Thanks for reading 🙂
supposely ambiguous thats why the timeline says seppuku ?My amusing boi has gone from this world...
Thank you so much for carrying this AMAZING series to the end!
...However, I'm still a little confused on how they took this ending. Are they implying that Oribe somehow escaped his seppuku and went around the country spreading his aesthetics for a little while longer? Or are they just following that idea, while it was just the aesthetics of Oribe that outlived him long enough to have a lasting effect around the country?
That's actually even more mundane than a lantern. It's a decoratively-shaped mosquito coil burner, a kayaributa (lit. "mosquito pig", which holds a kayari senko/mosquito-repelling incense coil).The ending with the lantern was very serene
I don't know it's definite proof that he lived on and that was his residence but I think the last chapter wanted to hammer in the idea that despite people making new values and forming new tastes, his own aesthetics has ultimately colored Japan and outlasted his existence so he truly left something behind. Despite his supposed demise of his bloodline, people still hold comicality to their hearts so whether or not Furuta was still alive, his ideas will live on in the Tokugawa shogunate as many have wanted. But the comical design of the pig makes me believe it couldn't have been none other than Furuta who made it. He was just that kind of guy who makes those jokes and turns them into fashion and art.That's actually even more mundane than a lantern. It's a decoratively-shaped mosquito coil burner, a kayaributa (lit. "mosquito pig", which holds a kayari senko/mosquito-repelling incense coil).
It's adorable and whimsical, and I think it's a perfect way to end Oribe's aesthetic story.