WHY ARE JAPANESE SWORDS SPECIAL?
The following contains excerpts from the
book, THE JAPANESE SWORD, by Kanzan Sato. The uniqueness of the Japanese sword lies
in the technical innovations devised by the
Japanese in an effort to resolve the three
conflicting practical requirements of a sword:
unbreakability, rigidity, and cutting power.
Unbreakability implies a soft but tough metal,
such as iron, which will not snap with a
sudden blow, while rigidity and cutting power
are best achieved by the use of hard steel.
The Japanese have combined these features
in a number of ways which have given their
swords a very distinctive character. First
of all, most Japanese blades are made up
of two different metals: a soft and durable
iron core is enveloped in a hard outer skin
of steel which has been forged and reforged
many times in order to produce a complex
and close-knit crystalline structure. Seconds,
the cross-section, widening from the back
to a ridge on both sides, then narrowing
to a very acute angle at the edge, combines
the virtues of thickness for strength and
thinness for cutting power. Third and most
important of all, a highly tempered edge
is formed by covering the rest of the blade
with a special heat-resistant clay and heating
and quenching only the part left exposed.
The result is a steel which is even harder
then the rest of the outer skin and can take
a razor-sharp edge. A fourth feature, the
distinctive curve away from the edge, owes
its origin to another practical demand: the
need to draw the sword and strike as quickly
as possible and in a continuous motion. Where
the sword itself forms part of the approximate
circumference of a circle with its center
at the wearer's right shoulder and its radius
the length of his arm, drawing from a narrow
scabbard will naturally be easier and faster
than with a straight weapon. But to the Japanese
specialist the beauty of a sword lies in
more than just its fulfillment of practical
requirements or its almost mechanical perfection
of finish and cleanness of profile. The Japanese
swordsmith has given his product a number
of features which, although they may have
a strictly practical origin, have been elaborated
far beyond the simple requirement of hard-wearing
efficiency in slaughter. One example of this
is the forging of the outer skin, a process
necessary to produce steel of adequate purity
and hardness: this has been done in a multitude
of different ways so as to obtain a wide
variety of distinct grains in the surface
of the blade. But it is the tempering process
which has received the most careful attention.
The heat-resistant clay is wholly or practically
scraped away from the area of the edge in
a seemingly inexhaustible range of outlines
resulting in an enormous number of patterns
of hard crystalline steel which guarantee
that no two swords will ever be the same:
and yet these outlines have no practical
function beyond the simple requirement that
the edge must be tempered in one way or another.