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第23章

unbeaten tracks in japan-第23章

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reached a solitary yadoya with the usual open front and irori;
round which a number of people; old and young; were sitting。  When
I arrived a whole bevy of nice…looking girls took to flight; but
were soon recalled by a word from Ito to their elders。  Lady
Parkes; on a side…saddle and in a riding…habit; has been taken for
a man till the people saw her hair; and a young friend of mine; who
is very pretty and has a beautiful complexion; when travelling
lately with her husband; was supposed to be a man who had shaven
off his beard。  I wear a hat; which is a thing only worn by women
in the fields as a protection from sun and rain; my eyebrows are
unshaven; and my teeth are unblackened; so these girls supposed me
to be a foreign man。  Ito in explanation said; 〃They haven't seen
any; but everybody brings them tales how rude foreigners are to
girls; and they are awful scared。〃  There was nothing eatable but
rice and eggs; and I ate them under the concentrated stare of
eighteen pairs of dark eyes。  The hot springs; to which many people
afflicted with sores resort; are by the river; at the bottom of a
rude flight of steps; in an open shed; but I could not ascertain
their temperature; as a number of men and women were sitting in the
water。  They bathe four times a day; and remain for an hour at a
time。

We left for the five miles' walk to Ikari in a torrent of rain by a
newly…made path completely shut in with the cascading Kinugawa; and
carried along sometimes low; sometimes high; on props projecting
over it from the face of the rock。  I do not expect to see anything
lovelier in Japan。

The river; always crystal…blue or crystal…green; largely increased
in volume by the rains; forces itself through gates of brightly…
coloured rock; by which its progress is repeatedly arrested; and
rarely lingers for rest in all its sparkling; rushing course。  It
is walled in by high mountains; gloriously wooded and cleft by dark
ravines; down which torrents were tumbling in great drifts of foam;
crashing and booming; boom and crash multiplied by many an echo;
and every ravine afforded glimpses far back of more mountains;
clefts; and waterfalls; and such over…abundant vegetation that I
welcomed the sight of a gray cliff or bare face of rock。  Along the
path there were fascinating details; composed of the manifold
greenery which revels in damp heat; ferns; mosses; confervae;
fungi; trailers; shading tiny rills which dropped down into
grottoes feathery with the exquisite Trichomanes radicans; or
drooped over the rustic path and hung into the river; and overhead
the finely incised and almost feathery foliage of several varieties
of maple admitted the light only as a green mist。  The spring tints
have not yet darkened into the monotone of summer; rose azaleas
still light the hillsides; and masses of cryptomeria give depth and
shadow。  Still; beautiful as it all is; one sighs for something
which shall satisfy one's craving for startling individuality and
grace of form; as in the coco…palm and banana of the tropics。  The
featheriness of the maple; and the arrowy straightness and
pyramidal form of the cryptomeria; please me better than all else;
but why criticise?  Ten minutes of sunshine would transform the
whole into fairyland。

There were no houses and no people。  Leaving this beautiful river
we crossed a spur of a hill; where all the trees were matted
together by a very fragrant white honeysuckle; and came down upon
an open valley where a quiet stream joins the loud…tongued
Kinugawa; and another mile brought us to this beautifully…situated
hamlet of twenty…five houses; surrounded by mountains; and close to
a mountain stream called the Okawa。  The names of Japanese rivers
give one very little geographical information from their want of
continuity。  A river changes its name several times in a course of
thirty or forty miles; according to the districts through which it
passes。  This is my old friend the Kinugawa; up which I have been
travelling for two days。  Want of space is a great aid to the
picturesque。  Ikari is crowded together on a hill slope; and its
short; primitive…looking street; with its warm browns and greys; is
quite attractive in 〃the clear shining after rain。〃  My halting…
place is at the express office at the top of the hilla place like
a big barn; with horses at one end and a living…room at the other;
and in the centre much produce awaiting transport; and a group of
people stripping mulberry branches。  The nearest daimiyo used to
halt here on his way to Tokiyo; so there are two rooms for
travellers; called daimiyos' rooms; fifteen feet high; handsomely
ceiled in dark wood; the shoji of such fine work as to merit the
name of fret…work; the fusuma artistically decorated; the mats
clean and fine; and in the alcove a sword…rack of old gold lacquer。
Mine is the inner room; and Ito and four travellers occupy the
outer one。  Though very dark; it is luxury after last night。  The
rest of the house is given up to the rearing of silk…worms。  The
house…masters here and at Fujihara are not used to passports; and
Ito; who is posing as a town…bred youth; has explained and copied
mine; all the village men assembling to hear it read aloud。  He
does not know the word used for 〃scientific investigation;〃 but; in
the idea of increasing his own importance by exaggerating mine; I
hear him telling the people that I am gakusha; i。e。 learned!  There
is no police…station here; but every month policemen pay
domiciliary visits to these outlying yadoyas and examine the
register of visitors。

This is a much neater place than the last; but the people look
stupid and apathetic; and I wonder what they think of the men who
have abolished the daimiyo and the feudal regime; have raised the
eta to citizenship; and are hurrying the empire forward on the
tracks of western civilisation!

Since shingle has given place to thatch there is much to admire in
the villages; with their steep roofs; deep eaves and balconies; the
warm russet of roofs and walls; the quaint confusion of the
farmhouses; the hedges of camellia and pomegranate; the bamboo
clumps and persimmon orchards; and (in spite of dirt and bad
smells) the generally satisfied look of the peasant proprietors。

No food can be got here except rice and eggs; and I am haunted by
memories of the fowls and fish of Nikko; to say nothing of the
〃flesh pots〃 of the Legation; and


〃a sorrow's crown of sorrow
Is remembering happier things!〃


The mercury falls to 70 degrees at night; and I generally awake
from cold at 3 a。m。; for my blankets are only summer ones; and I
dare not supplement them with a quilt; either for sleeping on or
under; because of the fleas which it contains。  I usually retire
about 7。30; for there is almost no twilight; and very little
inducement for sitting up by the dimness of candle or andon; and I
have found these days of riding on slow; rolling; stumbling horses
very severe; and if I were anything of a walker; should certainly
prefer pedestrianism。  I。 L。 B。



LETTER XII



A Fantastic JumbleThe 〃Quiver〃 of PovertyThe Water…shedFrom
Bad to WorseThe Rice Planter's HolidayA Diseased CrowdAmateur
DoctoringWant of CleanlinessRapid EatingPremature Old Age。

KURUMATOGE; June 30。

After the hard travelling of six days the rest of Sunday in a quiet
place at a high elevation is truly delightful!  Mountains and
passes; valleys and rice swamps; forests and rice swamps; villages
and rice swamps; poverty; industry; dirt; ruinous temples;
prostrate Buddhas; strings of straw…shod pack…horses; long; grey;
featureless streets; and quiet; staring crowds; are all jumbled up
fantastically in my memory。  Fine weather accompanied me through
beautiful scenery from Ikari to Yokokawa; where I ate my lunch in
the street to avoid the innumerable fleas of the tea…house; with a
circle round me of nearly all the inhabitants。  At first the
children; both old and young; were so frightened that they ran
away; but by degrees they timidly came back; clinging to the skirts
of their parents (skirts; in this case; being a metaphorical
expression); running away again as often as I looked at them。  The
crowd was

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