Yume no seirei

Yume no seirei (夢の精霊, “dream spirit”), is a mysterious yōkai in Japanese mythology believed to cause nightmares.[1]

Yume no seirei ゆめのせいれい from Bakemono no e (化物之繪, c. 1700), Harry F. Bruning Collection of Japanese Books and Manuscripts, L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.

Origins

Belief in the supernatural was particularly strong during the Heian and Edo periods. During this time, many believed that the spirits of the dead caused a multitude of evils for the living.[2] On certain nights, demons and ghosts would move in a haunting procession from dusk to dawn, known as the Hyakki yakō or night procession of one hundred demons.* Occasionally, yume no seirei appears in this procession. He appears in the Hyakkai Zukan, "The Illustrated Volume of a Hundred Demons," created by Sawaki Suushi in 1737. Yume no seirei is also part of the Bakemonozukushie (化物尽絵, "Illustrated Index of Supernatural Creatures"), housed in the Harry F. Bruning Collection of Japanese Books and Manuscripts of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library at Brigham Young University.[3]

Physical Appearance

Sawaki Suushi, Yume-no-seirei from the Hyakkai-Zukan, circa 1737.

Artists depict yume no seirei as an emaciated, elderly man. He wears a loose white robe, which reveals his frail body and exposed ribcage. His thin wispy hair flows behind him in a ghostly motion. In his right hand he holds a cane and with his left he reaches out, beckoning. The bottom half of his body eerily fades away as if he is disappearing. His appearance is similar to the description of the female ghosts yurei.

"During the Edo Period (1600–1867) a female yurei was conceived of in terms not unlike that of a Western ghost. Artists often depicted her with long straight hair and waving or beckoning hands. Pale clothing with long, flowing sleeves was draped loosely about the seemingly fragile figure, and the head and upper part of the body were strongly delineated. From the waist down, however, the form was misty and tapered into nothingness.”[2]

Similar yōkai

Binbōgami

In some sources, this image of yume no seirei is used to illustrate the kami of poverty, binbōgami. Like yume no seirei, binbōgami is a skinny, dirty, old man. Perhaps their similar physical description explains why this image of an old emaciated figure has been used for both yōkai. However, unlike yume no seirei who brings nightmares, binbōgami brings poverty.

Makura-gaeshi

Makura-gaeshi,[4] or pillow shifter, is another yōkai relate to sleep. Sleep was a particularly vulnerable state of being because it was believed that the spirit and physical body seemed to separated while dreaming.[5] The pillow was a threshold, a sort of magical device, that allowed one to travel to another world. Because of this, pillows were treated with respect. It would have been disturbing to wake up and discover that your pillow had been shifted. If the makura-gaeshi moved your pillow while you were asleep, it was possible that your spirit would not be able to return to the body.[5] This threat turns a seemingly innocuous prank into a deadly one and is all the more frightening because of the vulnerable unconscious state of dreaming.

Baku

Baku, or dream-eater, is a benevolent yōkai with the power to eat nightmares.[5] As a remedy for nightmares, baku can be seen as the antithesis of yume no seirei.

gollark: I tend to just put wood parts on my tools, or repair them manually.
gollark: Ah. Right.
gollark: Tools don't gain experience unless you have a TiCon addon for it.
gollark: I think there's a psi spell someone wrote for dealing stupid amounts of damage to it in the compendium, better find that.
gollark: Yæy!

References

  1. Zenyōji, Susumu (2015). E de miru Edo no yōkai zukan. Tokyo: Kōsaidō Shuppan. p. 309. ISBN 9784331519578.
  2. Addiss, Stephen (1985). Japanese Ghosts & Demons: Art of the Supernatural. New York: Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas. p. 68.
  3. "Bakemono no e". search.lib.byu.edu. Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University. 1700.
  4. "Makuragaeshi". yokai.com. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  5. Foster, Michael Dylan (2015). The book of yōkai : mysterious creatures of Japanese folklore. Oakland: University of California Press. p. 280. ISBN 9780520959125.
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