The vassals’ argument coheres in an impassioned problem from Hiromatsu, Toranaga’s oldest and closest buddy, who begs him to cease “throwing away all we’ve fought for.” Hiromatsu threatens to commit seppuku on the spot if Toranaga persists in his plan to give up. Minute after tense minute, the 2 travel, barely stifling their tears in a grim sport of hen — however Toranaga gained’t relent.
“So you do consider in pointless dying,” Hiromatsu says, seemingly shocked. “Your vassal dies in useless.”
“Then die,” Toranaga replies.
The ritual of seppuku has been described and threatened by a number of characters since episode 1, but it surely isn’t till this level that “Shogun” lastly depicts the act in graphic, agonizing element. Indeed, Hiromatsu’s dying scene features as a microcosm of the entire sequence: teasing us with the taboo thrill of violence, then actually making it harm when it sinks the knife in.
The good-hearted Hiromatsu is the canvas on which the sound and results workforce paint a grotesque portrait of steel tearing by way of flesh and muscle and viscera, till the sword of his son Buntaro, who Hiromatsu has requested to “second” the act, severs his head. It rolls instantly towards Toranaga, like a grotesque accusation.
Here’s your code of honor, the present appears to say. Choke on it.
But this magnificent scene performs a second, surprising function. As famous above, Toranaga spends the episode radiating loser vibes. He’s in mourning — the Regents grant him a number of weeks to grieve, as per customized, earlier than he must report for his execution — and he’s bodily sick. In his each motion, he seems to have utterly given up. Earlier within the episode, he goes as far as to dispatch Father Alvito, the diplomatic Portuguese priest, again to Osaka to report that he’s accepted his destiny. (But first he grants the priest land for a brand new church — proper subsequent to the crimson gentle district he’s ordered up for Gin and Kiku’s courtesan operation. There goes the neighborhood.)