In 1932 Tsuji was institutionalized in a
psychiatric hospital after what would become popularly known as the "
Tengu Incident". According to some accounts, one night during a party at a friend's residence, Tsuji climbed to the second floor and began flapping his arms crying "I am the Tengu!", eventually jumping from the building, running around, and jumping onto the table calling "kyaaaaaa, kyaaaa!!" After hospitalization, Tsuji was diagnosed as having experienced a temporary psychosis probably resulting from his chronic
alcoholism. During this hospitalization Tsuji came to idealize the Buddhist monk
Shinran and read the
Tannishō many times over. Thereafter the once prolific Tsuji gave up his writing career, and he returned to his custom of vagabondage in the fashion of a
Komusō monk, apparently as a sort of
Nekkhamma. For the next few years Tsuji fell into various incidents with police and was readmitted to mental hospitals several times. At the age of 41 Tsuji suffered a major
asthma attack and after hospitalization became weighed down with substantial hospital bills. While book royalties and a sort of provided some economic support, Tsuji was caught up in a harsh late
World War II economic environment and spent the last few years of his life in vagabond
poverty. Tsuji often made ends meet by going door to door as a
busking shakuhachi musician. However, in 1944, Tsuji settled down in a friend's one-bedroom apartment in Tokyo, where he was found dead from
starvation. Tsuji is now buried in Tokyo's Saifuku Temple. ==Legacy==