Gardenvisit.com The Garden Guide

Book: Landscape Gardening in Japan, 1912
Chapter: Old photographs

Plate Viii. Kinkakuji Garden, Kyoto

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The garden of the Kinkakuji, or Golden Pavilion, is one of the most historically interesting spots of the ancient capital, Kioto. It was laid out in the fourteenth century for the Regent Ashikaga Yoshimitsu as a landscape to surround a palace built for his seclusion. From this place of retirement, in priestly garb, and ostensibly indifferent to the cares of State, he secretly directed the government of his successor. A three-storied pavilion richly covered with gold formed the principal feature of the palace; this still remains, bearing traces of its former magnificence. The lake which surrounds this garden pavilion, now thickly covered with the water-weeds of centuries, was called the "Mirror Ocean," and contained three pine-clad islets shaped to resemble in their outline the principal islands of the Japanese Empire. Much artifice is said to have been bestowed upon the whole composition, in the grouping of rare trees and rocks, and in adapting the design to the surrounding prospects. Perhaps the best proof of its original artistic perfection is to be found in the wildly natural aspect which it now bears, time having assisted art in that self-concealment which it is the latter's highest purpose to attain. As now to be seen, the spot is no longer recognisable as an artificial garden, but resembles rather some romantic watered glen in which man has "built himself a lordly pleasure house."