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immediate left; and for a moment it was a question whether she
would not smash us to atoms。 Ito was livid with fear; his white;
appalled face struck me as ludicrous; for I had no other thought
than the imminent peril of the large boat with her freight of
helpless families; when; just as she was within two feet of us; she
struck a stem and glanced off。 Then her crew grappled a headless
trunk and got their hawser round it; and eight of them; one behind
the other; hung on to it; when it suddenly snapped; seven fell
backwards; and the forward one went overboard to be no more seen。
Some house that night was desolate。 Reeling downwards; the big
mast and spar of the ungainly craft caught in a tree; giving her
such a check that they were able to make her fast。 It was a
saddening incident。 I asked Ito what he felt when we seemed in
peril; and he replied; 〃I thought I'd been good to my mother; and
honest; and I hoped I should go to a good place。〃
The fashion of boats varies much on different rivers。 On this one
there are two sizes。 Ours was a small one; flat…bottomed; 25 feet
long by 2。5 broad; drawing 6 inches; very low in the water; and
with sides slightly curved inwards。 The prow forms a gradual long
curve from the body of the boat; and is very high。
The mists rolled away as dusk came on; and revealed a lovely
country with much picturesqueness of form; and near Kotsunagi the
river disappears into a narrow gorge with steep; sentinel hills;
dark with pine and cryptomeria。 To cross the river we had to go
fully a mile above the point aimed at; and then a few minutes of
express speed brought us to a landing in a deep; tough quagmire in
a dark wood; through which we groped our lamentable way to the
yadoya。 A heavy mist came on; and the rain returned in torrents;
the doma was ankle deep in black slush。 The daidokoro was open to
the roof; roof and rafters were black with smoke; and a great fire
of damp wood was smoking lustily。 Round some live embers in the
irori fifteen men; women; and children were lying; doing nothing;
by the dim light of an andon。 It was picturesque decidedly; and I
was well disposed to be content when the production of some
handsome fusuma created daimiyo's rooms out of the farthest part of
the dim and wandering space; opening upon a damp garden; into which
the rain splashed all night。
The solitary spoil of the day's journey was a glorious lily; which
I presented to the house…master; and in the morning it was blooming
on the kami…dana in a small vase of priceless old Satsuma china。 I
was awoke out of a sound sleep by Ito coming in with a rumour;
brought by some travellers; that the Prime Minister had been
assassinated; and fifty policemen killed! 'This was probably a
distorted version of the partial mutiny of the Imperial Guard;
which I learned on landing in Yezo。' Very wild political rumours
are in the air in these outlandish regions; and it is not very
wonderful that the peasantry lack confidence in the existing order
of things after the changes of the last ten years; and the recent
assassination of the Home Minister。 I did not believe the rumour;
for fanaticism; even in its wildest moods; usually owes some
allegiance to common sense; but it was disturbing; as I have
naturally come to feel a deep interest in Japanese affairs。 A few
hours later Ito again presented himself with a bleeding cut on his
temple。 In lighting his pipean odious nocturnal practice of the
Japanesehe had fallen over the edge of the fire…pot。 I always
sleep in a Japanese kimona to be ready for emergencies; and soon
bound up his head; and slept again; to be awoke early by another
deluge。
We made an early start; but got over very little ground; owing to
bad roads and long delays。 All day the rain came down in even
torrents; the tracks were nearly impassable; my horse fell five
times; I suffered severely from pain and exhaustion; and almost
fell into despair about ever reaching the sea。 In these wild
regions there are no kago or norimons to be had; and a pack…horse
is the only conveyance; and yesterday; having abandoned my own
saddle; I had the bad luck to get a pack…saddle with specially
angular and uncompromising peaks; with a soaked and extremely
unwashed futon on the top; spars; tackle; ridges; and furrows of
the most exasperating description; and two nooses of rope to hold
on by as the animal slid down hill on his haunches; or let me
almost slide over his tail as he scrambled and plunged up hill。
It was pretty country; even in the downpour; when white mists
parted and fir…crowned heights looked out for a moment; or we slid
down into a deep glen with mossy boulders; lichen…covered stumps;
ferny carpet; and damp; balsamy smell of pyramidal cryptomeria; and
a tawny torrent dashing through it in gusts of passion。 Then there
were low hills; much scrub; immense rice…fields; and violent
inundations。 But it is not pleasant; even in the prettiest
country; to cling on to a pack…saddle with a saturated quilt below
you and the water slowly soaking down through your wet clothes into
your boots; knowing all the time that when you halt you must sleep
on a wet bed; and change into damp clothes; and put on the wet ones
again the next morning。 The villages were poor; and most of the
houses were of boards rudely nailed together for ends; and for
sides straw rudely tied on; they had no windows; and smoke came out
of every crack。 They were as unlike the houses which travellers
see in southern Japan as a 〃black hut〃 in Uist is like a cottage in
a trim village in Kent。 These peasant proprietors have much to
learn of the art of living。 At Tsuguriko; the next stage; where
the Transport Office was so dirty that I was obliged to sit in the
street in the rain; they told us that we could only get on a ri
farther; because the bridges were all carried away and the fords
were impassable; but I engaged horses; and; by dint of British
doggedness and the willingness of the mago; I got the horses singly
and without their loads in small punts across the swollen waters of
the Hayakuchi; the Yuwase; and the Mochida; and finally forded
three branches of my old friend the Yonetsurugawa; with the foam of
its hurrying waters whitening the men's shoulders and the horses'
packs; and with a hundred Japanese looking on at the 〃folly〃 of the
foreigner。
I like to tell you of kind people everywhere; and the two mago were
specially so; for; when they found that I was pushing on to Yezo
for fear of being laid up in the interior wilds; they did all they
could to help me; lifted me gently from the horse; made steps of
their backs for me to mount; and gathered for me handfuls of red
berries; which I ate out of politeness; though they tasted of some
nauseous drug。 They suggested that I should stay at the
picturesquely…situated old village of Kawaguchi; but everything
about it was mildewed and green with damp; and the stench from the
green and black ditches with which it abounded was so overpowering;
even in passing through; that I was obliged to ride on to Odate; a
crowded; forlorn; half…tumbling…to…pieces town of 8000 people; with
bark roofs held down by