Vagabond (Japanese: ãã¬ãã³ã, Hepburn: Bagabondo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Takehiko Inoue. It portrays a fictionalized account of the life of Japanese swordsman Miyamoto Musashi, based on Eiji Yoshikawa's novel Musashi.
It has been serialized in Weekly Morning magazine since 1998, with the chapters collected into 37 tankÅbon volumes by Kodansha as of July 2014. Viz Media licensed the series for English release in North America and has published 36 volumes as of October 2014. Vagabond won a 2000 Kodansha Manga Award and the 2002 Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize, and has sold more than 82 million copies worldwide.
Summary
Growing up in the late 16th century Sengoku era Japan, Shinmen TakezÅ is shunned by the local villagers as a devil child due to his wild and violent nature. Running away from home with a fellow boy at age 17, Takezo joins the Toyotomi army to fight the Tokugawa clan at the Battle of Sekigahara. However, the Tokugawa win a crushing victory, leading to nearly three hundred years of Shogunate rule. Takezo and his friend manage to survive the battle and afterwards swear to do great things with their lives. However, after their paths separate, Takezo becomes a wanted criminal and must change his name and his nature in order to escape an ignoble death.
Characters
Main characters
- Miyamoto Musashi (å®®æ¬æ¦è"µ)
- The main character, also known by his birth name, Shinmen TakezÅ (æ°å æ¦è"µ).
- Sasaki KojirÅ (ä½ã æ¨å°æ¬¡é)
- A deaf swordsman and the archrival of Miyamoto Musashi.
- OtsÅ« (ãã¤ã)
- Childhood friend of Takezo and Matahachi. Served as aid to Yagyū Sekishūsai Muneyoshi.
- Hon'iden Matahachi (æ¬ä½ç"°åå «)
- Childhood friend of Musashi and ex-fiance of OtsÅ«. Impersonated Sasaki KojirÅ for a period, after obtaining KojirÅ's certificate of swordsmanship.
- Takuan SÅhÅ (沢庵å®å½)
- A Rinzai Zen Buddhist monk.
Minor characters
- OkÅ (ãç"²)
- An ex-thief and Matahachi's ex-lover.
- Akemi (æ±ç¾)
- OkÅ's daughter and Yoshioka SeijÅ«rÅ's lover.
- Tsujikaze Tenma (è¾»é¢¨å ¸é¦¬)
- A brigand and head of the Tsujikaze-gumi (辻風çµ) gang.
- Tsujikaze KÅhei (辻風é»å¹³)
- Younger brother of Tsujikaze Tenma. Later assumes the name Shishido Baiken (å®æ¸æ¢ è»').
- Osugi Hon'iden (ãæãã°ã°)
- Matahachi's mother and matriarch of the Hon'iden clan.
- Shinmen Munisai (æ°å ç¡äºæ)
- The father of Shinmen Takezo (Musashi) and an expert martial artist in the usage of sword and jutte.
- JÅtarÅ (å太é)
- Musashi's first apprentice.
- Yoshioka KempÅ (å岡 æ³æ³)
- The founder of Yoshioka-ryū school of swordsmanship.
- Yoshioka SeijÅ«rÅ (åå²¡æ¸ åé)
- Yoshioka KempÅ's oldest son. Despite not having interest in swordsmanship, he is naturally gifted at the art and was chosen as the second generation head of the Yoshioka clan.
- Yoshioka DenshichirÅ (å岡ä¼ä¸é)
- SeijÅ«rÅ's younger brother. He is strictly dedicated to the way of the sword.
- Ueda RyÅhei (æ¤ç"°è¯å¹³)
- A senior disciple and the leader of the Ten Swords of Yoshioka (å岡åå£), which includes MÄ«ke JurÅzaemon, Nampo Yoichibe, Kobashi Kurando, Åtaguro Hyusuke, Horikawa YoshibÄ", Azuma Koshiro, FujÄ«e and Tagaya Hikozo.
- Gion TÅji (ç¥å'è¤æ¬¡)
- A senior Yoshioka disciple and member of the Ten Swords.
- HÅzÅin In'ei (å®è"µé¢ è¤æ )
- The founder of the HÅzÅin-ryÅ« school of spearmanship. Students include Agon (é¿å³) and MyÅei (ææ ).
- HÅzÅin Inshun (å®è"µé¢ è¤è)
- The second-generation master of the HÅzÅin spear technique.
- YagyÅ« SekishÅ«sai Muneyoshi (æ³ç"ç³èæ)
- The founder of the YagyÅ« Shinkage RyÅ« school of swordsmanship. The school's four senior disciples are Kizaemon Shoda (åºç"°åå·¦è¡é), Kimura Susekuro (æ¨æ'å©ä¹é), Debuchi Magobe (åºæ·µå«å µè¡) and Murata Yozo (æ'ç"°ä¸ä¸).
- Kami'izumi Ise no Kami Hidetsuna (ä¸æ³ ä¼å¢å® ç§ç¶±)
- The founder of the Shinkage-ryū school of swordsmanship and Yagyū Sekishūsai Muneyoshi's master.
- YagyÅ« HyÅgonosuke (æ³ç"å µåº«å©)
- The successor of Yagyū Shinkage Ryū, he is a son of Yagyū Toshikatsu and a grandson of Yagyū Muneyoshi.
- Kanemaki Jisai (éå·»èªæ)
- Founder of the ChujÅ-ryÅ« school of swordsmanship. Master and guardian of Sasaki KojirÅ, as well as master of his father.
- ItÅ IttÅsai (ä¼è¤ä¸åæ)
- Former student of Kanemaki Jisai and founder of the IttÅ-ryÅ« school of swordsmanship. He takes Sasaki KojirÅ on his travel and further mentors him in swordsmanship.
- MusÅ Gonnosuke (夢æ³æ¨©ä¹å©)
- Founder of the ShintÅ MusÅ-ryÅ« school of jÅjutsu. He joins ItÅ IttÅsai and Sasaki KojirÅ on their travels.
- Hon'ami Koetsu (æ¬é¿å¼¥å æ¦)
- Famed swordsharpener, artist and calligrapher.
- Itakura Katsushige (æ¿ååé)
- The Kyoto Shoshidai. He has Musashi imprisoned in order to shield him until his injuries heal.
- Hosokawa Tadatoshi (ç´°å·å¿ å©)
- Daimyo of the Kokura Domain.
- Nagaoka Sado (é·å²¡ ä½æ¸¡)
- A samurai that serves the Hosokawa clan.
Synopsis
- Miyamoto arc â" chapters 1â"21 (volumes 1â"2)
Before Takezo becomes Miyamoto, we see him as a man who can draw the fear out of anybody, who lives on his wits and will quickly kill anyone who crosses him. This gets Takezo into big trouble, where he has to live in the mountains cut off from all but the hunters from his village who come to try and kill him. Eventually, the monk Takuan and Miyamoto's childhood friend Otsu help to capture Takezo, who is subsequently hung from a tree for several days without food or water. During this time, Tsujikaze Kohei, the younger brother of a bandit that Takezo killed, comes to claim his revenge on Takezo (but only because Kohei wanted to kill his brother first). Takuan scares him away.
At the end of the arc, Takuan takes Takezo out to a remote area surrounding the village and talks to him. At the end of the fifth volume, we learn that Takezo has for the moment shed his rage and become a more graceful person - Miyamoto Musashi.
- KyÅto arc â" chapters 22â"32 (volumes 3â"4)
Miyamoto Musashi travels to KyÅto to look for strong fighters to challenge. He immediately heads to the Yoshioka school of swordfighting, where his father's name was well known. Before he gets there, he unknowingly encounters the current leader of the school, Yoshioka SeijurÅ, cavorting with the many geisha in the town. After a few words, SeijurÅ says "You're dead," and Musashi looks down in surprise and horror to see that SeijurÅ's sword was at his neck.
Undaunted, he heads for the school and challenges the owner, but first he is forced to face many of those who train there, after some of the lower class members insult him. Musashi kills five members of higher rank, until finally Yoshioka DenshichirÅ, the more serious of the two sons of Yoshioka Kempo, decides to kill Musashi himself. In a very dramatic battle, one that SeijurÅ intervenes in once to give Musashi the scar on his forehead, Musashi also manages to dislocate DenshichirÅ's shoulder, but the fight does not end until Hon'iden Matahachi accidentally sets the school building on fire, after drinking much of the sake stored in the basement, bemoaning the "inevitable" death of his newfound hero who stood up to the Yoshioka. DenshichirÅ then tells Musashi to come back stronger within a year for a rematch.
Musashi escapes with his life and, once Matahachi realizes that Takezo/Musashi was the one who challenged the school, Matahachi decides to put his life back together. This became the beginning of an inferiority complex and would-be rivalry that would influence his life.
- HÅzÅin arc â" chapters 33â"76 (volumes 4â"8)
Takuan encourages Musashi to be more serious about training and not throw away his life so easily, but Musashi still has a lot to learn. He splits up with Takuan and goes to visit the HÅzÅin temple for its famous spear technique. Gion Toji, the Yoshioka school's assassin who seeks to kill Musashi, arrives at the temple first. He cuts both hands off a monk who challenges him and proclaims that he will come back everyday and do the same to others until he finds Musashi, throwing the temple into turmoil and unease.
Musashi appears at the temple the next day and picks a fight with Agon, one of the higher-level monks. Musashi seeks In'ei, the old and legendary master of the school, whom he does not know has retired. Agon recognizes that this must be Musashi and, seeking both to end the turmoil that Toji has caused and defend HÅzÅin's name, he fights Musashi. At one point, Musashi finds himself without a sword but he manages to end the fight by breaking Agon's nose.
Gion Toji then challenges Musashi, but before they can begin, Inshun, the new master of the school and a child prodigy at the spear, breaks up the fight, wanting to battle Musashi himself. Toji backs off and Musashi has an all-out battle with Inshun. Musashi becomes tired and distraught and flees from Inshun badly beaten. He winds up later in the care of In'ei, the same monk and spearmaster he had journeyed to HÅzÅin to fight. The elderly In'ei feels that while Inshun, his greatest student, has brilliantly mastered the physical art of spear fighting, he has not mastered himself and his soul. He believes Inshun needs a powerful rival to do this and trains Musashi so that he can be that rival.
In the end, Musashi gets a second battle with Inshun, with only In'ei and Agon as witnesses. Having learned a lot from his training about himself and his demons, Musashi overpowers Inshun's spirit. He manages to dodge Inshun's attack and knocks him down with a strike to the head from his own self-carved sword; after this, he reverts to his savage self and starts beating the ground and the fallen Inshun with his sword repeatedly. Both Musashi and Inshun are treated for any injuries at the HÅzÅin Temple, after which Musashi was issued finer robes and a pair of swords. They leave with the vow of trying not to kill each other the next time they meet.
- YagyÅ« arc â" chapters 77â"104 (volumes 8â"11)
Matahachi is making a living by posing as Sasaki KojirÅ, whose certification in ChujÅ-ryu swordsmanship he took from the mortally wounded Kusanagi Tenki. Matahachi is asked for a match by Kai Shojiro, a wandering swordsman with thirty-five years of experience. Matahachi grants Shojiro this request, but upon deciding Shojiro is a swordsman capable of killing him in combat, distracts him and flees. Matahachi runs into his mother and uncle Gon at a marketplace and states that Sasaki KojirÅ is a pseudonym he uses instead of his actual name, as he feels he has shamed his family by living with a prostitute and inadvertently setting the Yoshioka temple on fire. Granny Hon'iden states that they are to look for Musashi and Otsu, whom she states "ran off together", though she is completely unaware that the two have not been with each other since they ran away from the village. This would further fuel Matahachi's inferiority complex, since he was coerced by OkÅ into writing a letter of renouncement to Otsu.
Meanwhile, Musashi, with JotarÅ in tow, proceeds to travel to the residence of YagyÅ« SekishÅ«sai, a swordsman of great renown. YagyÅ« SekishÅ«sai is delighted to receive news that his grandson, Hyogonosuke, is returning to his temple. Yoshioka DenshichirÅ is constantly requesting a duel with SekishÅ«sai, but is refused an audience each time. By chance meeting, Musashi meets Hyogonosuke and JotarÅ meets Otsu. Musashi happens upon a peony cut by SekishÅ«sai and requests an audience with the person who cut the peony. At the hall of the YagyÅ«, Musashi attempts to antagonize the members into fighting him, hoping that by besting them he will be granted audience to SekishÅ«sai, however his efforts prove fruitless, as the disciples are used to such methods. JotarÅ, however, kills the YagyÅ« pet dog, after it attacks him. The group attempts to physically punish JotarÅ, but Musashi claims that he must take the punishment for his disciple and uses this as an excuse to engage in battle with the YagyÅ« senior disciples. JotarÅ runs to find Otsu, but falls into a pit. After a long and exhaustive bout with the senior disciples, Musashi eventually loses them in a bamboo forest and sneaks into SekishÅ«sai's cottage after a brief, but emotional reunion with Otsu. Musashi is shocked to discover that SekishÅ«sai is now an old, bedridden man, but nonetheless has an impacting discussion over the nature of being the greatest swordsman and learns one of his most valuable lessons: "invincible is just a word." Musashi leaves JotarÅ in the care of the YagyÅ« and leaves alone.
- Tsujikaze KÅhei/Shishido Baiken arc â" chapters 105â"127 (volumes 11â"13)
The arc begins with Matahachi fleeing from his uncle Gon and mother, after the former questions the legitimacy of his claim to be Sasaki KojirÅ. Matahachi runs into the ronin Kai Shojiro, who has since realized Matahachi an imposter and thus harbors murderous intent. While fleeing, Matahachi finds himself on the mountain trail leading to Shishido Baiken, a figure renowned for his chain and sickle technique, and encounters a mysterious young girl armed with a chain and sickle. The ronin and his companion eventually catch up to the fleeing Matahachi, but Gon arrives in time to protect him. Gon is killed in the ensuing struggle, while Matahachi continues to flee. The ronin eventually sees the mysterious girl and mentions she has a weapon similar to Shishido Baiken, which causes him to drop his pursuit of Matahachi and instead follow her. Shishido Baiken, however, is revealed to be none other than Tsujikaze KÅhei. Matahachi stumbles upon his house to see him smashing Shojiro's skull open. As he is discovered hiding, Baiken makes him bury the ronin and the bodies of two others, including his uncle Gon. As he painfully reminisces about his uncle, Matahachi spies Musashi arriving from afar and quickly runs away, praising Musashi for how strong he appears to have become.
Musashi, starving, happens upon a kindly hermit's hut, where he is fed and informed that Shishido Baiken is dead. The hermit recants that Baiken was nothing more than a despicable bandit leader who often gave her trouble and that respectable swordsmen only began seeking him after his death. Baiken and the girl spar with their chains and sickles, after which, as Baiken sleeps, the girl playfully examines Baiken's face to reveal to the reader a massive facial scar that had previously been obscured by Baiken's hair. Musashi eventually enters Baiken's hut, leading to shocked reactions from both Musashi and Tsujikaze. The girl, now identified as Rindo, attacks Musashi, but Baiken tells her that she should not meddle in their affairs. Rindo, nonplussed, climbs a tree to observe the combat, commenting that Musashi is different from the other swordsmen that have appeared in the past.
At the start of the match, Baiken states that while he does not wish to kill Musashi, he can only use his chain and sickle with the intent to kill. Musashi is initially intimidated by Baiken's technique and asks about his master. Baiken responds that Rindo is his master. The origin of the current incarnation of Baiken is then shown. After his spat with Musashi four years ago, Tsujikaze fell into a deep depression and began "looking for a place to die". During that time, he encountered and slew Baiken and his gang. Rindo initially attacked Tsujikaze, however she relented and passed out after seeing his grisly scar, after which they became fast friends. Back in the current battle between "Baiken" and Musashi, Baiken manages to wrap his chain around Musashi's neck. He states that Musashi's life is ultimately meaningless in the grand scheme of things. After Musashi frees himself, Baiken attempts an under-handed tactic to attack a distracted Musashi.
"Baiken" then begins to display a twisted grin, displaying that he has reverted to his former, blood-thirsty "Tsujikaze" persona, which saddens Rindo. Musashi dispatches him, severing all of Tsujikaze's fingers on his left hand save his thumb and leaving a deep wound through his shoulder. Tsujikaze pleads Musashi to help treat his wound, saying he wishes to escape the "cycle of death". Musashi seems reluctant at first, but eventually relents and aides him. While recuperating, Tsujikaze remarks that his pride was destroyed by someone who was "further along the path of death" than he, a man called Sasaki KojirÅ. It is implied KojirÅ is the one who gave Tsujikaze his scar.
During the epilogue, Tsujikaze's past is further delved into, revealing how he came to adopt his macabre outlook on life and the events leading up to his encounter with Musashi in the first arc.
- Sasaki KojirÅ arc â" chapters 128â"179 (volumes 14â"20)
This arc follows the upbringing of his arch-rival, Sasaki KojirÅ. It begins in the year 1583 CE, with a letter from Sasaki Sukeyasu to his former teacher, Kanemaki Jisai, who has retired and is living as a hermit in a small coastal village, to please take care of his only son Sasaki KojirÅ. Soon afterwards, Jisai spots the baby on a boat in the middle of a storm offshore. He rescues KojirÅ and raises him, not knowing that his adoptive son is in fact, deaf.
KojirÅ grows into a healthy young boy, but is distanced from the villagers because of his deafness and his association with Jisai, who is seen as a crazy old man and fraud, since he advertised himself as a teacher of ChujÅ-ryu swordsmanship. This changes when KojirÅ befriends Kusanagi Tenki, the local bully who longs to be a great swordsman and achieve the title of "Invincible Under the Sun". Together they plot to take down Fudo, a powerful swordsman who terrorizes the village by abducting girls just as they hit puberty. The assault does not go well, Tenki being scarred for life and KojirÅ realizing his bloodlust in battle. He cut off Fudo's right hand but it was Jisai who saves the village and the boys' lives when he takes Fudo down with one stroke.
Time passes and KojirÅ becomes a powerful teenager longing to be taught by Jisai, who refuses, haunted by how KojirÅ whimsically massacred Fudo's body after he was already dead. When ItÅ IttÅsai, an old pupil of Jisai and a renowned swordsman, strolls into town, he disrupts the balance between Jisai and KojirÅ. ItÅ sees that KojirÅ is a powerful swordsman, a "real tiger", like ItÅ and Jisai. He instigates a duel between wandering swordsmen including Ueda RyÅhei and DenshichirÅ of the Yoshioka. KojirÅ discovers them, and he and DenshichirÅ duel. DenshichirÅ discovers that though KojirÅ is deaf, he speaks volumes through battle. The duel ends with both suffering serious injuries, and DenshichirÅ longing to meet KojirÅ again.
Soon afterwards, KojirÅ leaves the village and travels with IttÅsai, Jisai having finally accepted his adoptive son's future as a swordsman and entrusting KojirÅ to Ittosai's care. Jisai sends Tenki after KojirÅ along with money and a certificate of swordsmanship, which Matahachi would ultimately acquire. KojirÅ and IttÅsai stumble upon Muso Gonnosuke, but Gonnosuke is not prepared for "the stage", as IttÅsai calls it, and KojirÅ quickly defeats him. He takes his defeat in stride and travels with them as they discover the battlefield of Sekigahara, which has just ended. IttÅsai challenges the remaining Tokugawa soldiers and a young Takezo also enters the fray, hoping to kill a general. This is the in-universe chronological first encounter between KojirÅ and the future Musashi. When the battle is over, IttÅsai and Gonnosuke are separated from KojirÅ. IttÅsai states that once KojirÅ has killed about one hundred men he will have acquired his survival instinct. If KojirÅ can survive this, IttÅsai says, then the next time they meet will be as opponents.
- Yoshioka arc â" chapters 180â"242 (volumes 21â"27)
The story focuses on Miyamoto Musashi as he returns to KyÅto in 1604 (the 9th year of the KeichÅ era) to fulfill his promise for a rematch with the Yoshioka brothers.
Musashi is unexpectedly met with a public bulletin of a challenge from Yoshioka DenshichirÅ, which he accepts. As Musashi practices and is about to rest in Rendaiji Field, Yoshioka SeijurÅ attempts to kill him. Musashi cuts him down, but the Yoshioka clan is devastated by this. SeijurÅ attacked Musashi in secret without informing anyone else and so the clan sees the killing of SeijurÅ as unforgivable. Musashi encounters Hon'ami Koetsu, a renowned sword sharpener, who offers Musashi a room to stay in while the Kempo clan seek him out. While travelling, Musashi has a tense encounter with the heads of the Kempo, but DenshichirÅ adamantly forbids any foul-play against Musashi. Gion Toji reappears, looking noticeably worse for wear (he seems to symbolize Musashi had he remained so angry). Toji has been away from the Yoshioka dojo during his search for Musashi and, in outrage at DenshichirÅ's orders, attacks Musashi blindly only to be cut down with a single slash to the neck.
Ueda, seriously worried over the possibility of his master's death, hatches a scheme to solicit Sasaki KojirÅ to fight DenshichirÅ's battle instead. Matahachi encounters the real Sasaki KojirÅ as he travels through a field. The Kempo swordsmen invite KojirÅ back to their dojo, but the encounter turns bloody after one member attacks him. Matahachi then takes KojirÅ to the Yoshioka dojo, posing as his interpreter. The men are outraged that someone who has killed one of their own is invited as an honored guest, but Ueda stifles the furor. Matahachi flees after he discovers the plot to have KojirÅ fight Musashi. When Ueda pleads to DenshichirÅ to give his consent to the plan, DenshichirÅ excommunicates Ueda.
KojirÅ wanders away from the Yoshioka dojo out of boredom and returns to the place he was staying, which is the same place Musashi is staying at. Musashi spies KojirÅ attempting to cut through Musashi's snowman's head with a stick, but is frustrated that he cannot. The two engage in a playful stick fight with thin tree branches in which Musashi "wins", however, the fight takes a serious tone when KojirÅ then eagerly draws his sword in the hopes of a real fight. They are cut short by Hon'ami's mother, who calls the two men in for dinner. Musashi and KojirÅ develop a bizarre camaraderie, in which Musashi seems to revere KojirÅ more than any other swordsman he has met to date. Musashi leaves the next day to duel with DenshichirÅ and sees that KojirÅ is now able to completely cut through his snowman's head.
Before the duel with DenshichirÅ begins, Ueda draws a matchlock pistol on Musashi, who dispatches his weapon. Ueda states that if Musashi kills DenshichirÅ then the Yoshioka clan will become solely fixated on killing him. Musashi battles DenshichirÅ regardless. The duel seems one-sided, as Musashi sees no need to draw his blade for the majority of the fight. Musashi eventually does draw his blade and cleaves through DenshichirÅ's arm with one stroke. DenshichirÅ, now solely intent on killing Musashi with no regard for his own safety, grasps Musashi, who unceremoniously guts him with a swift stroke of DenshichirÅ's wakizashi. DenshichirÅ solemnly states that he is glad to have had Musashi as his final opponent and perishes. Ueda RyÅhei, now head of the Yoshioka clan and hell-bent on vengeance, plans to ambush Musashi with all seventy Yoshioka members when Musashi attempts to leave Kyoto.
Musashi and Matahachi run into each other and have a tearful reunion. The meeting turns ugly when Matahachi's jealousy of Musashi's skill crops up, causing a drunken Matahachi to accuse Musashi of running off with Otsu. Musashi, appalled at the notion, punches Matahachi in the face and renounces his friendship. Musashi begins to meditate within a massive pine tree at IchijÅji. As he reflects on his isolation from the world, he overhears Ueda and the rest of the heads of the Yoshioka plot to ambush him. Musashi deduces that he will certainly die from such an attack and opts to strike the small number of the heads of the Yoshioka beneath the tree. Losing his composure, Musashi antagonizes Ueda, who then makes light of the fact that Musashi would become so angry at his own imminent death but feel nothing for killing DenshichirÅ and his brother. Ueda takes advantage of this emotional distraction to successfully cut Musashi, but the battle is cut short by Takuan, who houses Musashi for the night. During his stay, Musashi states he will flee before the fight the next day and that he is unaffected by the reaction a "cowardly" retreat would have with other people.
Mid-flight, however, Musashi begins to have second thoughts and returns for reasons unknown even to him. He spies the Yoshioka amassing under the same great pine as where Musashi had his confrontation with Ueda RyÅhei. Musashi takes his early arrival to his advantage and descends upon the Yoshioka swiftly and silently, successfully carving a swath through their ranks to Ueda. Musashi, critically wounded and exhausted, lurches his way out of KyÅto and runs into Akemi, the girl with whom he lived briefly. Akemi states that Musashi was foolish for abandoning his life with her, attempts to stab him, says she is SeijurÅ's woman, then proceeds to leap into a nearby river before a stunned Musashi.
- After the Yoshioka War/KojirÅ revisited â" chapters 243â"present [322] (volumes 28â"present)
The arc begins an unspecified time after the first KojirÅ arc, with KojirÅ in the den of a kindly prostitute and her pet frog; Gonnosuke and Ittosai are noticeably absent. The prostitute is unusually philanthropic; she refuses money if her clientele are nice to her. The prostitute goes outside after making love to KojirÅ to see Tsujikaze KÅhei (scar absent). Tsujikaze and the prostitute had previously been together and he is returning after his imprisonment, downward spiral into severe depression and subsequent release. He pierces her right eye with his sword and stomps on her pet frog, killing it. KojirÅ, upon seeing this, retrieves his sword and confronts Tsujikaze. Tsujikaze, not taking KojirÅ seriously, states that KojirÅ is merely wasting time until his death. Tsujikaze attempts to attack him, but KojirÅ dodges, shoves KÅhei back then slices his face, delivering the scar seen in the Baiken arc.
After Musashi's great fight, he is taken care of by Takuan and finally encounters JotarÅ, Matahachi (who has renounced his past resentment) and Otsu. While he is recovering from his injuries, Matahachi resigns himself to Otsu loving Musashi over himself, and separately tells both of them to have a relationship. When he awakens, it is revealed that Musashi cannot walk because of the severe wound in his right calf (caused by Ueda RyÅhei's final slash) and, according to "one of the two best physicians in KyÅto", his fighting days are over. Soldiers then come to arrest Musashi for killing the seventy warriors of the Yoshioka.
When next seen, he is imprisoned at NijÅ Castle, although, according to the shoshidai of KyÅto in a conversation with Koetsu, it is more of a protective custody, since his nation-wide fame from defeating the Yoshioka now makes him the target of possible revenge, challenges from fighters seeking fame and invitations to serve as a samurai. As such, Musashi will not face beheading or seppuku. However, the possible end of his fighting career causes distress for him, JotarÅ and Otsu. Musashi takes up a journey to visit a cave back in his hometown where he had promised a skeleton that he would return if he was stronger. Just as he reached it, ItÅ IttÅsai challenges him to a duel. IttÅsai remembers Musashi from fighting alongside him for a brief moment with KojirÅ and Gonnosuke but Musashi does not recall anything, only that IttÅsai is famous for his fighting style. When the fight seemed over, IttÅsai revealed his right hand with only his pinky and ring finger still on his hand, he claims that KojirÅ is stronger and recalls the time when he had left KojirÅ for dead with vengeful peasants.
In the meantime, Matahachi's mother had died and the time shifts towards the future when an old Matahachi is telling a group of villagers about Musashi's, KojirÅ's and his story.
Production
In April 2009, Takehiko Inoue told Nishinippon Shimbun that he suspected Vagabond would be ending "within one or two years." Claiming that he did not know how it would end, but that it had entered its final stages. In January 2010, he confirmed it would be ending within the year. However, in September during a hiatus due to health concerns, Inoue announced that the ending had been delayed until 2011. Inoue posted an update on his website in December 2010, stating that Vagabond would not return until he regained "enthusiasm" for the series.
After eighteen-months, Vagabond returned to Weekly Morning as a monthly series in March 2012. The manga is currently on a four-month hiatus until June 19, 2014, with the reason stated being for Inoue to work on research.
Release
Written and illustrated by Takehiko Inoue, Vagabond is based on Eiji Yoshikawa's 1935 novel Musashi and has been serialized in Weekly Morning since 1998. He began the series Real in Weekly Young Jump in 2001, and currently creates it alongside Vagabond. As of October 2013, the Vagabond chapters have been collected into 36 tankÅbon volumes by Kodansha.
Viz Media began releasing Vagabond in English in North America in 2002. Their release retains the color pages from the series' magazine run, and the company has published 34 volumes as of March 19, 2013. Viz's release is distributed in Australasia by Madman Entertainment. In 2008, Viz began re-releasing the series in a format that collects three of the volumes into one.
Two art books for the series were released on October 23, 2006; Water containing the manga's colored art and new pieces, and Sumi (墨) containing the black and white art as well as early rough sketches. Both were published in North America by Viz on September 16, 2008.
Reception
Vagabond won the Grand Prize for manga at the 2000 Japan Media Arts Festival. The following is an excerpt from the speech congratulating Takehiko Inoue: "From Toyotomi to Tokugawa. Musashi Miyamoto grew up amidst the turn of two great eras. Mr. Inoue has taken the powerful Musashi who was sometimes called a 'beast' and drawn him as a vagabond. The artist brags about boldly challenging the national literary work of Eiji Yoshikawa, even so, the sense of speed that he creates is impressive. I send my applause to the artist for creating a new image of Musashi." The same year, the series won the 24th Kodansha Manga Award in the general category. Vagabond also received the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in 2002, and the North American version earned Inoue a nomination for the 2003 Eisner Award in the Best Writer/Artist category. Vagabond has sold 82 million copies worldwide.
References
External links
- Takehiko Inoue Official Website
- Vagabond (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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