Tsuzura no bakemono

Tsuzura no bakemono 葛籠の化物

Tsuzura no bakemono (葛籠の化物), the “Wicker Trunk Monster,” is a mysterious and mischievous Tsukumogami—an ancient basket that has spent so many centuries in a dusty attic that it has developed a personality and a desire to surprise.

Meaning and Origin

The name means “Monster of the Wicker Trunk” (tsuzura - wicker basket/trunk, bakemono - monster/shape-shifter).

Like many object-spirits, its origin is the Buddhist belief in Tsukumogami. In traditional Japan, tsuzura were large baskets woven from bamboo or vines used to store precious kimonos. If a trunk was kept for over 100 years and then neglected or forgotten, it would develop a spirit. It is the physical embodiment of “domestic neglect,” showing that even our household tools have a memory and a soul.

Characteristics

A Tsuzura no bakemono is usually depicted as a standard wicker trunk that suddenly sprouts a single large eye in its center, or a pair of thin, spindly arms and legs. It often has a long, lolling tongue that it uses to “taste” the air.

It is rarely dangerous but highly mischievous. It enjoys hiding in the corner of a storage room and “shifting” its position just enough to make a servant or a housewife think they are losing their mind. When the lid is opened, it might let out a puff of ancient dust that takes the shape of small ghosts or birds before vanishing.

Legends

The most famous connection to this yokai is the classic fairytale of The Tongue-Cut Sparrow (Shita-kiri Suzume). In the story, a greedy old woman is given a choice between two wicker trunks: a large one and a small one.

Choosing the big one out of greed, she drags it home and opens it, only to find it wasn’t full of gold, but was a Tsuzura no bakemono. Out of the trunk flew a swarm of monsters, snakes, and demons that terrified her and drove her out of her home. This legend solidified the Tsuzura as a vessel for moral judgment—to the kind-hearted, it is a simple basket of gifts; to the greedy, it is a box of living nightmares that reveals the monster hiding inside the person who opened it.