It needed the genius of the Tang
dynasty to emancipate Tea from its crude state and lead to its final
idealisation. With Luwuh in the middle of the eighth century we have
our first apostle of tea. He was born in an age when Buddhism, Taoism,
and Confucianism were seeking mutual synthesis. The pantheistic
symbolism of the time was urging one to mirror the Universal in the
Particular. Luwuh, a poet, saw in the Tea-service the same harmony and
order which reigned through all things. In his celebrated work, the
"Chaking" (The Holy Scripture of Tea) he formulated the Code of Tea. He
has since been worshipped as the tutelary god of the Chinese tea
merchants.
The "Chaking" consists of three volumes
and ten chapters. In the first chapter Luwuh treats of the nature of
the tea-plant, in the second of the implements for gathering the
leaves, in the third of the selection of the leaves. According to him
the best quality of the leaves must have "creases like the leathern
boot of Tartar horsemen, curl like the dewlap of a mighty bullock,
unfold like a mist rising out of a ravine, gleam like a lake touched by
a zephyr, and be wet and soft like fine earth newly swept by rain."
The fourth chapter is devoted to the
enumeration and description of the twenty-four members of the
tea-equipage, beginning with the tripod brazier and ending with the
bamboo cabinet for containing all these utensils. Here we notice
Luwuh's predilection for Taoist symbolism. Also it is interesting to
observe in this connection the influence of tea on Chinese ceramics.
The Celestial porcelain, as is well known, had its origin in an attempt
to reproduce the exquisite shade of jade, resulting, in the Tang
dynasty, in the blue glaze of the south, and the white glaze of the
north. Luwuh considered the blue as the ideal colour for the tea-cup,
as it lent additional greenness to the beverage, whereas the white made
it look pinkish and distasteful. It was because he used cake-tea. Later
on, when the tea masters of Sung took to the powdered tea, they
preferred heavy bowls of blue-black and dark brown. The Mings, with
their steeped tea, rejoiced in light ware of white porcelain.
In the fifth
chapter Luwuh describes the method of making tea. He eliminates all
ingredients except salt. He dwells also on the much-discussed question
of the choice of water and the degree of boiling it. According to him,
the mountain spring is the best, the river water and the spring water
come next in the order of excellence. There are three stages of
boiling: the first boil is when the little bubbles like the eye of
fishes swim on the surface; the second boil is when the bubbles are
like crystal beads rolling in a fountain; the third boil is when the
billows surge wildly in the kettle. The Cake-tea is roasted before the
fire until it becomes soft like a baby's arm and is shredded into
powder between pieces of fine paper. Salt is put in the first boil, the
tea in the second. At the third boil, a dipperful of cold water is
poured into the kettle to settle the tea and revive the "youth of the
water." Then the beverage was poured into cups and drunk. O nectar! The
filmy leaflet hung like sealy clouds in a serene sky or floated like
water-lilies on emerald streams. It was of such a beverage that Lotung,
a Tang poet, wrote: "The first cup moistens my lips and throat, the
second cup breaks my loneliness, the third cup searches my barren
entrail but to find therein some five thousand volumes of odd
ideographs. – The fourth cup raises a slight perspiration,
– all the wrong of life passes away through my pores. At the
fifth cup I am purified; the sixth cup calls me to the realms of
immortals. The seventh cup – ah, but I could take no more! I
only feel the breath of cool wind that rises in my sleeves. Where is
Horaisan?1 Let
me ride on this sweet breeze and waft
away thither."
The remaining chapters of the" Chaking"
treat of the vulgarity of the ordinary methods of tea-drinking, a
historical summary of illustrious tea-drinkers, the famous tea
plantations of China, the possible variations of the tea-service and
illustrations of the tea-utensils. The last is unfortunately lost.
The appearance of the "Chaking" must
have created considerable sensation at the time. Luwuh was befriended
by the Emperor Taisung (768-779), and his fame attracted many
followers. Some exquisites were said to have been able to detect the
tea made by Luwuh from that of his disciples. One mandarin has his name
immortalised by his failure to appreciate the tea of this great master.
In the Sung dynasty the whipped tea
came into fashion and created the second school of Tea. The leaves were
ground to fine powder in a small stone mill, and the preparation was
whipped in hot water by a delicate whisk made of split bamboo. The new
process led to some change in the tea-equipage of Luwuh, as well as the
choice of leaves. Salt was discarded forever. The enthusiasm of the
Sung people for tea knew no bounds. Epicures vied with each other in
discovering new varieties, and regular tournaments were held to decide
their superiority. The Emperor Kiasung (1101-1124), who was too great
an artist to be a well-behaved monarch, lavished his treasures on the
attainment of rare species. He himself wrote a dissertation on the
twenty kinds of tea, among which he prizes the "white tea" as
of the rarest and finest quality.
The tea-ideal of the Sungs differed
from the Tangs even as their notion of life differed. They sought to
actualise what their predecessors tried to symbolise. To the
Neo-Confucian mind the cosmic law was not reflected in the phenomenal
world, but the phenomenal world was the cosmic law itself.
Æons were but moments – Nirvana always within
grasp. The Taoist conception that immortality lay in the eternal change
permeated all their modes of thought. It was the process, not the deed,
which was interesting. It was the completing, not the completion, which
was really vital. Man came thus at once face to face with nature. A new
meaning grew into the art of life. The tea began to be not a poetical
past-time, but one of the methods of self-realisation. Wangyucheng
eulogised tea as "flooding his soul like a direct appeal, that its
delicate bitterness reminded him of the after-taste of a good counsel."
Sotumpa wrote of the strength of the immaculate purity in tea which
defied corruption as a truly, virtuous man. Among the Buddhists, the
southern Zen sect, which incorporated so much of Taoist doctrines,
formulated an elaborate ritual of tea. The monks gathered before the
image of Bodhi Dharma and drank tea out of a single bowl with the
profound formality of a holy sacrament. It was this Zen ritual which
finally developed into the Tea-ceremony of Japan in the fifteenth
century.
Unfortunately the sudden outburst of
the Mongol tribes in the thirteenth century which resulted in the
devastation and conquest of China under the barbaric rule of the Yuen
Emperors, destroyed all the fruits of Sung culture. The native dynasty
of the Mings which attempted re-nationalisation in the middle of the
fifteenth century was harassed by internal troubles, and China again
fell under the alien rule of the Manchus in the seventeenth century.
Manners and customs changed to leave no vestige of the former times.
The powdered tea is entirely forgotten. We find a Ming commentator at
loss to recall the shape of the tea whisk mentioned in one of the Sung
classics. Tea is now taken by steeping the leaves in hot water in a
bowl or cup. The reason why the Western world is innocent of the older
method of drinking tea is explained by the fact that Europe knew it
only at the close of the Ming dynasty.
To the latter-day Chinese tea is a
delicious beverage, but not an ideal. The long woes of his country have
robbed him of the zest for the meaning of life. He has become modern,
that is to say, old and disenchanted, he has lost that sublime faith in
illusions which constitutes the eternal youth and vigour of the poets
and ancients. He is an eclectic and politely accepts the traditions of
the universe. He toys with Nature, but does not condescend to conquer
or worship her. His Leaf-tea is often wonderful with its flower-like
aroma, but the romance of the Tang and Sung ceremonials are not to be
found in his cup.
Japan, which followed closely on the
footsteps of Chinese civilisation, has known the tea in all its three
stages. As early as the year 729 we read of the Emperor Shonm giving
tea to one hundred monks at his palace in Nara. The leaves were
probably imported by our ambassadors to the Tang Court and prepared in
the way then in fashion. In 801 the monk Saicho brought back some seeds
and planted them in Yeisan. Many tea-gardens are heard of in the
succeeding centuries, as well as the delight of the aristocracy and
priesthood in the beverage. The Sung tea reached us in 1191 with the
return of Yeisaizenji, who went there to study the southern Zen school.
The new seeds which he carried home were successfully planted in three
places, one of which, the Uji district near Kioto, bears still the name
of producing the best tea in the world. The southern Zen spread with
marvellous rapidity, and with it the tea-ritual and the tea-ideal of
the Sung. By the fifteenth century, under the patronage of the Shogun,
Ashikaga-Voshinasa, the tea ceremony is fully constituted and made into
an independent and secular performance. Since then Teaism is fully
established in Japan. The use of the steeped tea of the later China is
comparatively recent among us, being only known since the middle of the
seventeenth century. It has replaced the powdered tea in ordinary
consumption, though the latter still continues to hold its place as the
tea of teas.
It is in the Japanese tea ceremony that
we see the culmination of tea-ideals. Our successful resistance of the
Mongol invasion in 1281 had enabled us to carry on the Sung movement so
disastrously cut off in China itself through the nomadic inroad. Tea
with us became more than an idealisation of the form of drinking; it is
a religion of the art of life. The beverage grew to be an excuse for
the worship of purity and refinement, a sacred function at which the
host and guest joined to produce for that occasion the utmost beatitude
of the mundane. The tea-room was an oasis in the dreary waste of
existence where weary travellers could meet to drink from the common
spring of art-appreciation. The ceremony was an improvised drama whose
plot was woven about the tea, the flowers, and the paintings. Not a
colour to disturb the tone of the room, not a sound to mar the rhythm
of things, not a gesture to obtrude on the harmony, not a word to break
the unity of the surroundings, all movements to be performed simply and
naturally – such were the aims of the tea-ceremony. And
strangely enough it was often successful. A subtle philosophy lay
behind it all. Teaism was Taoism in disguise.
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