Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/budgetoflettersfOOmaclrich is;i A BUDGET OP LETTERS FROM JAPAN REMINISCENCES OF WORK AND TRAVEL IN: J>:?AK, / 1 »»»,«, •'» ARTHUR COLLINS MACLAY, A.M., LL.B. FuKMKKLY InsTKUCTOR OF ENGLISH IN THE Ko-GaKKO-RiO, ToKio, Japan NEW YORK A. C. ARMSTRONG & SON 714 Broadway 1886 V Copyright, 1886, By ARTHUR COLLINS MACLAY. Press of J. J. Little & Ca Astor Place, New York. I DEDICATE THIS BOOK TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER 47ii346 PREFACE During my leisure hours, while a sojourner in " the land of the gods and of the rising sun," I made it a practice — partly as a matter of recreation, and partly from a desire to secure accurate information — to carefully reduce to writing my ob- servations and experiences while dwelling in that beautiful country, in order that I might always have something tangi- ble wherewith to refresh my memory in coming years when those vivid impressions had become dimmed through lapse of time. In the course of years, these " wayside jottings " ac- cumulated in a manner quite surprising to myself Throw- ing out all matter that had been dwelt upon to any extent by other writers upon Japan, and retaining only that which seemed to me to be fresh material upon this subject, I reduced the substance of my journals to a book, adopting the form of correspondence as being conversational in its nature and best suited for conveying to other minds the results of my own observations and experiences. Submitting the work to several impartial readers, I was strongly urged by them to have it published as containing matter of general interest presented in a readable manner. Bowing to their judgment in the mat- ter, I now submit this " Budget of Letters " to the individual opinion of each reader, hoping that each may derive as much profit and pleasure from the perusal thereof as I have derived from the composing. Arthur C. Maclay. 32 Park Place, New York City, July I, 1886. EXPLANATORY REMARKS. New York City, February i, 1886. Dear Public: Inasmuch as introductions are, subjectively and objectively, a bore, permit me to be very brief in introducing to you my friend Theophilus Pratt. He was a school-teacher in Japan for four years. He taught in various parts of the Japanese Em- pire from the year 1873 to the year 1878. During that time he wrote me quite a number of letters, which to me were very interesting. They are upon a variety of topics, including house-keeping, rebellions, and assassinations. They describe the halcyon days of school-teaching in Japan. They also touch upon events of general interest to Americans and Europeans. These letters, I repeat, were very interesting to me. Hence I naturally inferred that they might interest others. Therefore I have arranged them in book form, and now present them for your perusal. Hoping that our tastes in tMs matter will coincide, I remain. Very respectfully yours, Julius Marcellus Van Tag. CONTENTS. LETTER I. » PAGB The Farewell i LETTER IL A Voyage Across the Pacific 6 LETTER in. Yokohama 2X LETTER IV. HlROSAKl 35 LETTER V. A Gumpse OP Old Feudal Times in Japan 57 LETTER VI. A Few Ideas About Life in the Interior 81 LETTER VII. A Tragedy. .., , 99 LETTER VIII. A Few Reminiscences iii •/ LETTER IX. ToKio 130 Vlll CONTENTS. LETTER X. PAGB School-teaching in Tokio 162 LETTER XL A Summer Vacation 173 LETTER XIL Missionary Work in Japan 196 LETTER XIIL A Trip Through Classic Japan 219 LETTER XIV. Kioto 243 LETTER XV. An Excursion to Nara 258 LETTER XVI. Fujiyama 272 LETTER XVII. The Satsuma Rebellion 287 LETTER XVIII. HlYEISAN 303 LETTER XIX. Social Problems in Japan 333 LETTER XX. Our Imperial Cousins 365 LETTER XXL Farewell to Japan 385 ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGB The Yomei Gateway Frontispiece Casting up Accounts 21 iwa-ki-san 35 Street Vender 43 Gossiping at the Well 51 Old-style Warriors 57 Third Moat of the Tokio Castle 68 Our Postal Service 81 May^bara 99 Street Scene in Hirosaki. iii AiNos 130 The Ubiquitous Jinrikisha 145 The Kago 162 The Tomb op Tokugaw a Iyeyas i73 GuMPSE OP Chiusenji Lake 186 View of the Third Terrace, Nikko Temples 196 The Citadel of Owari Castle 219 The Great Bell at Dai-Butz Temple, Kioto, 243 The Death of Buddha 258 Image of Dai-Butz at Kamakura. 272 The Citadel of Kumamoto Castle 287 Ruins of the Citadel op Aidzu Castle 303 A Quiet Corner in a Buddhist Cemetery 333 At Home 346 The Three Estates 3^5 A BUDGET OF LETTERS FROM JAPAN. LETTER I. THE FAREWELL. San Francisco, California, October lo, 1873. Dear Julius Marcellus: I AM off for Japan. I left New York in such a hurry that I was unable to give you a parting call. I therefore present my apologies and explanations by letter. I expect to be gone for three or four years ; and I wish to open a regular correspondence with you during my sojourn abroad. If you agree to this plan, be so kind as to notify me to that effect. Why did I decide so suddenly to go to Japan ? Permit me to explain. You will remember that my studies were interrupted by the failure of my eyesight last year. This inopportune event laid me on the shelf, colloquially speaking. About six weeks ago I received a letter from my friend Adamson, in Yokohama, urging me to go out to S' : ■' ; ' , ■ LE7^TERS FROM JAPAN. Japan and teach school. He said the work would be agreeable and not too hard for my eyes. He also said that the pecuniary considerations were by no means to be overlooked. He advised me to go right on to Yokohama so as to be ready to make application for the first vacancy that might occur. This was the only way to do, for there was no probability that a Japanese delegation would wait upon me in the United States. He said I might have to wait a year, or I might have to wait only a month, for one of these flitting opportunities. In almost every transaction in life we are obliged to incur a certain amount of risk. Success is the result of an ever-varying equation. The science of life is to calculate that there is a reasonable prob- ability of a given set of circumstances producing a plus quantity, and then to go ahead. In the pres- ent case, the circumstances and conditions augur well for success. The journey across the continent was not spe- cially exciting. We came through from New York with the same car-load of passengers with which we started. We had the usual assortment of travelers. There was the bridal couple going to visit the Yosemite. There was the Englishman returning to China via America despite the warning of anxious friends who had cautioned him to be- ware of the free fights and the railway disasters of the reckless Americans. There was the elderly lady with spectacles, who had come to write a book on Mormonism, and wanted to silence all THE FAREWELL. 3 assailants with the fact that she had seen the things therein stated with her own eyes and could not be mistaken. There was the man going to get up a lecture on the Chinese immigration question, and wanted to convince his audiences of his impar- tiality by stating that he had been in California and could testify whereof he knew. And then there was the party of ubiquitous "Globe-Trot- ters " with their Cook's Guide, We were given to understand that they represented several millions of dollars and also a rare assortment of refinement and culture. And, finally, there were Mrs. What's- her-name, from Boston, and her husband, — but he didn*t count. She had strong scientific tastes, and made many very wise observations. She thought that the country, through which we passed yester- day, gave strong evidence of glacial erosion. To- day she wishes that she could obtain some of those fossils in the ledge of rocks to our right, for she feels positive that the place gives indications of much geological interest. Her meek husband then expresses profound regret that the sordid aspirations of the lucre-loving railroad company will not allow the scientific passengers to spend an hour or two per day at these carboniferous outcroppings. She then pines for some of those lovely endogenous bulbifer- ous plants that are growing beside yonder marsh, for she feels sure that they must be some new species, and heaves a regretful sigh as the train passes on. Whereupon her husband turns around and looks wildly down the car, as if seriously contemplating 4 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the immediate stopping of the trail), or some other desperate maneuver whereby the bulbiferous endo- gens may be procured. But, on second thought, he settles down and delivers himself of a diatribe against the vile mercenary spirit of railroad cor- porations in general and of the Union Pacific in particular. Enlisting the florid effusions of some of his choice oratorical efforts, he warmly asserts that corruption in high places should be closely scrutinized ; that bribery and trickery among our public officials should be ferreted out, and an indignant public should excoriate the same with withering scorn ; and that the surest way of staying this frightful torrent of chicanery, and of heralding in pure politics, was to grant universal and unre- stricted suffrage to the much-abused and down- trodden female sex. To all of which an approving amen was smiled by the budding scientist whose genius was thus being rudely blighted by the grasping avarice of the Union Pacific. It took us about seven days to cover the dis- tance between the oceans. The journey was a most enjoyable one. The greater part of our com- pany will take the same steamer for Yokohama. This will make it quite home-like. I have not cumbered myself with very much luggage. A trunk and a box of books tell the tale. They say that Yokohama furnishes all articles needed by Europeans and Americans. I hope you will ex- cuse the brevity of this letter. Also, its abrupt termination, for I must go down to Santa Clara THE FAREWELL. 5 this afternoon to visit some cousins living there. Keep me posted on all home news, and I will post you on all news relating to Japan. Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. . LETTER II. A VOYAGE ACROSS THE PACIFIC. Yokohama, Japan, December 18, 1873. Dear Julius Marcellus: I HAVE been here about a month. I have not yet secured a position : but my friend Adamson says that patience is a great virtue, particularly in Japan. He says that more than half the battle is won by being here on the ground. I hope to report progress in my next letter. My mornings I spend in walking over the delightful hills surrounding Yokohama. For two hours after tiffin I am engaged in teaching a couple of Japanese gentlemen. After that, I have some time for reading. And then before dinner I take another walk through the city or along the Bluffs. I have already been over almost every path within a radius of five miles of this place. Everything is so novel that it seems as if I were in a new world. Private teaching here is not very remunerative. Japanese do not feel able to pay more than five dollars per month for tuition ; and the majority feel heavily taxed when they have to pay two dollars per month. Unless a person can secure a contract under the government, he will find school-teaching A VOYAGE ACROSS THE PACIFIC. 7 a poor business. But all this is not answering your questions about my voyage across the Pacific. Let us imagine ourselves on the wharves at San Francisco. We pass up the gangway of the huge paddle-wheel steamer chained to the pier. Its accommodations are superb. Upon the upper deck is a social hall where we can have music and dancing. Upon the same deck is a fine broad promenade. Here, the children, the terror of sea- going folks, spend most of their time. These steamers take about twenty-six days to reach Yo- kohama in moderately fair weather. The pro- pellers take about eighteen days. They are not, however, so comfortable, and many of the ladies prefer the extra time, with comfort. Having arranged our stateroom, we lean over the taffrail beside the main gangway, and watch the passengers coming up from the pier. Here comes the English party. They recognize us and exchange nods, for in journeying we dispense with formal introductions. Behind this party come three or four Japanese gentlemen dressed in Euro- pean style and armed with patent leather valises. Then follows a Chinese Commissioner leading his two boys. They are all dressed in their native costume. And their well-greased pig-tails flaunt gently in the breeze. They come stalking up the gangway as consequentially as if they owned the ship. The contrast between them and the Japa- nese is characteristic of the two nations. 8 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. The tide of passengers and leave-taking friends is now surging up and down the plank in a con- tinuous stream. It is within a few minutes of high noon, and we are preparing to start. Ah ! here comes the admirer of bulbiferous endogens. And beside her is the denouncer of corrupt railroad cor- porations, our friend Mustaches. That feeble old gentleman meekly following them is the father of the gushing scientist. We came near being deprived of their society across the Pacific. Time's up ! The gang-plank is drawn away. The hawsers are cast loose, and the vessel swings from the wharf. Round go the wheels, and the spray sprinkles the crowd on the pier. The extending wake of boiling waters now marks our course down the bay. Have you ever seen your native cliffs sinking be- neath the waves? And have you ever felt as you gazed mournfully astern through the misty air that your farewell might be final, and that you might never see those blue mountains rising from the sea? Then you can appreciate our feelings. The passengers crowd the hurricane deck and wave their handkerchiefs to the crowded shore. Many eyes moisten as the gap widens and the re- sponsive flutterings become obscured by the dis- tance. Even the officers wear a resigned expres- sion. But the saddest group of all is the little party of missionaries just abaft the paddle-box. They necessarily feel the situation far more keenly than people who are going abroad for self-interest, expecting to return in a few months, or two or A VOYAGE ACROSS THE PACIFIC. 9 three years at most. Their outlook is gloomy. For they are to be gone for ten years at least, un- less death or disease steps in to shorten their exile. Now, in the Sunday schools we used to get the impression that missionaries were a species of beings so divinely constituted that they were not apt to be affected by ordinary human woes ; but here we see simply a sad little company of devoted people who arc greviously afflicted, like ordinary mortals, with homesickness. And as they hurry down into the cabin we grimly wonder how many of the church members at home, who believe in missionaries never leaving the foreign field, and in their going to heaven by way of India and China, and who are so loud in dictating about the econo- mical disposal of missionaries, as if they were pieces of church furniture, would thus ostracize themselves from home, friends, and civilized society. But our voyage is begun. The peculiarity of a sea-voyage across the Pacific is that you get almost all nationalities represented. English, French, Germans, Jews, Chinese, Japanese, and Americans are apt to be well represented. All grades of so- ciety, all creeds, and all professions are also apt to be represented. The cosmopolitan character of the passengers usually promotes good nature and sociability. You, of course, know what a sea- voyage is. There is much sameness in the general run of events. Eating is our prime occupation. Coffee and toast at seven ; breakfast at eight ; tif- lO LETTERS FROM JAPAN. fin at twelve ; a regular dinner at five ; and tea at nine ; there you have it. Our interludes we fill in with reading and gossip- Sometimes the Japanese passengers are criticised. You are duly informed how many cigars they smoke per day; how many bottles of wine they drink at dinner ; how often they pace up and down the spar-deck indorsing the civilized method of exercise ; how little Tanaka^ while pacing the deck with the dignity of a tycoon, had his high hat blown over the quarter-rail and came very near going over himself while frantically hopping after it ; and how sociable, genial, and chatty they are. Then you will hear a long yarn about the mis- sionaries. How the stewardess says the ship al- ways meets a storm when they come aboard ; and how foolish it is for people to spend thousands of dollars in sending them abroad when there are so many heathens at home. Then you will hear about the English. How they bet on every imaginable thing, — on the weather, on the number of miles run per day, on the prospects of rain, on the continuance of the wind, and on the length of the voyage. Then the Americans catch it. And our English cousins furnish us with a series of dissolving views upon society, politics, and morality in all that por- tion of dangerous territory called by civilized na- tions America, but which we designate the United States. They always advance the same arguments, and A VOYAGE ACROSS THE PACIFIC. II tenaciously cling to the same line of assertion. They get most of their ideas from English news- papers and journals, and never think for themselves as to whether their ideas are accurate. I have had several tilts with them and have now become so familiar with their mode of attack that I begin to wish they would start a new journal in England so that we can have a little variety in our discourses. After a short conversation you can tell by what London newspaper an Englishman swears. We have had several animated after-dinner dis- cussions. As a matter of recreation, I have dramatized these belligerent talks. I here insert a copy of my humble efforts. It will serve as a sample. ACT I. Scene I. '(Captain's table. Dramatis /Vrj<7«'. All the rooms are extremely high and airy. They are separated from each other by exquisitely ornamented shojees * * The word shojec, like the word tatami, cannot be rendered prop- A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 63 (sliding doors made of paper) set in elegantly lac- quered frames. Upon the panels you see beauti- fully executed designs from nature, — mountain, field, and flood being presented by the best native skill. The floors are covered with the finest tatamis, A few lovely screens and some superb pieces of bronze and lacquerware will complete the furnish- ing of the apartments, for you must bear in mind that the Japanese are utterly deficient as regards upholstery. The ceilings of the rooms are usually finished off with square panels representing dragons and fairies upon gilded backgrounds. In the cham- bers of Nobunaga's palace in Owari the panels are .said to have been originally inlaid with plates of pure gold. As was before hinted these palaces cover a vast amount of ground. The visitor is led through suite after suite until he becomes bewildered at the ap- parently never ending maze of elaborate apart- ments. As a rule, the finest room is the audience cham- ber. Here the combined skill of many artists con- spire to overwhelm the mind of the stranger with the wealth, the power, and the generosity of his Highness. Royal tigers are crouching upon the gilded panels. Here we see two of the ferocious erly into English. It will therefore be frequently used in the fol- lowing pages. It is a kind of sliding door set in grooves. They form the walls and partitions of Japanese domiciles. Upon a fragile sashing of wood, delicate tissue paper is pasted ; this is then set in a light frame, frequently lacquered, adapted to grooves in the floor. 64 LETTERS FROM JAPAISr. beasts engaged in fierce combat. There we have the phoenix and the peacock perching upon gor- geous sprays of a species of plant that never existed outside of the artist's brain. While down at the far end of the room is a scene from Chinese history that occupies the entire side of the apartment. Great ingenuity has been displayed in the endless variety of the designs. No two are precisely similar. Here we have the lotus plant growing in an elaborate jar. There we see it blossoming beside the sedges in the moat. There it unfolds its gor- geous petals beside the mountain streams that flow through the shaded grounds of that monastery. And yet again wc catch its impassioned gleam beside the lilies in the Imperial ponds. Very few of the historic scenes relate to Japan. China is the classic source of inspiration. For elegance and beauty, the palaces of Kioto, Owari, and Yeddo ranked among the highest. As there is a similarity between the castles in Japan, so the palaces furnish but little in the line of start- ling variety. Since the Imperial Revolution of 1 868-1 870, all these provincial strongholds have been turned over to the central government. All the former pro- prietors have been sent to Tokio to be kept under Imperial surveillance. Many of the castles have been allowed to fall into decay. Some of the choicest, however, are kept in a fair state of repair, and are open to the inspection of tourists from abroad. But the majority have been turned into A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 65 quarters for garrisons, and all the ancient parapher- nalia and ornamentation have about disappeared. Many of the bronzes, and most of the elegant lac- quering, now adorn the homes of the wealthy in Europe and America. You will find long rows of roughly-made bed- steads arranged up and down the spacious chambers. Muskets are stacked in the audience hall. Knap- sacks and heavy riding boots are strewn around promiscuously to be kicked under an adjoining bed by some passing foot. The shojccs and tatamis have been removed, and but little remains to remind one of the former condition of things, save the few rooms appropriated by the officers. And now I hear you inquiring about the parties that lived within these walls. How did they spend their time ? What was the social life of the in- mates? How was administrative power wielded? In short, give a glimpse of old feudal times in Japan. Let us begin, then, with my lord, the Daimio, inasmuch as he was the theoretical sovereign unit. In him were centered the executive, the legislative, and the judicial power. These functions were then delegated to favored retainers, who relieved their lord of the drudgery usually connected with those departments. In discussing the Daimio, we will suppose him to be a person of fair ability and energy. He has under him some ten or twenty thousand samurai (feudal retainers) scattered through the Daimiate. 66 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Of these some five thousand live in the immediate vicinity of the castle, taking turns in doing garrison duty and in guarding their liege lord. From these again are selected the most promis- ing as personal attendants. Under the old regime it was the ambition of every samurai to be so chosen. For if an obscure retainer could win the notice and favor of his master by pleasing manners and bearing, he could flatter himself with the pros- pect of holding the most honored positions so long as the favor lasted. In some cases, powerful fami- lies would hold the princely favor for generations to the exclusion of others, thus causing bitter jeal- ousies, and, too frequently, cruel assassinations. This favor was usually secured and retained by an amount of obsequiousness quite repulsive to our natures. Now let us follow his lordship through a day's work. After breakfast (composed of rice accom- panied with delicate morsels of fish, rice-beer, and choice bits of vegetables, served up and eaten on the tatainis), a delegation of samurai will wait upon his Grace with a few items of provincial business which are presented for approval or discussion. Perhaps it is a memorial from some farmers peti- tioning for lower taxes as the rice crops have been a failure. Or perhaps it is a minute description of some foreign articles in an adjoining province. Or, possibly, it may be an account of another intrusion of one of those restless barbarian ships upon the coast. Or, it may be the disorderly conduct of A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 67 some samurai, coupled with the suggestion that he be confined to his house for a few days as punish- ment. After this, a well-informed gentleman comes in to instruct his Lordship by edifying conversation upon a variety of topics. The manners, literature, and history of the Chinese will usually form the main topic of conversation. The duration of this private tutoring will entirely depend upon the tem- perament and mental caliber of the prince. In the afternoon, a stroll down to the shooting range will be in order. When the long-bows and match-locks have been sufficiently tested, some time will be devoted to fencing with bamboo foils. After which, a half hour or so of horseback riding up and down the avenues will be in order. About two or three times per month he goes forth from the castle to hunt with his falcons in the country. Occasionally he tackles larger game and brings down a boar or a stag with arrow or spear. Some of these excursions form famous themes for artists. In some of the drawings, my lord is repre- sented leaping his horse over a chasm and chasing a monstrous boar that rivals his steed in dimen- sions, while his speechless retainers stand gaping in hopeless bewilderment on the further edge, quite unable to follow the mad career of their valorous master. During the hot summer months when the exhala- tions from the moat render the immediate vicinity of the tenshiu unhealthy, he will journey off to his 68 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. mountain villa, where he can spend a month or two in composing Chinese poetry in honor of the moon or his favorite concubine. For you must bear in mind that poetizing in this country is not a mon- opoly, but a mere mechanical process that can be learned by almost any one who desires to become expert in grinding out the requisite metered verses. Some of this princely rhythmic agony, by the way, enjoys considerable reputation. The sentiment, however, is never remarkably overwhelming in its effects. If our prince be public spirited, he will make an occasional journey through his Daimiate to see that all is going well. But the great event of the year will be his visit to Yeddo. The discus- sion of ways and means will occupy several weeks, and, as many months will elapse before his return, arrangements must be made for guarding the castle and keeping things in order. Theoretically, the Daimios were supposed to ex- change provinces annually in accordance with the laws of lyeyaSj the feudal law-giver of Japan. And in the early days of the ShogunatCy this regulation was undoubtedly enforced. But the rule became prac- tically a dead letter as regards the northern and south-western provinces ; although the right to carry out the statute was never relinquished by the house of Tokugawa. So long as a province sent in its regular tribute of rice, and disturbed not the peace of the general government by hatching conspiracies, it might retain its prince for many generations, — provided .1..., > ' » , > {Sativt PItotograph.') • i. A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 69 he paid his regular visit to Yeddo to do homage to the Great Lord of Nippon. But I have been depicting to you an ideal Daimio. Your average lord, it grieves me to say, differed very much from this model. Instead of harkening daily to the edifying conversation of some learned samurai, he wasted his hours in frivolous sports and childish chit-chat with his concubines. He loved wine to excess, and was frequently as " boozy " as typical members of nobility are wont to be. So far from practicing his body with daily manly exer- cise, he resorts to the ingenious expedient of hav- ing two or three horse-boys wind his nags, and two or three coolies might strain their backs over the bows and arrows while he complacently watches their gyrations. As to practicing fencing, he merely desires half a dozen retainers to bang each other's heads with the heavy foils until he has thoroughly imbibed the intricacies of this highly scientific art. As to listening to the long-winded disquisitions of aldermanic Yakunins and official samurai upon the administration of provincial affairs, they might smoke their pipes over the he- bachiSf ad libitum^ and adopt any measure they might see fit, so long as they did not compromise his pleasures and revenues, and falconry and hunt- ing might go to the winds. And as to jumping chasms after wild boars, — the — the — well, the horse-boys can do that also. About three or four times a season he will exert himself sufficiently to visit some hot mineral spriogs JO LETTERS FROM JAPAN. in the mountains to soak out the licentious impuri- ties of a past winter. Occasionally he will rouse his languid curiosity enough to examine some su- perb pieces of lacquer-ware or bronze, upon which he has squandered half the revenues of his province, perhaps. Should he wish to see some famous court- dancers, wrestlers, or any other performances of a curious nature, several days will be spent before the preliminaries, the preparation of the grounds, and the exhibition can be consummated. For it would be the height of vulgarity for his Grace to visit a house of public resort. He must inspect anything odd and novel through endless formalities. In short, he was a perfect slave to etiquette. And, unless he was a person of more than average reso- lution, he would inevitably sink into a state of utter and hopeless imbecility, — a condition, in fact, that was rather encouraged by the ambitious head men of the clan who desired to administer affairs to suit themselves without any interference from the prime power. It was a kind of oligarchy. The Daimio was a kind of social figure-head. He was to be petted and humored. He was never to have the placidity of his temper ruffled by any crossing ; he was to be treated with the most deferential obse- quiousness ; to symbolize limitless power, though possessing little of the essence. In short, he was to be kept in a state of perfect animal good nature, and to have his ambition and energy dissipated by abundance of license, so that his consent to all legal proceedings might the more easily be obtained. A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 7 1 The truth is, that about Perry's time, political affairs in Japan had become thoroughly run down. The samurai were rapidly degenerating into a herd of voluptuous imbeciles. Feudal customs had be- come completely worn out. The country was well prepared for a change. I have frequently been in- formed by Japanese that the patriotic portion of Japan had already become disgusted at the fright- ful corruption of their country, and were solicitous for speedy reformation. And it was this under- current of liberalism that forced the conservative element to open the country to foreign intercourse. This accounts for the marvelous reaction against all ancient political institutions that has so aston- ished us Western people. For you must remember that the Japanese still cling to most of their social institutions; and they will continue to do so for generations. Now as to your next question, concerning ad- ministrative regulations in old times, it will be rather difficult to convey a very definite idea. The first course served up in a French revolution is a new constitution. But this country has never been blessed with this modern invention, as it has been characterized. The legacy of lyeyas, which in many respects was a dead letter, consisted mostly of directions for regulating the succession of the Tokugawa house, and of a few general admonitions for the management of public affairs. Theoreti- cally, the Shogun (Tycoon, we call him), was the prime minister of the invisible emperor (Mikado, 72 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. we call him), at Kioto, to whom he did homage for perpetual lease of unlimited royal power. And he, in turn, exacted homage from the Daimios for an- nual lease of provincial power revocable at pleasure. He stood as a sort of go-between betwixt the phenix car and the Daimios. The emperor must not be contaminated by vulgar bickerings with the masses. That piece of drudgery must be performed by his head servant, the Shogun. It was his duty to keep peace within the realm in the name of his master. He must govern the people. He must furnish his Imperial Majesty with proper guards, and appoint proper officers to see that the revenues of the Province of Yamashiro were duly devoted to keeping up the simplicity of the imperial court. While the Shogun was thus supposed to be busy- ing himself with the secular affairs of the realm at Yeddo, the inmates of the Gosho in Kioto were supposed to be wrapped in the sublimest indiffer- ence to administrative affairs, being in a kind of imperial Nirvana, if you please. They would, how- ever, occasionally notice the petitions of their head servant for some title or rank to be conferred on some worthy subject. Such w^as the theory. Practically, however, the emperor was kept under a polite but most unrelenting surveillance. A bare pittance wherewith to keep up a skeleton court within a few acres of enclosed ground was doled forth to him at tardy intervals by the officers. He was respectfully but strictly guarded by Aidzu, the most zealous Tokugawa clan. And the Shogun A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 73 bothered himself so little about his Imperial Ma- jesty that he spent all his time in Yeddo, three hundred and fifteen miles to the north-east, and they are reported to have paid their homage per- sonally to the emperor only about once a century. So closely was the emperor confined that his person was never seen by any one outside of his family. In fact, the position was so void of prerog- atives, and possessed so few attractions, that it became by no means a rare custom for an emperor to resign his office, and, investing his infant son with the empty titles, retire to one of the superb monasteries in the mountains surrounding Kioto, where he could at least see something of the world. Thus it was that the Tokugawas, giving but nom- inal deference to the fountain of honors, grasped the administrative power, and bullied their subor- dinates to their hearts* content. Like all central- ized power, however, their authority over the Daimiates gradually became dissipated. Satsuma, Chosiu, and Tosa, were permitted to do pretty nearly what they chose. And soon each prince, so long as he paid his regular homage and tribute, held almost unlimited sway over his Daimiate. Each one had his palace in Yeddo in charge of some near relative. Passing now to the respective provinces we find that the administrative power was almost entirely in the hands of the samurai class. These are the double-sword ed gentlemen that we see so often represented in Japanese pictures. They were, in 74 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, theory, bound body and soul to the interests of their lord. To disobey him was the highest crime. They were to gird him round with a living wall, standing betwixt him and every danger. In return for these services he was to distribute among them annual pensions of so many bushels of rice apiece. They never worked at manual occupations. Their only business was to attend on the prince. They were the aristocrats of the realm. The swords they carried were typical of their genteel and chivalrous breeding. The sons of samurai^ during their in- fancy, would carry wooden ones. When fourteen years old, at which age they reached their majority, they would receive a pair of genuine ones. This day was made one of festivity, and all the family friends sent in their congratulations. The young man was now admitted to the counsels of his elders, and was treated with all becoming deference. The next thing was to try the temper of the blades. And until this was accomplished the youth was nearly wild. The first hack would usually find its way into some luckless dog roaming about the yard. The bodies of criminals also furnished much prac- tice. The executioners also tested the edges by taking off heads. Should dogs and criminals be scarce, however, a night's loafing in the dark streets generally furnished a victim. When a samurai appeared on the street he must always wear his swords. It would have been a serious breach of etiquette not to have done so. The samurai were haughty and brave. They cultivated the most A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 75 pleasing politeness. They were very sensitive, and very easy to take offense. They would instantly draw their swords upon any one insulting them. But toward the mercantile people and the peasan- try they were very overbearing. A peasant was once slain on the spot for splashing some mud upon a samurai. If a peasant laughed at a samurai he would be cut down instantly. The lower classes always passed these gentlemen with averted faces and downcast eyes. If one samurai was rude to another one a duel followed. Therefore, when two samurai met they tried to outdo each other in politeness, so as to avoid giving the least cause for offense. I have seen four of these gentlemen take nearly five minutes to get out of a door. Each one wanted the other one to step out first. The exces- sive politeness that wc notice in the Japanese is the product of feudal times. A typical samurai was courteous toward his friends, haughty toward for- eigners, vindictive and merciless toward his foes, hasty and furious in his temper, recklessly brave in combat ; sly, treacherous, and cunning in politics ; easy, lazy, and licentious in private life, and a prodigal boon companion, socially considered. He had no well-grounded principles. He was fickle and unreliable. A samurai must always avenge in- sult with blood. If he could not assassinate his enemy he would often slay himself by the famous stomach -cut, or hara-kiri, A strong-minded Daimio would have found himself at the head of a dangerous and serviceable body of men, and would 76 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. have been a most arbitrary dictator. But, as was before intimated, the head families of the clan usually managed to absorb all favor and power, and the Daimio became a myth, while the pampered savmrai merged into a parasitical condition of will- fulness and indolence, having frequent duels, and rendering the immediate vicinity of the castle de- cidedly dangerous after nightfall. Many a morning has dawned upon the mangled remains of some be- lated peasant, whose body had served admirably for testing the temper of some lawless blades. Redress in such cases was almost impossible. It thus became a matter of vital importance for the head families to keep possession of the person of the prince, so as to give legality to all proceed- ings. As the Shogun guarded the emperor, so these savmrai guarded the Daimio. And the mass- ive Tenshiuswerc quite as much for preserving this legal seal from sudden factions of rivals as from the unexpected inroads of the enemy. The legislative and judicial departments, as we understand the terms, can not be said to have ex- isted in the Japanese feudal system. There was no legislative body at all. The law of the land was the will of the prince modified by the influence of his chief retainers. Like most semi-civilized so- cieties, the common law was very simple ; and was not enshrined in elaborate treatises and reports, like our voluminous system, that requires years of per- sistent application to fully grasp. The principles of the feudal code were decidedly primitive. In A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. J J the first place, whatever conflicted with the prince's will must be wrong, and was not to be tolerated. In the second place, there must not be the slightest manifestation of disobedience from subordinates, for this would be the grossest of misdemeanors. In the third place, existing customs, when not con- flicting with the above, were to be duly respected and adopted as the common standard of adjudica- tion. Finally, the opinion of the presiding Yaku- nin, or magistrate, must be decisive in all cases left to judicial discretion. And from his decision an appeal was practically impossible. In this primitive condition of society, where legal complexity could hardly be said to exist, — and where, if it did, it could be easily severed by the will of a single individual, — you can readily perceive that it required no very great amount of accumu- lated lore to fit a man for passing judgment. Al- most any young samurai could mete out what little justice there was to be doled forth to the harmless, simple people of the provincial towns and villages. A fair amount of self-confidence — (and these gen- tlemen were rarely found wanting in that article) — and a knowledge of local customs, quite fitted any young blade for the position of Yakunin. The term " Yakunin " conveys but a faint im- pression to the Saxon mind. But to the native intellect it is the embodiment of legal majesty. He everywhere stands forth as the executor of the royal will, the inexorable administrator of the un- written law. The mountain boor of Mino, or the 78 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. mud-bespattered peasant of Echigo, may have but hazy notions of the invisible power within the dis- tant imperial moats of Yamashiro, but he finds a tangible something about the ubiquitous Yakunin that is impossible to be ignored. The presence of one of these magistrates is indispensable in all pub- lic actions. It is he that sees that the environ- ments of the castle are properly cared for. He keeps the avenues, roads, and bridges, in repair — impressing peasants, if necessary, for the work. He regulates tariffs upon the highways, furnishing horses and coolies at standard prices. He collects the revenues. He punishes offenders. He guards the prisons. He keeps up a correspondence with the friendly provinces, and takes endless pains to make hostile ones as uncomfortable as possible. He receives envoys and presents them to the prince with due formality. He escorts. He spies out traitors. He sponges with consummate grace, and eats his master's rice with gratitude exquisite to behold. By my troth ! it will be difficult to find anything of a public nature of which a Yakunin is not, in some way, a prime ingredient. Is there an obscure mountain village that needs — or rather, does not need — a magistrate ? Zounds ! he again turns up quite equal to the emergency. Does my lord desire to make an excursion to some hot springs? It is the Yakunin that arranges all pre- liminaries. He goes on ahead to order the people to remain in their houses when the princely fiori- mon comes down the street. He sees that proper A GLIMPSE OF OLD FEUDAL TIMES IN JAPAN. 79 deference is shown by the coarse-minded masses. He secures all the best rooms in the hotels, bund- ling out all the occupants thereof. Is there a civil commotion in the streets ? Behold ! the indefati- gable, double-sworded exponent of the royal will comes swaggering along, significantly grasping his hilt, and orders a dispersion of the crowd with a wave of his fan. If you desire to see the atomic beauties of this apparently indispensable office, go to a little ham- let of two families, near Tsuruga, in Echizen. It is needless to say that the sire of one of these per- forms the duties of a Yakunin, diligently attending to the welfare of the community and seeing that the public receive no hurt. But a truce to this. The night is well spent, and our hand wearies. We have taken our glimpse of a state of society that has existed a thousand years. Imbecile figure-heads now no longer are made to spurn the advances of outside '* barbari- ans." Semi-barbaric cavalcades of samurai no longer follow their princes in stately procession along the somber avenues that wind through the empire. The horde of parasites that formerly flocked about the palace has been turned adrift, while my noble lord has been summoned to Tokio, where he may be more directly under the imperial eye. His Daimiate has been surrendered to the im- perial government ; and he is allowed, as a recom- pense, one-tenth of the revenues of his former prov- ince. 8o LETTERS FROM JAPAN. The speeding years are dismantling the moated turrets. The water lilies bloom upon the stagnant ponds. Where once the lotus flowers brooded on the murky waters of the moats, the bulrushes and the reeds now afford shelter for the sedgebird*s nest. The autumnal leaves have accumulated upon the grassy lawns. The dragons and the bronze fishes keep solitary vigils over the crumbling ram- parts. For the lord of the estate has gone forth ; the turbulent retainers have dispersed, and the som- ber pines mournfully communing with the winter gales, regret the pageantry of former years. Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. OUR POSTAL SERVICE. LETTER VI. A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. HiROSAKi, September lo, 1874. Dear Julius Marcellus: In your last letter you asked many questions about my life here in the interior ; how I spent my time ; what kind of a house I am living in ; what sort of school-buildings we have ; and what class of scholars are under me. Let me begin with a description of my house. It is a well-built, double-storied, Japanese dwelling, that was formerly used by one of the relations of the Daimio. The exterior is not very prepossess- ing; for your true Jap, however dainty he may be about the interior arrangements of his man- sion, appears to have rather indifferent ideas about external show. You can never judge of the afflu- ence of a family by outside finish. One great beauty about a native house is that you need hardly any furniture. The picturesquely papered walls and shojees, together with the neatly polished ceil- ings, make the general appearance so pretty that much furniture would only mar the effect. The house is splendid in summer time. But during 6 82 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. these severe northern winters it is very difficult to keep warm. I, of course, have tables and chairs. My yard is also thoroughly Japanese. It is sur- rounded by a closely woven reed fence and is quite secluded. I frequently invite my visitors out here. My left-hand neighbor is a samurai turned photo- grapher. He learned his profession in Yokohama, and is able to turn out a very fair picture. My right-hand neighbor is a merchant who has bought out the titles and estates of an impoverished samurai. The school-building is some three hundred feet back of my house. It was formerly used by the retainers of the Daimio. In reality it is a long shambling line of barracks ; somewhat better, how- ever, than the usual run of such structures. It cost about twelve hundred dollars; cheap enough from our stand-point, but rather expensive from a native's, the cost of whose humble domicile does not often exceed four hundred. The large school-room is furnished with benches, tables, maps, globes, and black-boards. A large stove stands guard at my end of the room. The floor is bare but well polished. Light is admitted through a series of glass windows arranged along the side of the room. Their transparency furnishes an inexhaustible fund of astonishment to the country folks. The adjoin- ing room contains a small library and a few mathe- matical instruments. Beyond this room is the dining-room, which you will find to be well satu- rated with the odor of salt radish, rice, and fish. A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 83 Beyond this again, extends a long series of rooms for the boarding scholars. Then come the offices of the directors. On the whole, after seeing the miserable villages that line the road from Awomori, you will be posi- tively surprised at the really academic appearance of the institution. From a native stand-point, these are exceedingly liberal arrangements. The accom- modations are the best in the city. The situation is the most aristocratic, being upon the edge of the outer moat, and the furniture seems quite elabo- rate to a native. The school is supported by the ex-Daimio. You cannot help admiring the endeav- ors of this people to obtain learning. The scholars number about eighty. They are all the sons of samurai : common folks do not yet frequent the school. When you get acquainted with the boys, you find them a sharp set of youths. The first time I entered the school-room they all seemed alike,^ and I was much puzzled to know how to dis- tinguish them. I found them all very polite and very attentive to their duties. Their ages averaged sixteen. Their style of learning differs somewhat from ours. They adopt the Chinese style of com- mitting everything to memory. A boy will ac- curately repeat a whole page, and yet have but little idea of its meaning. I have great trouble in breaking them of this habit. In studying they raise a tremendous row. Three or four will get into the school-room, and rock back and forth upon the benches yelling in unison the next day's history 84 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. lesson. They shout forth sentence by sentence until it is learned. Take such a sentence as *' Caesar, having vanquished Pompey, returned tri- umphantly to Rome." They first repeat Caesar half-a-dozen times ; then they bawl forth the par- ticipial phrase at least a dozen times; and, finally, yell forth the concluding clause with such deafen- ing gusto that you might well imagine the immor- tal Caesar and a legion of hoodlums at his heels were triumphantly announcing the fact that the vanquished Pompey had gone below, where fathers- in-law cease troubling. The foreign teacher in Japan holds rather an anomalous position. He is at first disposed to con- sider himself merely a pedagogue plying his humble avocation for exceedingly lucky wages. But he soon finds that he holds a highly respectable posi- tion. His house is generally the best in the city, and occupies a site where only the relatives of the Daimio were formerly permitted to live, and he finds himself decidedly the leader of fashion. All the scholars pattern after him as closely as possible, and receive no small amount of social distinction from being under the tuition of a foreigner. The head men of the city will be proud to visit and re- ceive visits from him. Should he be under govern- ment employ at Tokio he is at liberty to call on the emperor on New Year's Day. The emperor visits the schools frequently. In the early days, before he had begun to feel his importance, he would listen to examinations, present prizes, and A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 85 submit to long-winded addresses from the masters and directors with commendable patience. And on one occasion, in Kioto, he even condescended to partake of refreshments offered by one of the teachers. Whenever I go out for a walk the directors send an escort with me. They seem to fear my coming to grief at the hands of some fanatical satnurai. When I first came here, every time I went out for a walk about thirty of the scholars would turn out with me. They came ostensibly for the exercise, but I think they were possessed with a desire to cut a swell in their native streets. And so the whole crowd would come streaming after me in a long procession, bringing the whole town out by the din of their clogs. To shake them off appeared impossible. I was finally inspired with the idea of lengthening my strides to a regular training gait. All manfully endeavored to keep up. Away we stalked down the main street, across the suburbs, through the fields, and down the long avenue that stretched toward the mountains. Three or four of the stoutest managed to keep up, but we could look back over two miles of straggling squads of demoralized small boys. The stratagem worked like a charm. Thereafter my escort consisted of three stout pedestrians. One day my escort being tardy, I slipped out alone. Upon my return I found the whole board of directors convulsed with consternation. They had sent the whole school in all directions to hunt me up. One squad didn't 86 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. get back until near ten o'clock, having, as they, rep- resented, gone clown the extreme length of my most extensive walk ; doubtless, however, tarrying by the wayside booths to brush dull care away with a little sak^ and fish. My return seemed to afford infinite relief. One eagerly inquired whether I had received any injury ; another, whether any- one had insulted me ; and yet another, whether I wasn't afraid of the dogs. They said they were afraid of my being cut down by some of the discon- tented old-style samurai who were bitter against foreigners, believing them to have been instru- mental in the abolition of feudalism. My escort thereafter was always on time. The avenue just spoken of leads to the east until it strikes the grand avenue that leads over mountain, stream, and plain, until it reaches Tokio and ends in Nihon-Bashi. Along this noble high- way swept the trains of the Daimios as they passed down to do homage to the dread power of the Tokugawas at Yeddo. Hither flocked his retainers and subjects to bid god-speed to him on his tedious journey ; bowing themselves to the ground as his stately 7torimon (sort of palankeen), borne on the shoulders of attendants, passed between the sway- ing multitudes. Down where the avenue merges into the winding mountain road among the foot- hills formerly stood the summer villa of his Excel- lency. Here his relations and retainers, who were not going to accompany him, took their leave, sipped the farewell cup, and turned their steps back A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 87 to their quiet city and solemn groves, regretting, perchance, that they were not to visit the wonders of the distant metropolis. A melancholy recollection will always linger around these stately highways. They are not so well kept as of yore. The small pines are fre- quently cut down of a dark night by fuel-seekers, who dislike to trudge off to the mountains for their fagots, and who would have atoned for their in- dolence with their heads in former days, for the Daimios took much pride in their roads. During the summer afternoons this place forms a popular resort for the citizens of Hirosaki. You frequently come across large picnic ptirties holding high carnival beneath some spreading tree, or upon some swelling knoll where no passing breeze is lost. As we pass along, some jolly customer, brimful of saki and fish, will rise up from the feast and per- form the weird fan-dance, to the delight of his up- roarious companions, who applaud and laugh at his tipsy flings. Sometimes one of the party will en- deavor to absorb the attention of the company by singing a song or telling a story, wherein his fath- omless shrewdness figures conspicuously. These convivial groups frequently remain long after the moon has risen, and in the still hours of the evening you can hear parties returning from some rollicking cruise, hiccough forth barbaric odes that make you dream of Chinese horns and Moorish conches for the remainder of the night. For you must bear in mind that there is nothing like Japan- 88 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. ese singing, either on the earth, or in the heavens above, or in the waters beneath. The operator first makes a prolonged hissing sound by drawing his breath between his lips. He then closes his eyes so tight that you fancy he never intends open- ing them again upon this cruel world. Then a series of groans and grunts begin to wallow up from the depths of his abdominal recesses, finally ex- ploding from his mouth in a succession of fiendish hoots and yells. In the meantime his contorted features loosen and shake themselves out into expressions of the most approving and ineffable serenity ; while he occasionally claps his hands as if forcibly appropriating that applause which he certainly ought never otherwise to obtain. I shall never forget the first time I heard one of these execrable productions of the infernal muse. It was on the trip from Hakodate to Awomori. As the steamer came to anchor, I went below to get my valise. While picking it up, I thought some one was speaking. Turning around, I saw a raw-boned fisherman in the opening stages of this interesting frenzy, and supposed from his agonized countenance that he was suffering from an attack of seasickness. But he wasn't. He exploded into one of his most impassioned strains, making my ears fairly tingle. Flute playing is also a popular source of recrea- tion, and appears to instill the very essence of amia- bility into the savage breasts of this neighborhood. Four patrons of this divine art, in the immediate A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 89 vicinity of my house, possess as many specimens of these sweet little sticks. The melody is a mourn- ful strain of unvarying monotony that they appear to be never tired of playing. On moonlight nights they and I are particularly wakeful. Singing and flute playing, with desultory strumming on fiddles, com- pletely exhaust the musical genius of this people. The opera, the oratorio, the concert, are utterly unknown. There is no requesting Miss Tomita or Miss Tanaka to afford you the exquisite pleasure of seeing her down to hear Parepa or Rubenstein ; no inspection of dashing actresses through binocular magnifiers; no formidable array of claw-hammer parquets ; no small boy always dodging between you and the prima donna ; no steaming and puffing while trying to get out ; and no hagglings with hackmen after you are out. Blissful primeval sim- plicity ! In America the evenings form the favored time for brilliant gatherings, but here they are a perfect blank. With the setting sun, the doors are slid to, and drowsiness or gossiping relaxations end the day. Between teaching, and walking, and reading my home mail, time is well spent. Should ennui, how- ever, steal upon mc unawares, I sally forth into my kitchen to refresh my boy's rather hazy ideas of bread-making with a few rather indefinite views of my own, which appear to leave him more hopelessly perplexed than ever. A boy is an indispensable appendage of the Oriental sojourner. It is the boy that cooks, washes the dishes, and waits on the 90 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. table. He makes your bed, and fills your lamps, and cleans your room. He looks after your inter- ests generally. He will not allow any one to cheat you, but always takes a percentage of all money passing through his hands, the rate of which will be proportioned to the rascality of his nature and the carelessness of his master. But the specimen that I possess will never be able to add much to his income, for the simple reason that he lacks the cleverness for cheating, and barely possesses the requisite amount of intelligence for chewing rice. It was only after much difficulty that his services could be procured, for the people here are rather timid about foreigners. He set his wages at five dollars per month ; and I made no ob- jection. From this income, he supports a wife, and is able to sport a pair of woolen drawers, to the no small envy of his former associates who are com- pelled to ply their daily avocations minus that delectable article of apparel. My boy has very vague ideas about foreign styles of cooking. To begin, he thinks it useless to wash his hands before kneading up the dough. I am in- flexibly of the contrary opinion. As to ever wash- ing out the dish-wiper, why, that's pure fogyism ! He considers it an absurd piece of foreign fastid- iousness to beat up the whites of the eggs before mixing with the sugar and flour. My own views as to the necessity of this proceeding not being very clear, I am not prepared to convict him on this point. Therefore I refer the matter for your deci- A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 9 1 sion ; for I am by no means disposed to give slavish deference to the recipe. He roasts a fowl quite fairly, but he hasn't the least idea as to how stuffing is made. Neither have I. His omelets are passable, that is to say, would not be taken for soap. It is on sponge cake, how- ever, that he prides himself. But it is fair to paren- thetically remark that his master is not particularly elated with his proficiency in this branch of cuisine accomplishment. Nevertheless I must modestly intimate that this cake is quite palatable when I chance to assist in its concoction. Otherwise, he appears to exert some fell influence over its proper development. He takes a melancholy satisfaction in having the top sag down like the crater of a vol- cano. Now I would not be fastidious about the shape, provided this depression did not reduce the interior to the flavor and consistency of leather. I am fully convinced that he slaps all the ingredients together into a dish and then shoves it into an oven. The first loaf of bread seemed to give his honest heart genuine satisfaction as he came grinning into my study with it in his hands. I told him to cut me a slice. His knife slipped hopelessly off the crust. He finally got it apart by driving the meat knife perpendicularly through the center and bear- ing heavily against the handle, making some artless remarks meanwhile about its being somewhat kattai (tough). The inside was as yellow as a carrot. I jntimated that the color wasn't exactly orthodox ; and that adamantine inflexibility was not considered 92 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. a requisite of the staff of life. I condescended, however, to initiate his unenlightened mind into the mysteries of this science by making three or four loaves myself, and was able, with comparative ease, to turn out some very fair specimens of brick- bats. We mutually agreed to give it up as a bad job, and I fell back upon the crackers in my store- box. His ideas of coffee-making were also based upon erroneous conceptions of the art. His first efforts resulted in a complicated emulsion that failed to pass muster, or my throat. I told him to put an Ggg into it next time, for that would settle the grounds. The following morning a long, sooty jet of liquid streamed from the nozzle into my cup. He looked perplexed, and began scratching his head, muttering something about yukinai (not right). The cover was lifted, and lo! the unbroken ii^'gy boiled to a flint! Considerable explanation convinced him of the propriety of breaking the ^^^ into the grounds before pouring on the hot water. I have occasion to feel devoutly thankful that I am not dependent on him for my living. If I allow him to discontinue his coffee-making for three days he invariably forgets the recipe, and brings in on the fourth a mixture much resembling tar, both as to flavor and consistency. If I permit him to dis- continue cake-making for a week he produces a batch of cookies that would infallibly bring tears to the eyes of a frisky crocodile. And as to his griddle- cakes ! Pitiful Zeus ! They are so elastic that the A FE W IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 93 Supreme Court and Amphictyonic Council com- bined could sit thereon without leaving the least impression. About once a month he is smitten with an unac- countable ambition to tickle his indulgent master's palate with some new dish. It is impossible to imagine from what source these combinations of culinary genius take their rise. He usually spends about two hours over these inspired stews. I am invariably forewarned of their debut by about an hour of deafening hissing and sizzling in the region of the kitchen, combined with a powerful odor, compared with which garlic and boiled cabbage would be ethereal and delicate perfumes. He then slides back the shojee, and, with a face wriggling with ecstatic subjective approval, hopes the danna- san (master) will condescend to try a trifling variety in cooking that his unworthy servant has had the presumption to innovate. The danna-san tries to smile a melancholy approval. But when the in- spired prodigy has gone out, the heartless danna- san throws half of the mess into the yard to be eaten by the crows, leaving the remainder to be eaten by the precious inventor. The crows eye the mixture with considerable suspicion before bolting it. And for the next two or three hours I fancy myself able to detect a certain listlessness in their deportment, as if they were suffering from indigestion, — if it be possible to conceive of anything disagreeing with a crow. I would not part with this boy for a number of 94 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. reasons. In the first place, it would be impossible to find another one in the province to take his place. Secondly, although he knows nearly as much about cooking as I do, yet he knows more than the whole province combined. And it would take at least a year to instill his concentrated knowl- edge of the subject into a new customer. Finally, I might go wild with ennui had I not his diversions to amuse me. I gain a splendid idea of the utter ignorance of this people concerning our civilized notions of living ; and also a practical knowledge of their charming primitive simplicity as regards meth- ods of reinvigorating the inner man. His meals are very simple. He merely throws a couple of handfuls of rice into some water, and allows it to boil until cooked. He then falls to, and chokes it down with a couple of sticks, ever and anon nibbling a piece of salt-radish. In eating his mouth works like an ungreased pump, making noise enough to be heard in my study. And yet his system is un- doubtedly more complicated than Adam's. The revered progenitor of our unfortunate race doubt- less never took the trouble to boil his vegetables. And he probably hadn't the remotest conception of the chop-sticks used by this portion of his fallen posterity, finding his fingers quite handy for stuff- ing down raw chops, and easily cleaned by sucking and rubbing through his hair. And as to washing his hands before indulging in culinary freaks, he would probably have shaken hands with his de- graded descendant. And as for beating up eggs A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 95 instead of instantly sucking the ends, — ah ! it is too evident we have fallen from the primitive style of preparing chow-chow. But, in addition to my boy, I find my spare time well taken up in defeating the machinations of my neighbors* cat and dog. The former animal, in particular, I view with hostile emotions. One day my boy and I, after uniting our combined skill and intelligence, were able to produce a dish somewhat resembling chicken pot-pie. 'Tis true the resem- blance was not remarkably striking ; still we flattered ourselves that we had done a pretty good thing, although the pastry did look like distress. While anticipating a second delicious meal off this dish my combination of chief butler and baker suddenly announced that a certain bob-tail cat had entered the cupboard in some mysterious manner, and had feloniously absconded with the remnants. My first proposition was to shoot the cat ; and, with the in- tent of carrying out my deadly designs, I began unpacking the accumulation of dust and rust from the chambers of my revolver. But when the direc- tors heard that I was lying in wait with deliberate intent to annihilate the vile transgressor, they were greviously agitated and begged me to desist, inas- much as it might frighten the people, and as it was against the local laws. The firing of a shot would probably form an epoch in the history of the neigh- borhood. The immediate community would take some weeks to finish comparing notes as to the volume and quality of the report, and the inimical 96 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. character of the agent. Taking heed of their ad- monitions, I thereupon inserted some acetate of lead and white vitriol into sundry pieces of meat, and, with savage exultation, saw the animal walk off with them. But to my infinite disgust, the brute called around next day for more. But he quit coming after that, and the curtain falls upon his further history. The dog lives two doors off. From my first ap- pearance he took a violent antipathy to my person, and I have never been to much trouble to dissi- pate that prejudice. Should he happen to be outside when I appear on the road he instantly springs into position behind the fence, and com- mences a furious attack by barking up and down behind, occasionally venturing to seize it between his teeth, and shake it violently ; creating the im- pression, as we poor mortals are sometimes wont to do, that but for this impediment wonderful things might be accomplished. On one occasion he unin- tentionally threw himself against a weak place, and came tumbling through into the road. It was interesting to notice the rapidity with which he resumed his former position. Another idiosyncrasy of his is to gnaw holes through my reed fence and tear up the flowers, and root around generally. My boy then goes out and claps his hands at him and says '' Shoo f C hicks haw f ^"^ (Begone! Beast!) Whereupon the dog wags his tail and continues operations in the most jocular frame of mind imaginable, until he A FEW IDEAS ABOUT LIFE IN THE INTERIOR. 97 sees the ominous shadow of a top-boot sailing through the air, when he suspends operations long enough to carry it off. His partiality to my yard increases in direct proportion to my murderous as- saults upon his person. He spends as much of his time here as he can. On one occasion he came near creating a complicated legal discussion by bit- ing another man's pig that had meandered near my veranda. He sometimes invites in two or three of his chums to help him in his horticultural pursuits. He also comes here to fight out his duels. The furious combatants paw up the soft loam, and leave the yard like the field of Waterloo. All dogs up here have a wolfish propensity for howling at night. They have a great variety of tones, and rising and falling inflections. This dog appears to be a kind of chorister. His companions seem to regard his voice as something uncommonly fine. Now this canine nightingale invariably trains his band just beside my window at midnight, ap- parently considering night air specially suited for this purpose. His enthusiastic efiforts usually rouse ambition in the emulous breasts of two or three other band-masters in the vicinity ; and they rout out their classes and start up opposition. These songsters then exchange challenges, and have a grand fight, and in the morning I wake to find my ink jug and fourteen tin cans lying around the yard, while the boy's clogs have been driven through the fence into the side of my neighbor's house. ** But he still lives. Aye, lives, and confronts me 7 98 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. daily " with a knowing wink whenever I appear outside. After all, his machinations lack the malicious audacity of the cat. I permit him to exist. Betwixt him and my unhung chief baker, I shall be able to worry out my contract here. I shall not renew it. The loneliness is too sepulchral. Thanks to Fred, I have a good offer at Tokio that I shall accept. The monotony of life in the interior is extremely wearing. Up at seven, breakfast at eight, school from nine to three, allowing an hour for dinner, and reading and walking to finish the day. There you have it in a nut-shell. To pursue the same routine, to sit down to meals alone, to have no healthy excitement for the mind for months, will be a strong test for the most elastic minds. In the first six months you finish all your investigations. The novelty gives you mental tone. But after that, you come to your rope's end, and it will be well for your soul if you possess sufficient moral ambition and elevation of spirit to avoid the foul example of the majority of those living inland, who, when they depart, leave an unfortunate prog- eny to drag out a degraded existence. I hope you will not feel shocked at my allusions to this subject in my letters, for it is the chief characteristic of foreign life in Japan. I shall al- ways handle the subject without ceremony or mercy. Would that I could blot out this hateful stain upon our civilization ! Write soon. Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. MAVV.IIAKA ; 1 VI-KAI. ^ fond of ram- bling over the country. On one occasion he hap- pened to stray beyond treaty limits. Not in the least disturbed at this occurrence he took up his quarters in a hotel, and ordered a bath. The land- lord asked him to show his passport. Of course, he had none. He said, however, as the exigencies of the case did not seem to be imperative, he would spend the night in- the hotel, and return to treaty limits in the morning. This satisfied the landlord. Our friend then went down to the bath. But he was much surprised to find it occupied by a strapping samurai. Our friend then told him in language more forcible than elegant to *' piggy " out of that. The man replied that he was quite willing to remain where he was, as he felt quite equal * lie remained nearly two years, and then left of his own accord. A FEW REMINISCENCES. 123 to the position, and, moreover, had not yet finished his ablutions. The gestures and tone of our irasci- ble friend now became so offensive that the recipi- ent thereof bounced out of the steaming tub, and rushed forward with the avowed intent of chastising the intruder. But about three feet off he was met by a left-hander under the chin, which caused him to step back through the shojees into the next room with a rapidity of motion that could hardly be characterized as graceful — an abrupt proceeding that terrified in no inconsiderable manner two old women who chanced to be there watching the prog- ress of the misunderstanding through the crevices of said shojees. As the victim showed no disposi- tion to come after his soap and clothing our friend pitched them out after him ; for the stage at which he had arrived in the arrangement of his toilet when interrupted could hardly have been designated as presentable to the condoling crowd of sympathiz- ing acquaintances gathering around him outside. Our friend then occupied the field of combat. He barricaded the doors, and spread himself out in the domain so lately occupied, and so hastily abdicated by the unhappy predecessor. After bathing to his heart's content, as he was going up to his room he saw quite a crowd in the yard listening to the ex- planation of the man who hadn't time to finish his bath, and who appeared to be illustrating his points with considerable warmth. Soon after the landlord came upstairs in considerable trepidation, and said that the samurai (who, by the way, was a Yakunin 124 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. from the next village) had found out that the for- eigner had no passport, and that he was going to have him carried back to treaty limits that same night. Our friend said that he would see about that. He ordered up two hebachis (braziers), with pots of boiling water. In a few minutes he heard steps on the stairs. Presently about a score of holes were punched through the shojees and as many sparkling eyes looked through. A through reconnoisance, how- ever, of the premises seemed to convince the out- siders that a six-footer, stripped down to a pair of drawers and a pair of invulnerable hob-nailed dry- docks, and armed with a ladle and two pots of scalding water, was not the most eligible bellig- erent that the occasion called for. So they retired for further discussion on the ways and means of capturing the Philistine. And Mr. B. finished his dressing. As the crowd below began to be a source of annoyance, he went down in a high temper. He fiercely demanded what they wanted. They said he had no passport and must return to treaty limits instantly. He then demanded if there was any one in the crowd authorized by the gov- ernment to take him back. To which answer was made that there was not. " And who is that big samurai making all this row ? " " Oh ! He is a Yakunin from the next village." " Then," said Mr. B., "why is he making all this disturbance? I must report him at Tokio. What is his name?" But the fellow had vanished like smoke ! If you A FEW REMINISCENCES. I 25 had looked down the next street you would have seen him, clogs in hand, racing for the next village, utterly oblivious of the fact that he had left his towel and soap upon the veranda. ** And what's this crowd doing here, I should like to know ? What are you blocking up the entrance for? Has the government authorized you to be annoying the people in this hotel ? I must take a few of your names in this book of mine and repor^ the affair at Tokio," said he, drawing forth his pocket-book. But there wasn't time to get a single name ! With one impulse, the frightened throng rushed forth into the street and scattered in all directions, leaving the vicinity as quiet as you please. And that ended the matter. In the morning he returned within treaty limits. All this sounds very strange to you, but it is still a very characteristic description. In a few years, however, I think the Japanese will become more self-asserting. When that time comes this letter will amuse the natives themselves. This will be my last letter from Hirosaki. To- morrow I start for Yokohama. My next letter I hope to date at Tokio. It is with feelings of con- siderable regret that I bid farewell to the Toogu- Gakko and the scholars. They have been my companions for eight months. They have been kind and obliging in escorting me about the coun- try. They have been diligent in their lessons, and extremely polite in their deportment in the school- room. I would much enjoy teaching them for 126 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. another year. But the lonely life I am leading is beginning to wear me down. My successor is already on his way here. He brings his family with him. He will, no doubt, be able to remain here several years. With a wife to attend to your house, you can live very comfortably here. I must be about my packing. Farewell, Theophilus Pratt. P. S. — I am writing this at a little village outside of Hirosaki. We left at daylight this morning. There was a slight fall of snow, and the road was very slushy. The scholars followed me two miles out of the city. They then stopped, and one of them stepped out and made a speech in English. He thanked me in the name of the school for my kindness and care in instructing them ; said that they were sorry the place was so lonely ; but that they had all tried to make it pleasant for me, and hoped that my journey would be a pleasant one. I was not prepared for this speech. But, turning in my saddle, and looking down upon the upturned faces and moistened eyes, I was really touched. I shall never forget that scene. There they stood in a semicircle, ankle deep in the mud, and shivering with the cold. Each face was touched up with an expression of genuine sorrow; for they had all been my companions in my loneliness, had all taken their turns in escorting me in my walks, had all been my faithful pupils. Under the inspiration of A FEW REMINISCENCES. 12J the moment, I spoke for several minutes in reply, " Boys," said I, ** we have now taken our last walk together. I shall now journey on to Awomori ; but you must return to your native city. I thank you for your many kindnesses to me during my stay in Hirosaki. Without you, my stay would have been very lonely indeed. I thank you for your diligence in your studies. By your diligence and kindness you have made my stay very pleasant. Perhaps I may never return to Hirosaki. Perhaps I may never see Iwa-ki-san again. But I can never forget the school and the scholars of the Toogu- Gakko. Should you ever visit Tokio or the United States, I shall always be much pleased to sec you. In the meantime, diligently continue your studies. I hope we shall meet again in this world. If not, I hope we shall meet in the next. I hope you will all meet with great success. Farewell." They all bowed low, and my horse bore me down the road. I looked back several times, and there they stood. I can see them now, almost, as I write this. I really did not know there was so much feeling in the Japanese nature. When you have once gained their confidence, they are very affectionate. But their enmity, when once roused, is implacable. Yours in haste, Theophilus Pratt. Awomori, November 19, ' 74. Dear Julius Marcellus : Before sending off my last letter, I met with a 128 LET TERS FROM J A PA M delay that detained me in this place nearly a week. I take this opportunity to send you a copy of the farewell address presented to me by the di- rectors and scholars several days before starting. It will serve as a kind of third postscript. ADDRESS. Since you came, last spring, to the school of Toogu, sailing over the waves, crested with foam, and taking no care of the uncivilized waste, you have taught the scholars for eight months, with your patience and industry. The fruits growing abundantly on the scholars, they made greater prog- ress, having compared to the last year. The effect was chiefly brought about by your wonderful energy. For the association, thus re- ceiving your kindness hitherto, I have no words to express the gratitude. Hereafter, I wish to reward your trouble of teaching, with the perfection of their study, with all my heart. Up to this time, you are living in the lone place without any friend to speak each other, save a few scholars. As you know, I being silly, not only I do imperfectly all that is required, but as I cannot speak the English like a dumb, have no means to comfort you, though I know your weariness and loneness. Moreover, other disagreement to your wishes are not few, but as these proceed from my being stranger to the English, I cannot hope to pray anything but the clear inference and forgiveness. A FEIV REMINISCENCES. 1 29 The lacquer wares and silk threads are not, in reality, excellent things, yet as these are the manu- factures of the city of Hirosaki, I will offer these to you as the parting presents. I pray you to receive these. 9 Sagaki. LETTER IX. TOKIO. Being a confidential Chat about the Metropolis. ToKio, May 31. 1875. Dear Julius Marcellus: Your letter from Naples came duly to hand. You ask me many questions about the situation and general features of Tokio ; about the geological aspects of the surrounding country ; about its his- tory, its inhabitants, the methods to which we re- sort for amusement, the present system of schools, and the social features of the place in general. Although your questions appear simple enough, yet, to transfer my ideas accurately to your mind through the clumsy media of pen and ink, will take no little time and paper. Written descriptions rarely convey accurate impressions to the reader's mind, and it is correspondingly rare to find a knight of the pen who docs not regard his version or de- scription of place, character, or thing thoroughly correct. It is amusing to notice how the same question will be answered by different persons. Ask a dozen residents of Tokio or Yokohama whether gratitude should be considered an element of Japanese character, and you will find yourself in » » . I » . » ' » • ••* > AINOS. (FrotH a Satire Photograph.) TOKIO, I 3 I possession of a vast and entertaining variety of af- firmation, negation, and invective. Be it therefore understood that we are only going to state our own views upon the metropolis. As the day is warm I shall lay myself out system- atically for my work. In the first place, I have or- dered the boy to put a couple of bottles of lemon- ade down the well so that I may refresh my pen betimes. I have ordered all the shojecs to be taken out, thus throwing parlor, bedrooms, and dining- room into one vast, airy apartment. So I am sit- ting in a kind of pavilion opening out on all sides into the garden. My chum has gone out for a day's shooting in the paddy fields beyond the Sumida ; so that my only companion is a little bull terrier that divides its time between sitting on a chair watching me write, and occasionally furnishing periods by bouncing out through the shrubbery at my neighbor's children who come peeping through the bamboo fence at the ejinsan (foreigner). Please excuse my shirt sleeves, for it is hot notwithstand- ing the bay breeze that is playing through the rooms. Now I feel prepared for that first question of yours. Let's see, what was it ? Boy ! bring me that letter on the bed. Ah ! here we are : " Gen- eral features of Tokio and the geological aspects of the surrounding country." In answering, we will omit the usual exordium which begins by positively announcing that Tokio is surely to be found transfixed by such and such a 132 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. parallel, and has never been known to be otherwise than astride such and such a meridian. The city of Yas/tikis'* and conflagrations is flanked on the east by a lovely bay, on the north by an ex- tensive stretch of level territory, and on the west and south by miles and miles of undulating country exquisitely diversified with picturesque ranges of hills. This is the most extensive piece of low coun- try to be found in the empire. It is the paradise of the ubiquitousy/>/r/-^j/rfl man, for he can trundle his establishment as far northward as Sendai, a dis- tance of about two hundred miles, before he must give way to the kago (palankeen) and the pack horse ; to the north-west, he can meander peacefully for ninety miles until the Nikko range impedes his blissful course; and to the west, and south, the tra- ditional even tenor of his way will meet with but few obstructions for sixty miles. A fair geological inference would be, that this rolling hill country and plain is formed of the debris washed off from the mighty spinal range during the floods of pre- * A Yashiki was a style of feudal architecture peculiar to Yeddo. The central feature was a palace of vast proportions. Around this, on all sides, were gardens, lawns, and court-yards, covering fre- quently many acres of ground. All this was then hemmed in with an unbroken line of barracks arranged in a quadrangle and having heavily barred windows and iron-bound gates of massive proportions. Each Daimio had his Ya.<:/tiki in Yeddo wherein he and his army of retainers resided during their long visits under the Tokugawa n'gime. But few of these grand structures remain ; many were burnt during the revolution ; and some of the finest, having been turned into gov- ernment offices, were set on fire and destroyed by stoves improperly set up therein. TOKIO. 133 historic ages. The extensive rice flats of Echizen, Kaga, and Echigo, on the west coast of Nippon, show that the turbid streams were also busy on the other side of the range. Mixed up with all this al- luvial drift will be found large quantities of lava from Fuji-san and Asama-yama. So much for the geological features of the surrounding country. The features of Tokio are various. The stranger's impression of the city will be materially modified by the time of the year, the state of the weather, the moral tone of his jinrikslia man, and the importu- nity of the Shiba priest. It is all very well, should he chance to strike a day when the fickle metropoli- tan climate chances to be smiling, and hit upon a team of amiable bipeds, to make the columns of that paper for which he is acting as foreign corre- spondent beam with vivid eulogies on the divine temperament of the native disposition, the tran- scendent salubrity of the Japanese climate, the beauty of the mausoleums, and the courteous de- portment of the priesthood. But let him come up on a day when the piercing gales from off Nantai- zan are raising every available atom of dust and pouring them down the streets in unremitting clouds ; just let him try to view park and temple with half-shut eyes and frozen liver ; just let him drive like a hurricane to the station to catch the last train, and then have a grand fight with thGj'ht- riksha men ; have them push the money back in derision ; have them follow him all the way to the slip bawling in vociferous unison at the incompati- 134 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. bility of the pay with their gigantic exertions ; have them grasp his clothing and bawl in his ears as he is attempting to pass the slip ; and have a recollec- tion of a sudden cessation of hostilities as a boot or cane goes off into a promiscuous assemblage of ribs, shins, and top-knots, and then a gloomy tinge will be imparted to the columns of that public instructor. The peruser thereof will gather the impression that the word beastly but inadequately expresses the Tokio climate ; that the temples are barracks ; and that a jinriksJia man is a combination of vicious balkishness and unutterable avarice, to be ranked below the vilest of the vile. Let us take a ride around the city. Visitors have reduced the ** doing " of Tokio down to a science. Let us suppose we are new-comers, and let us go over the beaten track. Here we jump into a jinrikslia at the station and merely say *' morroiv- viorroiu " (slang for go sight-seeing), and the faces of the crowd instantly become electrified with a beam of intelligence ; and four happy top knots (only two are necessary) immediately spring into position fore and aft of the vehicle, and away they go yell- ing like Modocs until we reach Shiba, in the south- west portion of the city. Here we can well spend a full hour in examining the mausoleums of the Shoguns (Tycoons) ensconced upon the gentle slopes of a deeply wooded hill. The elegantly lacquered floors, the richly frescoed ceilings, the pillars with exquisite arabesque designs, the mass- ive tombs of stone and bronze, the carved and TOKIO. 135 gilded walls, the bronze lanterns that look like dwarfed minarets, and the cool, melancholy avenues winding through the groves, will delight you ex- ceedingly. We now go through the castle grounds to Asakusa, some four miles off, in the northern por- tion of the city. Here we find an extremely large and unromantic Buddhist temple. In the im- mediate vicinity are all manner of shows. From morn till dewy eve the place swarms with sight- seers. Peasants, corporals, gaping military- recruits, and crowds of women armed with babies, loom up from all quarters of the metropolis to inspect the miniature Barnums. We now leave this uproar and confusion, and make off for Uyeno, about two-thirds of a mile north-east of Asakusa. This is a pretty park upon a bluff. Scattered through the grounds are a few temples of rather indifferent quality. Several of the Shoguns were buried here. At one time this park was the prettiest part of Tokio, and its tem- ples were far-famed ; but the Imperial Revolution of 1868 worked sad havoc with the shrines, and left only a few inferior buildings and some bullet- spattered gateways, which are rapidly disappear- ing. From the tea booths that line the brow of the hill, you obtain a lovely view of the city. The pretty panorama stretches for miles to the west, south, and east. And sixty miles to the south- west, you see Fujisan lifting its flattened crest far above the Hakon^ range. 136 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Leaving Uyeno, we drive down the Ginza, across Nihon-Bashi (the center from which all distances in the empire are computed), and reach the station in time to catch the five o'clock train. Regarding the history of Yeddo, or Tokio as it has been called since the Imperial Revolution, you will find that it does not date back four hundred years. When the Pilgrim Fathers were clearing away the timber from the cheerless shores of Massachusetts Bay, the site of Tokio was waving with tall grass and was tangled with under- brush. A few hamlets of fishermen and peasants were scattered here and there. The wild geese from Ycsso could, with rare impunity, frequent the marshes of the Sumida. Tokugawa lyeyas, while campaigning In this vicinity, noted its rare adapta- tion for a commercial metropolis, and his suc- cessors made it the permanent capital of the Tohtgawas. The great feature of the city is the castle. The citadel was built by Ohta Dokan, The two outer systems of circumvallation were subse- quently added as the grandeur of the dynasty grew apace. The circumference of the entire castle is now eleven miles. Scores of yashikis^ or palaces, sprang up all over the city in order to accommodate the Daimios and hordes of vassals that trooped with tithes and homage from more than a hundred provinces. Then, as a matter of course, merchants and trades- men came in immense numbers and built up the lowlands around the bay, beside the river, and TOKIO. 137 along the base of the bluffs. It did not take long for the glory of Kamakura to depart, and for Yeddo to become the metropolis. Every favorable breeze now brought fleets of junks scudding up the bay, gliding up the Sumida, and creeping off into the numerous canals that cut up the city outside the moats. Rice, salt, charcoal, fish, oranges from Kiushiu, sea-weed from Hakodate, and lumber from Chiba, were some of the cargoes. This was the great epoch of commercial prosperity in Japan. For three centuries a profound peace reigned throughout the empire. But Yeddo itself was always a scene of bustle and excitement. Between conflagrations, earth- quakes, processions of Daimios coming in from the provinces, and brawls between members of hostile clans, the mildew was not allowed to settle so thoroughly as it had done in other parts of the realm. New Year's Day was the great festive occasion. Friends exchanged visits and feasted. There is but little doubt that New Year's calling was introduced into America from Japan. The Dutch at Desima carried it to Holland, and the Knickerbockers then carried it to New York. The custom does not prevail in England. On this day the Daimios in Yeddo presented their respects to the Shogun. The next event would be the annual visit of the Dutch delegation from Desima. After their chief had, on his hands and knees, crawled into the presence of the Generalissimo of the Four Coasts, 138 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. prostrated himself, and then crawled back again ; and after his companions had sung Dutch songs, danced Dutch jigs, and kissed Dutch kisses for the entertainment of the royal household, they would be sent back with a few presents to Kiushiu {vide Kacmpfer). Then some powerful northern Daimio would for several days pour his retainers along the Oshiu- kaido, and another army of savmrai would stream up the Tokaido from the south. Bustle and ex- citement would follow until they were settled down in their yasliikis. How the children and the women tried to catch glimpses of the lords through the chinks in the doors ! But Yeddo wanted variety. So some windy night an incendiary, or careless waiter girl, would set fire to a house, and away would go about a quarter of the city. These vast conflagrations oc- curred about every two years. They usually began beside the moat and would lick up everything down to the bay. With the exception of the castle, the city was rebuilt about every eight or ten years. At another time the community would be enter- tained with a grand street duel between hot-headed samurai. Then some high officer, who had ren- dered himself obnoxious to his subordinates, would be hacked in pieces in broad daylight by a sudden dash of assassins rushing upon him at some unex- pected point. Japanese in feudal times had to use great care in addressing each other. A word, a TOKIO, 139 gesture, an uncourteous expression of voice, has frequently given offense that has been avenged after years of nursing. The rude oflficial was sur- rounded with scores of thirsty blades awaiting some dark night or unguarded yashiki. The ex- treme politeness of the Japanese is the product of feudal etiquette. Next, perchance, would occur a social tragedy. Some Daimio has insulted one of his vassals. Feu- dal etiquette stigmatizes any samurai who raises his hand against his lord ; so the fiery vassal calls his friends together, settles all accounts, and immo- lates himself on the shrine of honor by performing the hara-kiri. And now nature steps in and a violent earth- quake sends the city scampering into the streets. These shocks were generally quite harmless. On two occasions, however, since the founding of the city, the greater portion of Yeddo was thrown down and burned. As many as twenty thousand people perished on one of these occasions. But these epi- sodes were never allowed to interfere with trade. A Japanese merchant is not so easily disconcerted. With only five dollars in his pocket, he will set up shop again, while the embers of his former estab- lishment are still smoldering. The whole burned district will be rebuilt in a month. The center of every merchant's house is a fire-proof go-down (ware- house). When a fire-alarm is raised, he hastily puts all his valuables inside, seals up the cracks with clay, leaves a lighted candle inside, securely bolts 140 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, the door outside, seals it also with clay, and takes up his clothing and bedding and leisurely goes to the nearest open piece of ground and camps out all night. The next day he builds up a frail, tem- porary domicile around his go-down. No attempt is made to fight the fire. The Yeddo merchant is emphatically a man of business. Accustomed to handling money, he has acquired a reputation for energy and liberality. Accustomed to bustle and excitement and to variety in customs, he has be- come decidedly cosmopolitan in his tastes, and fond of all kinds of innovation. Accustomed to a thriv- ing business atmosphere, he has acquired a brisk- ness of action and a recklessness in speculation that quite take the breath out of a north countryman, and instill a mingled feeling of contempt and ad- miration into the effete being of a victim from Kioto. It has been his lot to deal too frequently with impetuous J^w7/rtf/, who often settled bargains with their swords. And this experience has given him a finished politeness of manner, which renders him a fit model for some of our home clerks, and an obsequious pertinacity in adhering to prices that renders him an object of disagreeable comment at times to his European victims. But old Yeddo has passed away. The arrival of Perry marked an epoch in its history. Consterna- tion filled the court when it was known that a for- eign fleet rode at anchor only a few miles below the capital. They must be instantly ordered off. But they refuse to go without delivering an important TOKIO, 41 letter to a high official ! Are they then unlike the Dutch ? Aye, and are persistent in their demands. Terror spreads from the court to the city. The merchants begin to carry off their valuables to places of safety. A general exodus appears immi- nent. Old samuraiy who had been lamenting the decline of chivalry, now begin to snuff carnage and breathe vengeance against the intruders. But the pressure is too great, and a treaty is reluctantly made. Dissatisfaction seizes the samurai. Angry mutterings come from the north, the west, and the south. The political sky grows black. Never- theless, the foreign trade prospers. The merchants become opulent. The prices of silk, rice, and tea become trebled. And all the pressure falls on the samurai^ who alone derive no benefit from this outside traffic. And, as if infatuated, the Shogun makes treaties with other nations, and opens other ports. This must surely be stopped. The Shogun is favoring the barbarian beasts and is betraying the national interests ! He is urgently petitioned to expel the intruders, but replies that it is beyond his power. Then the discontented samurai trans- fer their allegiance from the Shogun to the Mikado, and, for the first time in centuries, the tide of power sets from the east toward the west ; the chrysanthemum begins to prevail over the mallow leaves, and the imperial voice commands the Sho- gun to annul the treaties and expel the barbarian. The answer is that things have gone too far. No power can annul the treaties. Heavier and darker 14^2 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. hangs the political sky over the house of Toku- gawa. Influence rapidly deserts Yeddo and flows steadily toward the Gosho and the Phenix car. The Shogun, unable to carry out the imperial decrees, is commanded to lay down his office. Unwilling to raise the standard of revolt against the son of heaven, he retires into voluntary exile, after a vain attempt to wrest the imperial person from the grasp of the hostile and powerful Satsuma clan. The Aidzu and Tokugawa clans, however, bitterly continue the struggle unavailingly. They are driven from Kioto, pressed steadily backward upon Yeddo, fight desperately for a few days in the Uyeno grounds, are driven slowly northward, and arc finally vanquished in their last furious struggle at Hakodate in Yesso. And the Mikado, who has been ruling by proxy for more than a thousand years, comes to Yeddo and rechristens it Tokio. And now out with the barbarian ! But hold ! What means this sudden change? Has the Mikado gone mad ? Was not the rallying cry of the revo- lution, " Down with the Shogun ! Out with the barbarian!" Yet he is far exceeding the Shogun in his liberality ! More favorable treaties are made ! Additional ports are thrown open, and foreign civilization is introduced ! This singular transformation must rank as one of the most extraordinary changes in history. The new government clearly saw the folly of struggling against foreigners, and, as only Japanese can do, gracefully bowed to the force of circumstances. TOKIO, 143 Arrogant and haughty when in power, they well know how to be humble and obsequious when under power. And so, not without a pang of re- gret, we bid farewell to Yeddo. Tokio is quite a new city. The castle has been much dismantled, so that the people may more speedily forget old times. Almost all \,\iQ yashikis have been destroyed. Houses patterned after Eu- ropean models have sprung up everywhere. Just accompany me for a short time and we will note the main points of interest. Let us begin, then, at Tsukidji, the foreign con- cession. It is down on the bay. In former times it was a snipe-pool, but it has been sufficiently filled in to make a fair piece of property. The location is not very healthy. At ebb tide, three or four miles of mud-flats are laid bare under the very noses of the community. The wells are brackish. In some parts dampness and malaria render the ground floors unsafe for sleeping purposes. For foreign commercial purposes it is a failure, as the water is shallow for eight miles into the bay. The merchants, therefore, have pronounced anathemas upon the place and concentrated their forces at Yokohama. The place is at present almost entirely occupied by missionaries, who have made it one of the most presentable spots in Tokio. Like Desima at Nagasaki, it is an artificial island hemmed in with broad canals. But unlike Desima, no Yaku- nins stand guard at the bridges to prevent egress and ingress. The Tokugawas little dreamed that a 144 LET! ERS FROM J A PA N. Dutch legation would ever be built within a mile and a half of Nihon-bashi. Tsukidji is also dangerously situated as regards fires. The northerly gales carry all the conflagra- tions down in this direction, so that it has on one occasion been burnt out, and badly scorched on an- other. On such occasions the creaking of well- ropes, the roar of the multitudes streaming by, the blinding clouds of glowing cinders, and the blazing tatamis, borne along on clouds of dust, render the scene interesting, and hot for the fire volunteers. Tsukidji has four churches, two legations, three seminaries, a hospital, a hotel, a butchery, an orphan asylum, and half a dozen parsonages. Half a mile southwest of Tsukidji is the Naval College, an institution with an able staff of English instructors. Beyond this is the Sei-0-Ken, a hotel upon foreign ideas, kept by the Japanese. In build- ing it the chimneys proved a failure, so they have run innumerable stove-pipes through walls and win- dows, until the institution resembles a huge soap- boiling establishment. They, however, serve up a capital tabic d'liStc, They have also introduced the civilized institutions of bar-room (patronized almost entirely by Europeans) and bilHards. The reading- room has a fair assortment of foreign journals, in- cluding some of the indecent illustrated literature of New York city. Another half-mile brings us to the railway sta- tion, a building that would do credit to any country. Another half-mile brings us to Yamato-Yashiki, a THE I'BIQLTTOt'S JINRIKISHA. TOKIO. 145 pretty bluff covered with fine European houses for the use of foreigners in the employ of the Survey, Telegraphic, and Engineering Departments. Under the old rdgime this was one of the aristocratic por- tions of Yeddo. Here we also find the Ko-bu-sho, the Department of Public Works. It is a massive yashiki turned into offices. Near this stands the Engineering College, which possesses the finest group of buildings in Japan. They are substan- tially built of brick and stone, and would be a credit to any country. It has a large staff of European instructors, and is in a most flourishing condition. We now cross the moat, and turn to the west. Upon a bluff that skirts this part of the city we find the Mining Department. It is a magnificent old yashiki. This institution seems to accomplish but little beside giving employment to a horde of sunt- urai^ whose prime occupation seems to be drawing pensions, and meeting every day to annihilate end- less supplies of weed in discussing ways and means for — for (does anybody know ?) — for a continua- tion of the present order of things perchance. The natives are so jealous about the mineral resources of their country that they grudgingly allow any outside inspection. Once in a while an engineer will be sent through the provinces on a tour of inspection. His reports are then duly considered and ignored, until lapse of time renders it necessary to organize another expedition to keep up the de- lusion that something important is being done by the Mining Department. 146 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Passing northward for a mile along this pretty bluff we come to the British Legation, an immense " compound " surrounded by a substantial brick wall. In the center rises the huge residence of Her Majesty's Minister. Scattered through the spacious and pretty grounds are small brick houses for the Consul, the student interpreters, and a host of under- lings usually connected with an English legation in the East. In fact, the emperor himself does not live in such style. These magnificent legations, found wherever the cross of St. George unfurls to the breeze, are truly indicative of the power of the British Empire. But their immense cost, taken in connection with the prolific capacity of the house of Hanover-Brunswick, makes it rather disagreeable for the common run of English taxpayers. My ex- perience is that Americans, behaving themselves, are just as much protected and just as well received abroad as Englishmen, even though our people do not lavish money on their legations. The American citizen does not seem to need so much protection as a British subject. He behaves himself better toward the people of a foreign country, and con- sequently has less collision. Englishmen have been frequently cut down in Japan. I do not know of any native-born American so dealt with. There have been one or two naturalized ones assassinated, I believe. When the British subject learns to deport himself like a gentleman upon all occasions toward inferior races he will be disposed to dispense with the expensive luxury of being too much governed. TOKIO. 147 This entire bluff is known as Ban-Cho, and in old times it was highly favored by the aristocracy. Many pretty villas are scattered all over it. At the end of the bluff we find a light-house and a race-course. Rather an odd place for a light-house, you will say, and so it is. It was built in honor of the braves who fell fighting for His Majesty during the revolution. There is a weird supersti- tion that it serves to guide the departed souls, should they chance to be hovering near during the cheerless hours of night. However that may bo, 'tis surely a fine beacon for belated travelers who have not been so happy as to fall in the Imperial service. This vicinity is a sort of Campus Martins. Sev- eral times during the year races, wrestling, fireworks, and sports of various descriptions take place here. Hither swarm all classes of natives, and fill the boxes and scaffoldings that have been thrown up around the race-course. These are occasions of thrilling interest to the youth of the city. The horse-racing is the funniest portion of the whole programme. Each race is contested by half a dozen specimens of slab-sided horseflesh. At some un- couth signal the startled animals rush forward ; at the first turning at least one pair of shanks describes a cycloid over the nag's head ; at the second turning another candidate for glory prosaically measures his length in the mud ; and at the finish two or three demoralized nags come shambling down the home- stretch amid a feeble cheer, being kept from loafing 148 LE TTERS FROM JAP A N. up against the fence to rest by the vigorous use of tongue and stick. Passing down the hill we come to an extensive level district filled with the houses of the common people. Near the moat is the *' compound " of the Kai-Sei-Gakko, the Imperial University of Japan. The buildings are not so elaborate as those of the Engineering College, but it is in quite as prosperous a condition. It furnishes a good curriculum of studies, and has an able staff of foreign instructors. The location, however, is low and unhealthy. Crossing to the northward we come to Tsu- ruga Dai, reputed to be the highest bluff and the healthiest locality in Tokio. Here we find many fine houses in European style, also a large Russian church, and an extensive female seminary. The atmosphere is very pure, and the view is lovely. The city stretches away for miles. Yon- der is the tall roof of Mitsui's Bank, rising like a tower above the general level of houses around it. There lies the terraced, thrice-moated castle. There stretches the Ginza like a streak of snow, its modern style strangely constrasting with the surrounding architecture. And nearly four miles to the south- east you see the spires and gable-ends of Tsukidji; while far down the bay you see the forts built across the Shinagawa Shoals at the limits of the suburbs. And this is Tokio, with its five years of modern improvement, its schools and colleges, its twenty- eight square miles of animation, bustle, and trade. TOKIO. 1 49 As to your question concerning the climate of Tokio, a few words will suffice. January and February are cold but clear months. But little snow falls ; and the ponds, canals, and river are rarely frozen. A penetrating northerly wind makes you feel the cold to be trying. The gusts are very fickle. You will first have three or four days as balmy and as lovely as May, and you allow your fires to burn very low. Then your blinds begin to rattle, and a freezing gale rushes down from Nikko- san and takes the city by storm, making it misery to go out, and making it almost impossible to keep warm should you chance to be living in a native house. The month of March is even more change- able. About the middle of April you begin to drop your overcoat and bank your fires. The flowers now begin to come out. Crowds of people daily flock to Uyeno and Asakusa to see the beautiful groves of cherry trees buried in floating masses of pink and white blossoms. May is usually as lovely as can be desired, — although a little fire is agreeable in the evenings and on a few days when the fickle blasts of winter suddenly return as if loath to be exiled in the northern solitudes. The month of June is rainy and muggy, and everything becomes sticky and moldy, — an occasional fire is sometimes in order even in this month. July and August settle down to clear weather and steady heat, which is usually moderated by a typhoon near September. The last-named month is rather inclined to be rainy. October and November are simply perfec- I 50 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. tion, and December is almost as good. You start a low fire about the middle of October. For at least five months a steady fire is essential to com- fort. It is reported, however, that certain Scotch- men go nearly the whole winter without any arti- ficial heat. This does not, however, indicate the average capacity for enduring cold of our com- munity, for to chill the blood of some of these Caledonians would require the windward exposure of an iceberg. The climate is healthful on the whole. The grass is green all the year; and the camclias bloom all winter. The drinking water of Tokio is bad, especially in the low lands. The immense above ground drainage in gutters is thought to infect the springs. Filtering and boil- ing are resorted to. Much water is also brought from more favored localities in wooden pipes. The natives always drink tea, and are therefore not much annoyed in this respect. From December to March small-pox is an epidemic. The natives pay no more attention to it than we do to the measles. Almost everybody has had it. It does not seem to take violent hold of bodies nurtured with vegetable food. Foreigners are not much troubled with it, however. Cholera is an anomaly. Rheumatism and consumption are the prevailing ailments. The peculiar leg dropsy is very fatal to many. This is a malady unknown to us; it always begins at the knee and travels upward and attacks the vitals. The conflagrations form the most disagreeable feature of Tokio. They have a regular season, TOKIO, 1 5 I which almost invariably commences in the middle of November and lasts all winter. They are at- tributed to poverty-stricken incendiaries ; carpen- ters, clothing merchants, and lumber dealers being the popular scapegoats. But the fact that fires are coincident with the approach of cold weather and the consequent use of kebachis (braziers), argues that they are the result of carelessness on the part of the natives, who are notoriously heedless in car- rying shovels full of blazing charcoal all over the house to different hebachis. You frequently find the tatamis in a Japanese house scored with charred holes, — silent witnesses of the shuffling carelessness of a free-and-go-easy waiter girl, who invariably laughs and says ** nara/iodo'* (indeed) when you call her attention to them. Life in Tokio differs much from that in Yoko- hama; the latter place, in fact, is not Japan at all. The European society is composed of pro- fessors, missionaries, employees in the different departments, and a few of the intelligent Japanese who have been abroad. The teachers of the engi- neering colleges and the employes of the Ko-Bu- Sho live at Yama-to-Yashiki. The teachers of the Kai-Sei-Gakko live partly in the vicinity of the university and partly at Kaga-yashiki, two miles northward. Quite a number of clerical and secular people live at Suruga-Dai, while the missionaries have monopolized Tsukidji. You will see, there- fore, that distances of at least two miles separate the five branches of the Tokio community. It is I 5 2 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. a hard day's work to make the round on New Year's Day. One is surprised when he hears that the directory has six hundred names down as resi- dents of Tokio. Manj' are scattered around in ob- scure places. Many are in the employ of the Mitsu-Bishi Steamship Company and are only nominal residents of the place. Others, whose names arc down, are in the employ of the Kitakushi, and Mining Department and are off in Yesso or Akitah. So that it is safe to say the average com- munity docs not exceed three hundred. And as educated Japanese return from abroad and fill positions now occupied by foreigners, this number will rapidly diminish. The native population is about eight hundred thousand. In the days of the Tokugawas, however, when armies of retainers filled the numerous YashikiSy it exceeded a million and a half. Our leisure hours and business hours are variously employed. If you are adviser to a department of government, you dole forth the requisite amount of admonition (which may or may not be heeded), invest largely in curios, drive around in a carriage, keep your temper when interfered with by officious Yakunins, wisely let the department take its own course, and set an example of heroic intrepidity and commendable punctuality in drawing your salary as the appointed day rolls around. Even if you do not chance to be an adviser to a department but hold some subordinate position, you will also find pay-day to be an interesting season of much TOKIO. 153 unction. If you are a missionary you will find your time well taken up with studying the capri- cious language, teaching, preaching, and a few social duties. If you are a teacher in one of the government schools, you will find your life singu- larly unique. Your first move on coming to Tokio is to get a house, provided the government has not already furnished one for your accommodation. This undertaking usually assumes ponderous pro- portions before success crowns your efforts. Natives do not like to let good houses to foreigners. They abhor the tracking of muddy shoes over their tatamis. And then the cjinsan is so rough in hand- ling a fragile Japanese house. He thrusts the pipe of his stove through a wall and thus greatly in- creases the risk of fire. Then he knocks down a partition so as to have a large dining-room, and makes a big hole in the wall by backing his chair against it after a hearty meal. He drives about a hundred and fifty nails into the posts all over the house in order to hang up a multitude of pictures, guns, fishing-rods, hats, boots, trowsers, and a myriad of other things indispensable to his ideas of comfort. On sundry occasions he spits tobacco juice and an occasional mouthful of hot soup upon the tatamis. And he invariably keeps a brace of dogs that are perpetually jumping through the shoJeeSy measuring their heights against the nicely papered walls, or when not thus engaged, are pur- suing botanical investigations by tearing up the shrubbery in the garden and digging tunnels 154 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, through the artificial Fiijisatis, As I just remarked, you will find it difficult to get a house at all. You finally succeed in renting one on Ban Cho or Suruga- Dai for about ten or twenty dollars per month. You usually have a long bicker with the landlord, who wishes you to insure the premises against fire. He tells you that this is a regulation of the Tokio- Fu (city government), and that all cjinsatis must comply with it before taking a house. Steering clear of this imposition, you finally secure the premises upon your own terms. For twenty dol- lars you can get a fine house with a large yard. You then invest in about thirty dollars' worth of furniture, set up your stove, and paper up all the crevices. A few panes of glass along the shojccs looking out into the yard complete your prepara- tions. You generally get some other gentleman to take a part of the house, and you keep bachelor's hall together. Your next step is to get a boy. You walk over to Yama-to-Yashiki to see if Peak's boy can recommend one. To be sure he can, he has a friend who is an excellent cook, and happens to be out of employment because his master's con- tract was not* renewed by the Ko-Bu-Sho. He shall come around to-night. His wages? Well, his late master had a large household and gave him ten dollars per month. Ever get drunk? Never! His credentials? Oh, he shall bring them with him to-night. All right. Send him around this even- ing. Promptly he comes in his best clothes and well-polished top-knot. You and your chum then TOKIO. 155 form yourselves into an imposing inquisitorial com- mittee upon character. Albeit you consider his appearance somewhat " fishy," and feel morally cer- tain that he has borrowed or rented his credentials, you nevertheless engage him on trial, and he begins operations by blacking your boots on the spot. Next week he brings his family around and stows them away out of sight in some of the back rooms. Thus you are thoroughly started in house-keeping. As a matter of course, for the first two months you are deeply engrossed in your classes. You teach from four to five hours per day, Saturday and Sunday being free. You find the students quite different from scholars in the interior. They are more forward in conversation, being not so modest or timid as north-countrymen. Some of those who have been under inferior specimens of instructors are rather inclined to be insolent and intractable. They possess little of the deferential politeness found in boys who have never come in contact with the libertines of the Treaty Ports. Having access to libraries, you frequently find them plagiarizing their essays. Considerable vigilance is required in detecting these frauds. The convicted party usually laughs and says he was in a hurry last Sunday to go off with his friends and see the cherry blossoms at Uyeno. In my next letter I am going to give you some specimens of these compositions. I shall also give you a fuller ac- count of the schools in Japan, as space will not permit in this letter. 156 LE TTERS FROM J A PAN. The only punishment allowable is ** imposition" after school hours. After sentencing a precocious youth to copy out ten pages of his reader before going home to dinner, you find him very indus- trious for a fortnight or so thereafter. The most annoying experience connected with teaching is trying to secure punctual and regular attendance. They are frequently absent from recitations, so that you have to be very exacting with them. Their elastic excuses have to be rigorously reduced to proportions of probability. After a few weeks* experience, you find yourself compelled to fix a definite limit to their decimation of relatives. You begin to insist that parents are to die but once a year ; grandparents, but once in six months ; and immediate relatives are to be sparingly used up, as occasion may require. And the ubiquitous plea of important business is never to be tolerated without specific definitions in writing. As in the interior, the scholars are all the chil- dren of samurai. No restriction is actually placed on the admission of the children of the lower classes; but, partly from the lack of appreciation of the value of education, and partly from social antipathy resulting from centuries of prerogative, the children of the lower classes are unable to derive much benefit at present from the schools patronized by young bloods. This, of course, makes it pleasanter for the teacher ; for the samurai are not only more cleanly in their habits, but also much superior as regards breeding and intelligence. TOKIO. I 5 7 This is the result of centuries of superior advan- tages. As a rule, the scholars dress in native costumes, and they look much better this way. The first appearance of a small boy in coat-tails and tight trowsers is quite paralyzing. Nevertheless, you soon become really attached to your class. You find many excellent specimens of young men. Some of my most intimate ac- quaintances have been among my scholars. While freely associating with them, 1 have never known them to presume upon my friendship. Outside of school hours, the time of the foreign instructor in Tokio is variously spent. In winter, he will hurry off home, toast his feet at a stove, and read until dinner time. After this, perchance, he will go over to Yama-to-Yashiki and play chess with Peaks ; or he may possibly prefer to walk down Ban-Cho, and have a delicious season of gossip with his colleagues respecting the probability of getting a " rise ** at the end of the year. An oc- casional evening spent in solemn conclave with his chum in investigating the boy's accounts, and blow- ing him up roundly for cheating, seems to give much zest to one's mental tone. About once a week he gives a "stag" dinner or attends one. Should time, however, be still hang- ing heavily, he can go down to Tsukidji and call on the latest arrival of young ladies; and should his taste for this species of diversion be strong, he can occasionally journey on to Yokohama and shed his 158 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. beams on the most radiant localities along the Bluffs. As spring comes on, he begins to spend his after- noons in visiting places of interest. He will first go to see the pleasure gardens of the emperor within the second moat of the castle. A Saturday afternoon becomes well merged in the gloaming before the lovely lawns, the bamboo groves, the picturesque tea-houses, and the shadowy cascades have been sufficiently admired. Another afternoon can be profitably spent at Hamagoten, the Imperial Gardens on the shores of the bay. These are smaller than the former, but are more finished. When the cherry groves and the avenues of Mukojima are in full bloom, he can take a boat up the Sumida, and spend a delightful afternoon in walking down vistas of swaying blossoms that over- hang the river banks for nearly a mile. Hither flock the ^litc of Tokio upon every sunny after- noon, and spread themselves out for an unlimited treat of tea and cakes upon the verandas of the tea-houses that line the river, or upon the stone seats amid the box-wood copses. It is also considered the "correct thing" to visit the native theater at Shimabara two or three times during the season. The play commences at eight o'clock in the morning and closes at six o'clock in the afternoon, frequently requiring many days to render a single tragedy. The natives take their dinners along with them and eat in the building. The Japanese are consummate actors. Their TOKIO, 159 farces and comedies are capital. The tragic acting, however, I can not say so much for. There is so much sameness and bloodshed connected with it that you never care to see much of it. The enunciation is very clear and distinct. The ges- tures, from a Japanese stand-point, are certainly ex- cellent. The tragic portions of their plots are very monotonous. It is usually the same old story. A hot-blooded samurai becomes insulted in some un- pardonable manner — although as to what consti- tutes an insult in the eyes of a young top-knot thirsting for glory is by no means clear. A solemn gathering of friends then takes place, and the frightful provocation is duly discussed. After the regulation amount of ** ftarahodoiftgy' the wrathful Don Quixote furiously announces his determina- tion for blood, b-1-l-o-o-d! Nobly said ! Blood must be had! Sticking his vengeful blade into his belt, he then swaggers off to find his enemy, who is usually accommodating enough to be asleep, or up to his chin boiling in a bath-tub. An amount of promiscuous chopping and scientific hacking then ensues that is supposed to thrill the soul of chivalry with the very essence of admiration. Arms, legs, thumbs, ears, slices of calf and thigh strew the stage, to the unbounded approbation of the enrapt- ured house. And during this scuffle the stage-boy (supposed to be invisible) comes out and removes the clogs that have been kicked off by the furious combatants, so as to have them ready for the next scene. After this, the hero himself becomes the l6o LETTERS FROM JAPAN. victim, to the unfeigned grief of the old ladies in the pit, for the friends of the minced man take up the quarrel, and arise in wrathful indignation and smite the slayer some dark night, make an elaborate example of him as he had done with his enemy, and then tumble the remains into a river repre- sented by a painted board ; while the moon, repre- sented by a round paper lantern, is let down from the roof, and the scene looks melancholy enough amid the tolling of the monastery bells. So the quarrel, thu5 thoroughly inaugurated, is taken up by the relatives, and mutual extermination horrifies the house for weeks to come. The tragedy usually ends at three or four o'clock in the afternoon. Then a farce is acted, so as to restore cheerfulness to the house before breaking up for the day. We Americans here usually celebrate the Fourth of July. We sometimes have a ball at the Lega- tion, or have a dinner at the Uyeno Park. These occasions are always exceedingly jolly. Our summer vacations we usually spend in trav- eling. I will make this the subject of a future letter. After a stay of two years in Tokio you begin to find the time hanging very heavily. You have ex- hausted all the pleasure to be derived from wrest- ling, horse-racing, and theatricals. Your study of the native literature has reached that point where you find it destitute of elevating thought. You settle down to reading the history of the country and keeping up with the news of the day. You do TOKIO. l6l everything mechanically, and it becomes difficult to entice you out of your den. A kind of indolent mental torpor seems to settle down upon you. You derive infinite comfort from loafing on your veranda, dozing over the last home mail, and dis- cussing the latest scandal. Old residents here are rare gossips. But thanks to the letters I have to write to you, I hope not to drift into this imbecile method of thought. I trust that I shall not de- velop any remarkable keenness in becoming con- versant with the private affairs of the community at large. I certainly shall not become a member of that "outside committee" that sits in judgment on every breath of scandal, and constitutes a most in- defatigable agency for the propagation thereof. I think I have answered all your questions. Resting assured that I have endeavored to do so, I am, Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. LETTER X. SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. TOKIO, /u/y lO, 1875. Dear Julius Marcellus : In my last letter I promised to tell you a little more about school-teaching here. In no part of Japan are the schools so thor- oughly organized as they are in Tokio. The for- eigners connected with the schools in Japan num- ber about a hundred. Of these, at least fifty are here in the metropolis. The highest salary paid is nine hundred dollars per month. This sum is paid to the heads of the engineering and educational de- partments. One of these gentlemen is a Scotch- man, and the other is an American. The professors in the colleges receive between two hundred and fifty and four hundred dollars per month. The usual salary for teaching English is about two thousand dollars per year. Of course these high salaries will not last many years. As educated Japanese return from abroad, the number of Europeans in government employ will be gradually reduced, and in twenty-five years I doubt if there will be a dozen Europeans in the schools here. SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. 1 63 The government has also established schools in Yokohama, Nagasaki, Osaca, Niigata, Kioto, and a few inland .cities. But the number of European teachers in each of these places will not exceed six ; and in some of them only one is stationed. This estimate, of course, does not include private schools and mission schools. The expense of keeping up this school system cannot cost the government less than half a mill- ion dollars per year. All the books, charts, globes, ink, pens, and the usual school apparatus are im- ported. They are furnished to the scholars at al- most nominal prices. The tuition is free. A Japanese student pays from seventy-five cents to two dollars per month. There is but one school that charges two dollars, for very few can afford to pay this sum outside of their personal expendi- tures. Instruction is conducted altogether in English. A new class will at first have some difficulty in comprehending you. But after a few weeks they master the phraseology and technical terms of each branch of study so as to be able to recite and con- verse very intelligently. Conversation here is made a special study. Text-books have been prepared containing English idioms and phrases. Some of these books have been compiled by native authors ; and some of the expressions therein used are very amusing. In teaching, you will find the scholars very tract- able. The teachers are not allowed to chastise. 164 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, This method of suasion, in fact, is a species of bar- barism that they have not yet copied from our civilized home schools. It never pays to lose tem- per or patience with Japanese. They have a thor- ough contempt for any one unable to control him- self. In managing your classes, the most effective instrument is a mild touch of irony or sarcasm judiciously administered. They are as sensitive to this as mettlesome horses are to the touch of a lash. But if too often used, you will soon find the tables turned, for they also are expert at this kind of thing. When a boy is incorrigibly lazy, you will find it an excellent idea to keep him standing an hour or so at the map trying to find obscure places. Should he attempt to lean against a desk, gently call his attention to the fact that government property was not made for such purposes. Should he attempt to lean against the wall, intimate that both his per- son and the wall will become thereby soiled, — a re- sult not to be desired, because of the financial con- dition of the country at large. The unhappy youth then continues his work with great melancholy and lack of enthusiasm. The ages of my scholars average fifteen. They are all of the samurai class. As a rule, they are very polite and docile. They are particularly clever in mathematics. In grammar and analysis they stand well. In applied English they are fair. In Japanese and Chinese they are instructed by native teachers, and, as a rule, are good. SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. 1 65 They do not board in the school, but come from considerable distances. Some of them live four miles off, and most of them live at a distance of two miles. They always walk back and forth. At a quarter to nine every morning you hear the ceaseless clatter of about two hundred pairs of clogs coming through the massive gateway. Their lunch is a ball of cold rice with the inevitable salt radish and fish. They are hard students, but I do not think their diet will allow them to stand as much continuous hard study as our students at home can stand. They are much troubled with weak eyes. They use candle-light mostly ; some use kerosene lamps. I find it very interesting teaching them applied English. They have innumerable questions to ask about our institutions and customs. They also ask very many questions about Christianity. I never knew how thoroughly saturated our literature and history were with Christian thought and senti- ment until I began to teach these people. Some of the pages in a poem or review will require so much explanation that my teaching almost becomes a Bible lesson. The use of the term Creator, or nature's first cause, will suggest a line of inquiry that will take up an hour easily. Why do the books speak of a Creator? Because the average reasoning community in Christian countries accept the fact that there is one. Can they prove this? They can prove it so as to satisfy reasonable belief. How ? By the theory of probabilities. There are 1 66 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. two suppositions. Either all things came by chance, or they came by design. Now is it more probable that the vast machinery of the universe came by chance or by design ? By design, of course. Then docs not design betoken intelligence? And does not intelligent designing betoken a Creator? Yes. Then is it not the most probable and reasonable theory that the world was made by a Creator ? To this they readily assent. But then comes a flood of questions about Christianity. Why should Christianity be called the true religion? Because it contains the most perfect code of morality. If Jhe Creator made man with such vast powers for good and evil, is it not reasonable to suppose that he would give him a law whereby to regulate his thoughts and actions? And does not Christianity answer this purpose perfectly? Can you compare Buddhism and Brahminism with it ? Compare those countries that have been under Buddhism and Brahminism with those that have been under Christianity, and will you not find the Christian ones much more elevated ? Then is it not reason- able and probable to suppose that the Creator gave the Christian religion to man ? And when the Bible itself calls it the true religion, why should we not believe it? They are so ready to ask questions on these points that you sometimes are obliged to check them. Some of them have read Mills and other infidel authors, and are well up in all the hack- neyed objections. They are very quick to see SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. 1 67 single points, but they do not follow a succes- sion of points down to a conclusion tenaciously or logically. They are clear and bright, and can suggest difficulties about as easily as they can breathe. But they are always ready to laugh at their exposed fallacies, and are very good-natured under rough handling. They possess any amount of self confidence, and are always ready to enter upon the discussion of any subject that may arise. The nonchalance and eagerness with which they discuss weighty subjects is interesting. If they fail to carry a point, they are rather amused at hav- ing made as good a fight as they did. When a hard lesson is on hand, some of them are rather inclined to talk against time. During the midday recess, they are as noisy as you please. They romp all over the school-yard playing tag. With their petticoats on, they look more like a lot of girls at play. Some of the pleas- ure-loving ones are apt to slip off and cut the afternoon session. They dearly love to go with their friends to the tea gardens at Mukojimaand Uyeno, where they can discuss tobacco and foreigners with endless comments. It takes a long time to break them of this habit. They are puzzled to know why the teacher should care about this regular attend- ance so long as he is paid -anyway. One of the boys was incorrigible on this point, and as a punish- ment he was sentenced by one of the teachers to stay after school and write a composition on idle- ness. The youth evidently never exerted himself 1 68 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. to do justice to the subject. Here is a verbatim copy of this remarkable document : " IDLENESS. *' I have a very great refuse for the letter, Idle- ness, which now I made up the composition ; be- cause the idleness prevented for a task of all the people, and he was persuaded to induce in his idle party, but was never fall on his hand. When I was learning in any private school at last year, any idle came to my room, how do you not swing in a play place ? * he sales.* Yeas' I reply and I did so that with he. how do you not take a walk in a street ? again, yeas I reply, and soon, how do you not see a spectacle ? he ** sales " too again, no ! then I reply, how do you not go an eating house? he "sales" too more, no! reply I. when all pupil recite a meaning for each lesson, he sales always I cannot, or I did not prepare ! ** why do you not so study " I asked, because I can not endure heat or cold " he sales, I dleam all sales thus, therefore he spends the gold hour in vain, and he could not succeed his purpose wherefore I was very refused to describe it. *' Diligent men were overpower on a poverty, heat, cold." Another naughty boy produced this on the same subject : " IDLENESS. " There are an Idleness and Industrious in the SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. 1 69 world and Idleness is more than Industrious, but in the uncivilized countries is not so much because this would studies for several lesson — and to dis- cover for several thing and food which is very good for bodies and shall not become to Idleness but while is very Idlemen I supposed that it shall be- come & industrious from their character if their father and mother shall be right character and also right conscience. In Japan the food is very as you know — and Idlemen shall never move and go to play to and for when they finished to eat food, as soon' shall sleep therefore in Japan Idleness are there gpreat but Japanese commenced to civilization therefore Idlemen becamed to little number and their begun to go to school. " This composition is bad and mistaken to not know the meaning of Idleness and I was sick there- fore can not so good but I think always, it is wrong." Every Monday morning the whole school must bring in compositions. Some of the scholars are very nice writers. The penmanship usually is very fine. Some compose as well as boys of a corre- sponding age at home. They are, of course, not al- ways idiomatic, but the pleasure-loving ones do not make a very brilliant success at this essay writing. Saturday and Sunday they spend in hav- ing a good time with their companions, then they get a book and craftily plagiarize some sen- tences hurriedly selected. I send you literal copies I 70 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. of some of these essays sent in by the notorious truants of our school. They should serve as a ter- rible warning to lazy boys through ^11 time to come. NO. I. — COMPOSITION ON THE BENEFITS OF POLICE. " Police is a warlike and brave man and he have big and long stick with which he defenses a blow of a robber. Activity of a police is alway noticed in every newspaper. The most warlike and bravest fights eighteen robbers who were drest with the drawn swords and he defenses himself with a stick and at last, he takes them as prisoners. When there is a fire a police works like a fireman and tumbles down a houses with his stick. A police goes before a person who carries baggages at a fire in order to drive away the spectators so that he carries them easily and quickly. If a person pre- vents a police's or a fireman's work, the police beats him or uses him to carry the water or to push a pump, therefore I cannot stand heedlessly by see- ing a fire." No. 2. Another one sent in the following poetry, highly eulogistic of the policemen : " We can't think their hardships in walking when snowing or raining without rest. When the midnight storm disturb our dream. We see them in watch under nature's dome : SCHOOL-TEACHING IN TOKIO. 171 When the sun begin to rise in his majestic light, We meet them walking regardless severe cold of heat." (!!!) No. 3. ** Police is the regulation of city or policeman is one of the constabulary force, who is officer in Japan : the rule are make very hard to him, be- cause in the among them like an idle rosal, (?) but half of their are study, and so I think so that. The police man is very much necessary for the people, because he is defeat in city for every days and night, when the policeman saw the thief or bad man, he is soonly taken prisoner and bringing to the station of police then they are wants the inves- tigation ; also here is a foolish man, who is fall down into the river to die, it is very scarcely in Japan ; and all thing of street engage to the police ; the number in the station of police are about one hundred and number of about eighteen one thou- sand, among them Satsuma, Jesso are nearly above them engaged to him, because they are savage and warlike countries people in Japan, and so they are strong men ; then the foolish man or thief man less than the an ancient time, so that people are glad of it." NO. 4. — HISTORY. ** History is most important for a human to re- member a past condition of ancient world, and the I 72 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. history is one kind in the part of a science, there- fore when a man learned the history would he ani- mate his intellect ; and the history has remarkable worth for a education that is led to goodness a peo- ple, the reader imargin Napoleon, Washington & Taiko they how do that do, and practice their good ccMiduct, and they would not take a double wrong for a old instance. But have no history in barbaric country, therefore they knows nothing but savage or fight ; therefore I think that all the science would had been led from the history." NO. 5. — USES OF THE ENGINEERING COLLEGE. "College of Engineering which put in a Japan that it is used for countries if it would not be there people can not have mean to dig gold, silver, iron and other metals in the mountains & there are sev- eral way of the science, in the College of ingin^er- ing. Now shall not describe of name & mean of the science for have no time because I had my father business. We shall wish to enter in College of Ingineering; great examination for next year.'* In closing my letter, it is but fair to remark that but few compositions are so atrocious as the fore- going. Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. \d ■UK TllMR np Tnw-f(-.,\ \V 4 t\Vv.VS- \Ik-k-(1 TPMPI.FLS. LETTER XL A SUMMER VACATION, TOKIO, September lo, 1875. Dear Julius Marcellus: I spent my last vacation in making a tour through the interior. This is about the only way we have of spending our holidays. During August there is a general exodus of foreigners from Tokio into the interior. Some of us journey over to the west coast. Some of us go down the Nakasendo (Inland Road), or Tokaido (Coast Road) to Kioto. Others roam through the mountains of Shinano and Mino. While the majority visit Hakon^, Fujisan, and Nikko. We do not have any great centers of fashionable resort like Saratoga and Newport, where the sultry summer days can be spent in sip- ping mineral waters and lemonade upon cool ve- randas and shady lawns. Our summer recreations Bsually consist of a long tramp through the moun- tains. These trips require much preparation and planning. The selection of a route occupies at least a week. Then you must lay in a supply of canned fruits and vegetables, and some ham and dried beef ; and you must look up a traveling com- panion with whom to have a few animated discus- 174 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. sions upon the road. The natives have a great advantage over us in making these excursions. They merely pick up their heels and walk. A handkerchief will hold everything they need on the road, and they are the best-natured companions imaginable. Being very fond of pilgrimages to places of religious note, they also swarm through the country during the summer. The objects and places of veneration are varied. Sometimes it is a volcanic cone that has become the residence of a goddess; sometimes it is a shrine overlooking a wild ravine ; or, perhaps, it is a cave by the sea- shore, the haunt of some water-witch ; or it may be a lake romantically embosomed amid some lofty ranges where a gongcn^ or mountain spirit, plays the mischief with the winds and the rains, sending them storming across the plains with fearful fury unless properly propitiated with yearly offerings. When the snow has melted from Fujisan, thou- sands will scale its stupendous cone, place their of- ferings beside the shrines near the crater, worship the sun as he rises from the waves, and gaze upon the clouds floating thousands of feet beneath. While the rice is yet green upon the stalks and the crops are maturing for the autumnal gleaning, the worthy peasant, with about three dollars in his pocket for traveling expenses and religious contri- butions, grasps his filleted staff and sets out upon a tramp of about two hundred miles, visiting all places of sacred interest on the way ; and in about a fortnight he returns with sufficient unction to A SUMMER VACATIO^\ 1 75 last a year, — for you must remember that the masses are devout. Some have visited all the noted shrines in the empire, taking a couple of years or so for the undertaking. These pilgrim- ages, however, were almost entirely confined to the lower classes. The sa?nurai rarely felt inclined to go tramping and sweating over the country at the beck of sleek, oily priests that might chance to have empty coffers. These gentlemen were dis- posed to be fastidious in their tastes, visiting only the most fashionable places, taking their own time, and abundantly consulting individual comfort. Their favorite resort was the celebrated shrines of Nikko, situated in the heart of the central moun- tain system of Japan, about ninety miles north of Tokio. The locality is a tangled maze of glens, wild ravines, cascades, woods, temples, and moun- tain torrents. All the streams of the neighboring ranges seem to meet in the vicinity, forming a de- lightfully cool summer retreat. Ancient supersti- tion has fixed this as the abode of certain gongen^ whose patronage is greatly to be desired, and whose wrath must be assiduously appeased. The uneasy hurricane winds that dwell in the misty caverns be- side Chiusenji Lake hard by, and which often im- petuously sally forth, tearing the thatch from the roofs and flinging the grain prostrate in the mire, are a source of grievous complaint, and need fre- quent exorcisms and secret ceremonies to secure them within their dripping chambers. The shrines of Nikko are unparalleled for sym- I 76 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. metry of proportion, elegance and variety of de- sign, and richness of lacquering. As these temples were on my summer pro- gramme, I will now allow the pages of my journal to describe my visit to them. I also hope that you will get something of an idea how we spend our vacations here. July 23. — Not yet daylight. We must be ofif so as to avoid the heat of the day. Have routed Jack out of bed. We send the boy on ahead so as to have dinner ready for us at midday. Our clothing and provisions are stowed in a sep- arate jinriksha. Off at last ! We are far beyond Uyeno before the chill has begun to leave the morning air. A few early risers are sliding back their doors and rendering the premises vocal with their stentorian yawnings. We run along the Oshiukaido for about eighteen miles. The road is flanked by paddy fields as far as the eye can reach. Take dinner at a village. The butter and the currie powder got hopelessly mixed up by the breaking of the bottles. We sit on the mats and dine off bread, roast chicken, and cheese. Small boy is watching us through the fence. Jack asks him if he is hungry. Boy wilts. Jack wonders why foreigners can not make a living off rice. He tries some. Jack ceases to wonder. Jack tries to eat with chop-sticks. Landlady laughs. She wants to taste the pickled cabbage and crackers. Pro- nounces them kekko (splendid). Boy then washes the knives and forks, and wc are ready to start j4 summer vacation, 177 again. Call for the bill. It is four times too much. Jack mildly expostulates with the landlord. He replies that all foreigners pay such prices. Jack says he is not a fool, and advises the landlord not to be one. The landlord then comes down one- half. Jack then says that he is a Mombusho official of the seventh grade, and threatens to report the extortion at Tokio. Landlord then comes to terms. We prepare to depart. The landlord and his family then escort us to the street and request us to patronize them on our return. Continue our journey. Road much the same as in the morning. Villages numerous. The summer costume of peo- ple similar to that prevailing around Hirosaki. The men have only three feet of narrow cloth about the waist. Only the lower classes are thus exposed. At dusk we reach a large village on the banks of the Ton^gawa. Cross in a flat-bottomed boat. Spend the night at a small village on the other bank. Sleep under a net. Find the native pillows very hard. Are much bothered with a bad odor from the drains. We request the rain-doors to be left open all night. The landlady says she is afraid the dogs will come in. But we carry our point. At midnight I am awaked by the foulness of the air, and find she has slyly shut them. Open them again. Jiily 24. — Breakfasted at daylight. The road merges into a cool and lovely avenue of pine trees. The country is becoming more interesting. It un- dulates gradually toward the distant mountains. I yS LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Wheat fields and wood lands take the place of rice flats. Our road is now a stately vista that winds like a serpent across the fields and through the woods. With but trifling interruptions, it continues for fifty miles until it loses itself in the mountains. We walk and eat water-melons. The swarded banks beside the road make lovely seats. It's getting warm. We reduce our toilette down to trowsers and singlets. Every mile or so we quaff hot tea at little booths beneath the trees. Jack keeps up his smoking. Japanese dogs are spoilt. They lie right in the road, and never think of getting out of the way. The kind-hearted coolies never think of hurting them, and always pull their vehicles to one side. Then they scold the dog, and he wags his tail. Jack takes a load of pebbles and keeps distributing them in advance. Effect good. One pampered hound, fiowever, re- fuses to stir. The coolies turn to one side. But the wheel of Jack's vehicle passes over the gently wagging tail. Dog went to the top of the embank- ment at one leap. Seemed to be completely de- moralized and discouraged. Everybody regards it as the best joke of the season — dog excepted. Reach Utso-no-miya at dusk. Only fourteen miles from Nikko. We wait a couple of hours for them to change the water in the bath-tub. While this is being done, we hear a tremendous row downstairs. . A large party of foreigners from Tokio are having a row with their coolies. They are not fluent in the vernacular, and the coolies are trying to impose A SUMMER VACATION, 1 79 upon them. Thus it is the world over. Cheat the stranger ! Fleece him ! Consider him legitimate plunder! Curtain falls. July 25. — The landlord says we are twenty-two miles from Nikko. Distances in Japan are elastic. The avenue becomes yet more imposing. Its deep shade is cooled by the streamlets bubbling along the roadside. Meet a couple of colleagues return- ing to Tokio. We reach the village by midday. The shrines are beyond it. The village is situated upon a long slope, and in itself is not interesting. A stream from the hiountains comes tumbling down through the middle of the street. It forms a convenient reservoir for the town. Quite a num- ber of fox, hare, and deer skins are exposed for sale in the shops. Our pretty hotel is some distance up town. The terms are seventy-five cents a day. A native would pay less than half this sum. There's no help. All the hotel keepers are in league. Civ- ilization is gradually striking in. July 26. — We start off to see the far-famed tem- ples. They are buried in deep forests about a mile up the mountain side. Passing up to the end of the long, straggling street, we come to a wild ravine through which fiercely rushes a frothing torrent from the highlands. Two bridges span the chasm. One is intended for common use. The other was intended for the Shogun and his envoys. It is finished off with the finest red lacquer. The guide* book (I wish all journals would specify what por- tions are derived from guide books) narrates a l80 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. curious legend about this gorge. Shodo Shionin, a Buddhist priest of the eighth century, chanced to pass this way with his disciples. He saw no bridge, and found it impossible to ford the boiling rapids, rendered doubly dangerous by the timber plunging amid the eddies. While supplicating the gods to extricate him from this dilemma, he indis- tinctly beheld through the mist the god Shinsha Daio, on the opposite shore, holding two green and red snakes which he cast over the abyss. A long bridge instantly spanned the flood ** like a rainbow floating among the hills," The bewildered priest was inclined to doubt his senses, but seeing the grass growing between the planks, he was con- vinced, and passed over. Immediately after cross- ing they were astonished to find that the bridge, the grass, and the god had vanished ! From this sacred bridge many paths branch away in all directions, leading to numberless roman- tic spots hidden away in the deep gloom of the groves. For miles around, wherever a cascade dashes down some sequestered ravine ; wherever a mountain stream, widening in the glens, gives glimpses of unusual beauty; wherever some spring, slipping from the oozy fissures beneath some crag, comes tumbling down the vale — there you will find fantastic shrines in honor of some saint or gongen. Weeks could be spent in following up these various paths. Following the road up for some distance through the woods we come to the temples of lyeyas. They are built upon four terraces on the A SUMMER VACATION. l8l mountain side. The terraces are about fifteen feet above each other, and are connected by flights of stone steps. Cryptomeria groves of superb propor- tions cast a deep shade over the place. The en- tire premises are surrounded with a wooden wall lacquered in red and capped with bronze tiles. There are ten main buildings scattered over the different terraces, besides many smaller ones. All are built of kayake, the finest hard wood in Japan. All are roofed with thin bronze tiles, and all are so elaborately lacquered and gilded that none of the underlying wood-work is to be seen. The natives say that it took a boat-load of gold from Sendai to furnish the gilding. However that may be, it is certain that the resources of the empire were placed at the disposal of the builders. The first terrace is approached by a long, sloping vista. On this terrace we find an elegant vermil- ion-colored pagoda. It is covered with the gilded crests of Tokugawa. A large granite torii (bird- perch) and some tea booths constitute the remain- ing structures. We enter the second terrace through a handsome gateway. Before us are three structures of exquis- ite proportions and finish. In them were stored the paraphernalia and Sanskrit literature of the temples {Guide Book), Also, when the Shogun came to worship the shades of the great lyeyas, his retainers tarried therein, while their ** barbarian exterminating lord " went up to the private chapel on the fourth terrace. But the building that in- 1 8 2 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN, variably excites the stranger's keenest interest is the very stylish stable used by my lord's horse. It is elegantly made. Each rafter is tipped with orna- mented brass and stamped with the royal crest. It is so thoroughly exhausted by the guide-book that I shall not describe it. My only regret is that such sumptuous accommodations should have been pro- vided for a knavish betto and a vile, hammer-headed pony. Passing under a massive bronze torii we enter the third terrace. On either hand stands a graceful, airy belfry, faultless as regards symmetry and shape. Several bronze lanterns are arranged along the side. During the summer festivals, when the ceremonies were prolonged beyond twilight, they were lit up. Here also are some massive bronze candelabra presented by the Dutch. The guide- book suggests that they were sacked from some Roman Catholic cathedral in the Spanish Nether- lands during the wars between the Catholics and the Reformers. The fourth terrace is enclosed by a paneled wall about eight feet high, abounding with decorations. Before us stands the famous Yomei gate. (See frontispiece.) It has exhausted the art and inge- nuity of the architect. It is a bewildering maze of tracery. For beauty of design and prodigality of decoration, it is matchless. It is equally lovely whether glittering in the sunlight or shimmering in the moonbeams. The railing of its balcony is sup- ported by dragons' heads. Just above the portal A SUMMER VACATION. 1 83 are two white dragons linked in terrific combat. Underneath you see groups of children playing. Beneath these are clusters of Chinese sages in vari- ous philosophical attitudes, such as only Chinese philosophers can assume. The dragons, upholding the massive roof, with their flaming eyes and gap- ing crimson jaws, seem to be on the qui vive for evil spirits. Going through the gateway we enter the court- yard where stands the chapel of lyeyas. It is an architectural gem. Gable-ends, ridge pole, eaves, rafters, and the very planking of the floor, exhibit the consummation of native skill. For a full de- scription of it, I refer you to Satow's Guide-Book which I send you by this mail. The tomb of lyeyas is further up the mountain side. We ascend a long flight of moss-grown steps. At the top, in the melancholy woods, is the weird bronze monument that marks the spot where rest the ashes of the great law-giver. It is somber and plain. I cannot think of anything with which to compare it. The historic interest, however, forms a sufficient attraction. The martial pines stand around in close array as if to guard Gongen Sama in his long rest. He was the heart and soul of Japanese feudalism. What the tomb of the Proph- et is to the Moslem, such was the scpulcher of Tokugawa lyeyas to the samurai. Antiquity bears testimony to the reverence that has ever been paid to the memory of the dead. Mausoleums, pyra- mids, and pillars, built at prodigal expense, com- 184 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. memorate the deeds of ancient heroes. The pride of Halicarnassus, the surpassing glories of the Taj, and the matchless beauty of the Nikko shrines equally testify to the appreciative character of mankind in widely separated countries. During the days of the Shogunate, swarms of samurai flocked hither to worship the shades and propitiate the favor of the departed with becoming offerings and ceremonies. But the great dynasty has fallen, and the pageantry that formerly streamed along the great vista, exacting cringing deference from the wayside folk, has faded away forever ; and the beauties of the place only excite unpleasant mem- ories in the minds of those who love the good days when the trusty sword was the '' samurai* s living soul." July 27. — We visit the shrines of lyemitsu, grand- son of lyeyas. They are about half a mile from those described yesterday. A long avenue through the woods connects the two. As they resemble the shrines of lyeyas in almost every particular, I shall not describe them. July 28. — Visited several shrines of minor im- portance scattered through the forests. Some of them are of rare beauty. July 29. — We followed one of the paths that twists off from the Sacred Bridge and goes winding through the thickets. We follow it up to where it madly hurls itself through a narrow gorge. Here we find upwards of one hundred and twenty large stone images of Buddha in Nirvana. They are ar- A SUMMER VACATION. 1 85 ranged along the shady bank in an extended line' facing the water. With dreamy eyes they seem to watch the spray that floats from the foaming cur- rent. The Guide Book asserts that in counting these images, no two persons will return the same figures. Jack and I made an elaborate attempt to get the same result. He began at one end, and I began at the other end. While counting we placed our canes upon each figure. " What do you make ? ** said I. " One hundred and twenty-seven," said he. "One hundred and twenty-five," said I. We try agrain. ** One hundred and twenty-four," said he. " One hundred and twenty-two," said. I. We then appealed to a Japanese, and he said the correct number was one hundred and twenty-three. He then counts them himself in order to show us, and comes out one hundred and twenty-one ! We give it up as a bad job. One gets confused at the similarity of the faces and at the noise of the roar- ing torrent. Besides this several of the small images are overgrown with grass, and you are al- most sure to overlook some. July 30. — We decide to visit Chiusenji Lake and the cascades, seven miles or so further up the moun- tain side. We get off early. The road leads through gorges and ravines of the most savage grandeur, where the foaming torrents from the lake thunder at the feet of dizzy cliffs and shiver themselves into spray against the massive bowlders that have fallen from the heights above. A steep climb up the side of the mountain brings 1 86 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. US to an elevated plateau about four thousand feet above sea level. On the right rises the volcanic crest of Nantaisan, looking out upon the distant Pacific nearly eight thousand feet beneath. In the plateau is embosomed lovely Chiusenji Lake, en- circled by densely wooded hills. It is seven miles long, and is very deep. It is said to contain no fish. Upon its border is a village, which is occu- pied by thousands of pilgrims during the summer. But when the winter has settled down upon the mountain, freezing the lake and filling the glens with snow, then the houses are utterly deserted. The cascades in this vicinity are of peerless beauty and pleasing variety. The outlet of the lake, after winding through several hundred yards of woods and tangled underbrush, falls seven hun- dred and fifty feet into a fearful abyss. The width of the cascade at the top is about fifteen feet. But it spreads out into a comet-like cloud of spray long before it reaches the bottom. You can but faintly hear it as it falls whispering into the dark pool be- neath. On three sides the rocks descend sheer, thus encircling the boiling gulf and presenting an appearance of hideous grandeur. A tea booth perched upon the brink of the chasm furnishes a superb outlook. The dense woods grow up to the very edge, as if the monstrous shaft had been sunk with precision and care. It is called the Kegeon- no-taki — taki meaning cascade. We lunched on the border of the lake in a native hotel. There are quite a number of pilgrims in the village. OUMPSB OF CHIU&ENJl LAKE. A SUMMER VACATION. 1 87 It is very cool up here. The breeze rippling the lake is really chilly. In the afternoon we walked through the woods bordering the shore up to Umoto, at the upper end of the lake. About five hundred feet above the level of the main lake is a much smaller one that discharges its overflowing waters into it by a series of magnificent cascades. The lowest one is called the Cascade of the Dragon's Head. The upper one is that of the Boiling Waters. It comes sliding down an inclined plane of black rocks, and plunges into a gloomy pool be- neath. The scenery here is enrapturing. As we were dallying around these lovely places, a heavy shower overtook us, and the path became ankle-deep with mud. They say that it rains every afternoon up here during the summer. By nightfall we had waded through the last pud- dle, and had crossed the little bridge into the vil- lage of Umoto. Here are innumerable sulphur springs, celebrated for medicinal qualities. During the summer the place is filled with invalids. It is, in fact, a village of hotels. Here I saw for the first time that common institution of former times — promiscuous bathing. Persons of both sexes, ut- terly regardless of apparel and modesty, flock out from the baths to look at the strangers. We found considerable difficulty in finding rooms, for the hotels were full, but finally suc- ceeded. We soon donned Japanese garments lent us by the landlord while ours were drying. It is fun to watch the people from the veranda. Many 1 8 8 LE TTERS FROM J A PAN. of them have never seen foreigners. They were very respectful in their observations, however. They were all engaged in amusing themselves: some in playing chess on the verandas of the hotels ; some in boating on the lake ; some in read- ing aloud so as to be heard over half the village ; some were boiling in the mineral vats in the street ; but the majority were sipping tea, smoking, and gossiping. This is a most popular place for soak- ing out rheumatism and impurities. The springs are far-famed. And a dreary place it is. Impene- trable woods, steaming pits, and three or four hours of rain every afternoon. Everything was saturated with the fumes of sulphur. The bed clothing, mats, food, and the very knife with which the melon was cut, were thoroughly impregnated with the disagreeable odor. The little streams pouring into the lake were fuming with it. In the winter time the springs of Umoto arc deserted, all the hotels are closed, and the place is as silent and as desolate as the grave ; while the streets are banked with snow and the sleet drives through the crevices of the houses. Late in the spring the place is again opened. Only people with considerable means can afford to come, for all the provisions have to be brought from a distance. Much game abounds in the fastnesses of the un- frequented glens, where the profound silence is only broken by the music of the takis (cascades) and the cries of the deer and wild boar. In future years, when the neighborhood has been A SUMMER VACATION, 189 pruned off, and a few modem institutions for con- venience established, the place will doubtless be- come a fashionable and elegant resort. /uiy 31. — We bade farewell to Umoto. The landlord escorted us to the bridge and said good- bye. Returned to Nikko. Aug. I. — Spend in writing up my journal and in revisiting the shrines. Aug. 2. — Stroll up the valley and call on several of the Tokio folks who are spending the summer here. They have rented a house for the season. We have an animated discussion over the Presiden- tial election. Aug. 3. — Visit a number of other friends who are scattered through the village. Some have brought their families and servants and have rented houses. Aug. 4. — Having visited the main points of in- terest, and, intending to visit Nagasaki this vaca- tion, I start back for Tokio. Aug, 5. — Spend on the road. Aug. 6. — Reached Tokio about 6 P.M. We were so dusty and tlirty that we went sneaking through all the back streets so as to avoid meeting any acquaintances. Shall start for Nagasaki to- morrow. Jack is going to Hakon^. Aug. 7. — Went down to Yokohama and procured my ticket. Under the P. M. S. S. Co. it would have cost a hundred dollars to go and return from Nagasaki. But under the Mitsu-Bishi Company I can go and return for thirty-six dollars. This com- pany has bought out the Pacific Mail on this line. 190 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. It bids fair in a few years to be the great maritime power of Asia. Aug, 8. — Started this afternoon for Nagasaki Fine sail down the bay. Aug. 9. — We are steaming along finely. The coast is only a few miles to larboard. Late in the afternoon we saw a distant waterfall in the province of Kii. It is said to be about five hundred feet high. It must be very fine, for we can see it at a distance of twenty miles. Shall visit it the first chance I can get. We have a great number of pas- sengers aboard. In the steerage there must be five or six hundred ; in our after-cabin there must be at least a hundred. Two-thirds of these saloon pas- sengers are Japanese. They appear to enjoy for- eign travel and food immensely. Some of them speak English and arc very sociable. All the offi- cers of these steamers are foreigners. The sailors are natives. Aug. 10. — Arrived at Kob6 at daylight. It is situated near the entrance of the Inland Sea. Re- specting its commercial prospects, it has seen its best days as regards Europeans ; but it will see better days as regards the natives. When the port was opened eight years ago, European merchants came in with a rush. They were going to coin money without stint ; and a good many, no doubt, did so, and they lost it again. The place was simply overdone, and the native merchants soon began to take a large portion of the business. The European population of Kob^ at present is about A SUMMER VACATION. I9I two hundred, and this number will probably grow less as time rolls on. The Japanese population, how- ever, has rapidly increased, and in a few years will number over four hundred thousand. This place is a center of trade. The steamers from China and the Inland Sea stop here, and the produce from Osaca, Kioto, and the central provinces is sent here for shipment. The climate is almost perfect. Aug, II. — We started down the Inland Sea. This is one of the lovely spots of earth. Three thousand little islands are strewn broadcast through a narrow channel. Shall not attempt to describe it. It takes about a day to steam through it, and it is a trip never to be forgotten. Many of the is- lands are under high cultivation. The villages on some of them arc extremely picturesque. In future years, when wealth has rolled into the country, these islets will make magnificent places for villas. Aug. 12. — We passed Shimonosek6, the far- famed Shimonosek^ of diplomacy. It guards the western entrance to the Inland Sea. When prop- erly fortified, it will be as formidable as Sebasto- pol. The situation is lovely. Aug. 13. — Arrived at Nagasaki last night. It is a singular fact that persons who have had only a glimpse of a place can usually tell a vastly more entertaining story about it than can the oldest inhabitant. I believe no less than a dozen writers have remarked that Nagasaki is very pretty. I make the same remark. An equal number have advanced the indisputable proposition that it is en- 192 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. circled by most picturesque hills, and has a most lovely harbor. All true, every word of it. And, moreover, the vegetation on the surrounding hills is heavy and almost tropical. The climate differs much from that of Tokio. The winter is very mild ; the spring is lovely ; the summer is hot ; and the autumn is equal to what we have in Tokio. I am going ashore to find the house of Mr. D., my missionary friend, who has kindly invited me to stop with him during my stay here. Aug. 14. — Spent in " doing up" the place. Trade here is very brisk. The business is mostly in the .hands of Japanese and Chinamen. There are but few foreign merchants ; and, as in the other Treaty Ports, there is but little chance of their increasing. The products of this port much resemble those of the other ports, with the exception of tortoise- shell work, which may be considered a specialty of the place. The native character is rather blunt. The people lack the extreme politeness of the Japanese in general. Centuries of commerce with the Chinese, the Portuguese, and the Dutch, have tended to make them brusque in their manners. The foreign community is smaller than that of Kobe. It is so limited that considerable freedom of social intercourse exists. In Yokohama there is an upper circle arranged on the decimal scale. A clerk, a storekeeper, or anybody in the lower paths of mercantile occupation, is pronounced unclean and unfit to bask in the same sunshine, or breathe A SUMMER VACATION, 1 93 the same atmosphere inhaled by beatified snobs, who are not above occasional sprees down to Kana- gawa. Social life in Nagasaki is apt to become rather monotonous after a year or so. The arrival of the steamers and an occasional party help some- what to enliven things. Boating, canoeing, and swimming are the favorite pastimes. The hilly nature of the country spoils driving and riding. An occasional regatta is the chief recreation of the amateur oarsmen. One lately came off between Shanghai, Kob6, and Nagasaki. Shanghai came prepared to row, to conquer, and to brag. But the other crews also displayed a remarkable pro- clivity for rowing. One of them conquered, and the other did an amount of bragging that must have shocked the vanquished. Aug, 15. — We took a boat and went down to Pappenberg. Those who doubt the capacity of the natives to be sincerely converted to Christi- anity will find it interesting to visit the cliff on this little island, where, centuries ago, hundreds of mar- tyrs were flung upon the rocks beneath. This is a famous place for picnics. In going around the harbor, it is interesting to notice the ruins of the many batteries that formerly swept the waters of the bay. Each promontory, each commanding bluff — even the melancholy crest of Pappenberg itself — give abundant evidence of the solicitude of the government to discourage for- eign intrusion and a reoccurrence of the bloody scenes that seem to have accompanied Romanism 13 194 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. into all lands. This country would have been civil- ized by this time had the meddling monks ab- stained from dabbling in State affairs. Aug. 1 6. — We went down to the coal mines in Takashima, a small island at the entrance of the harbor. The supervisors arc Europeans. The place is worked by a joint company of natives and foreign merchants. It pays well. At present they are flooding it. It took fire in some unknown manner some months ago, which could not be put under by ordinary methods. It is supposed that the earthquakes created sufficient friction to cause combustion in some of the obscure strata, and that it had been smoldering for months, for a strong odor of gas had been noticed for many weeks. On this occasion the native workmen displayed admir- able pluck. They crept up as close as possible to the fire, and held their ground until the hose drop- ped from their hands and they were dragged away insensible. On resuscitating, they would insist on returning to their posts. Aug. i8. — We made an excursion over the hills. Country lovely. The natives have some excuse for calling this the land of the gods. Aug. 19. — Played croquet. Ate water-melons. Drank lemonade. Very hot. No breeze. Hills cut off the sea air. Nagasaki is built on the wrong side of the bay. Aug, 20. — Began to think about returning to Tokio. Aug. 21. — Continued thinking. A SUMMER VACATION, 1 95 Aug. 22. — Decided to start. Aug. 23. — Started. And now I must shut up my journal. I have given you in this letter a specimen of our methods of spending vacations and keeping journals. Don't criticise severely. Remember everything is strictly cntrc nous. In traveling, I can assure you it is a most wretched bore to make daily entries. Japanese houses never have tables. I lie flat on the floor when I write. I am very glad to see that Columbia has won the inter-collegiate boat-race. Harvard seems to have hard luck. I don't wonder at her desiring close communion races with Yale. She is doubtless tired of getting annually thrashed by " oncJtoss colleges." Keep me posted on all home news. Truly yours, Theophilus Pratt. LETTER XII. MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. TOKIO, May l8, 1876. Dear Julius Marcellus: I have been much interested in the missionary question lately. Many of my most intimate ac- quaintances being missionaries, I have been fa- vored with an excellent opportunity for obtaining a close insight of all their labors. Knowing that you feel interested in everything pertaining to the present condition of Japan, I will now give you the results of my observations respecting this highly prominent factor in its civilization. The evangelizing of this country may be said to have been begun by the Jesuits three hundred years ago. But properly speaking, the mission work in Japan has sprung up within twenty years. Nay, accurately speaking, earnest, thoroughly or- ganized, and efficient work has hardly been in operation more than six years. And its growth during this period has been really wonderful, when we consider what it has had to contend with. The first Protestant missionaries came to Japan about eighteen years ago. For the first ten years their force was very small, and was limited to pi?; MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 1 97 Yokohama and Nagasaki. The early comers, as a matter of course, had to spend most of their time in making dictionaries, translating catechisms and doctrinal literature, and in trying to get a clear comprehension of the new language — a language that is difficult to master even under the most favorable circumstances. The times were also very unfavorable for their operations, as the natives were yet bitter in their hate toward Roman Catholicism. In 1867, however, this feeble force began to in- crease, and the natives, beginning to discriminate between Romanists and Protestants, became more disposed to listen. In 1870, the Imperial Revolu- tion being ended, the work became firmly rooted, and spread rapidly. New missions were estab- lished at Kob6 and Osaca, and those at Yokohama and Nagasaki were reinforced. But it was reserved for the year 1873 to witness the grand influx of all denominations, for the Presbyterians and Dutch Reformed were the pioneers. This year forms an epoch in the mission history of Japan. New stations were established at Hako- date, in Yesso, in Niigata on the west coast, and in Tokio, just then thrown open to foreigners. And recently missionaries have been employed to teach English in the interior, with the understanding that they may teach Christianity outside of school hours to all those disposed to listen. So that all of the empire may be said to be embraced within the scope of mission work. 198 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Of course the force in each place is very limited. Hakodate has but two families; Niigata, two; Hirosaki, one ; Nagasaki, three ; Kobe, five or six; Kioto, three ; Osaca, four : and Tokio and Yoko- hama form the great centers, as a matter of course. In each station the families are located in comfort- able but not expensive houses, built upon Eu- ropean plans ; and in each, the general plan of carrying on the work by preaching and teaching is the same. Beginning with Tokio, we find here about fifteen families, besides an almost equal number of single workers of both sexes. In this number I have not included the Roman Catholics; I would guess their force at about ten. They are indefatigable work- ers, but I do not think they will ever be very popular, because of their previous history. Nor have I included the small body of Greek priests connected with the Russian Legation. Almost every Protestant sect is here represented. We find Methodists, Canadian Wesleyans, Ameri- can and Scotch Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists, and American and English Episcopalians, all working harmoniously and independently. It has been calculated that two thousand people hear the Gospel every Sunday in Tokio. Places for Christian worship are scattered all over the city. There are three chapels in the foreign concession, and an elaborate Greek church on Suruga Dai. Here there is preaching on Sunday. Then three or four times during the week services are held in rooms MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 1 99 rented in various parts of the city, when the Script- ures are freely discussed and distributed, and the superiority of Christ's teachings held forth. It is the policy of the missionaries to avoid ridicul- ing or abusing the pagan forms of worship as much as possible. In addition to this, many young Japanese go to the missionaries to learn English, and, of course, receive much Scriptural instruction with it. There is also a fine mission hospital, under the able and energetic management of Dr. Faulds of Scotland, and the ladies have erected two large and well conducted female academies for educating Japanese girls. In addition to all this, the zealous missionaries take turns in preaching to the English-speaking residents every Sunday morn- ing, and it is to be hoped that this will form a per- manent feature of their work here ; for an able ex- position of the truth certainly benefits the com- munity by creating a healthy moral tone on topics common in pagan countries. Nor is the work confined to Tokio. The mem- bers of the various missions travel off into the suburbs, into the distant villages, and even beyond the mountains, preaching and giving instruction in hotels, in private houses whose masters have invited in their friends to hear the mysteries of the foreign religion, and to the folks at the wayside inns. In Yokohama the work is yet more extensive. There are at least twenty families, with fully an equal number of co-operative single workers. In addition to abundant teaching and preaching, much 200 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. good is accomplished by a well organized medical dispensary. There are also a number of seminaries and foundh'ng asylums. In no part of Japan is there such an abundant distribution of religious literature. In various ways, at least three thou- sand people must hear the truth every week. Places for preaching and instruction are rented in many of the villages surrounding Yokohama, and there are places in the country where weekly or monthly visits are paid. And occasionally a Japan- ese from the far interior will request a missionary to accompany him to his native village among the mountains to expound the Scriptures to his friends, who are too poor to come to Yokohama. Much good seed is thus cast. When the missionary reaches the village, he puts up at a hotel. He then informs the landlord that he wishes to preach in his lower room. Permission is generally easily obtained. The shojees arc then removed, thus throwing all the rooms into one. The talking then begins in a conversational way, and the crowd begins to gather until the streets and yard arc packed with listeners. The exhort er then steps out on the veranda and preaches to a respectful gathering for a couple of hours at a time. The people are champion listeners. They wear an ordinary man out. They are insatiate. They come three or four times a day urging a con- tinuance of the speech. I knew one missionary who began at four o'clock in the afternoon, and when he was exhausted his native helpers carried on the exhortation until nine o'clock at night. Of MISSIONARY WORK- IN JAPAN. 20I course sermonizing is not resorted to. Simply the barest recital of the life, the work, and the agony of our Redeemer seems to chain their attention. The people then disperse. Very few of them, per- haps, will be baptized. But curiosity has been awakened to know about this extraordinary relig- ion ; books are bought ; and when the missionary makes his next visit, he will find a number of earnest inquirers after the truth. The good that will result from this kind of circuit work is incalcul- able. Nor are the missionaries in Yokohama negligent of their own countrymen. Through their influence, a temperance hall and reading-room have been es- tablished. They preach on Sunday in English at the church in the Settlement, and they are inter- ested in other good works. In the other Treaty Ports the missionary operations are of a similar character, but are on a more limited scale, owing to the smallness of the forces. Each Treaty Port has become a center from which radiates Christian influence. Of course the direct fruit of this labor is com- paratively small. The actual number of converts to the Protestant faith is but one thousand ; but the number of inquirers and listeners much exceeds this. And the good that has been done and will yet be done by these devoted men and women will never appear in figures, — nor can it. I can assure you that the lot of the missionary in Japan is by no means an enviable one. In the 202 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. first place, while the native is an incomparable lis- tener, yet he is possessed of such an amount of good- natured indifference on religious subjects that it if very difficult to get him thoroughly in earnest. The people are usually fickle and capricious. The samurai laugh at Buddhism and its gross supersti- tions. They readily admit that Bible morality is perfect and far superior to their own teachings. But they do not like to put it into practice because it interferes with sensual pleasures. They, like many of our own people, do not object to contem- plating Christianity from a purely theoretical stand- point, but they cannot endure a practical illustra- tion thereof. They handle religious topics with an easy-going, slip-shod spirit, quite inconsistent with the ideas of thorough-going Westerners. Intense and sincere earnestness on spiritual matters is cer- tainly not one of their characteristics. Although frequently childishly superstitious, yet they pos- sess a strong natural tendency toward atheism. Charmed with the novelty of the new religion, affected with the unselfish life and the tragical death of our Redeemer, cordially admitting the matchless purity of his precepts, yet they are indis- posed to adopt what appears to them to be a severe and rigorous code of morality. The theoretical *^ ought'' pleases their fancy, but the practical " must " lengthens the visage and elicits the request to be excused. They do not like to commit them- selves to a regular and strict course of definite ac- tion on such subjects. MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 203 Their love of novelty is another serious obstacle to thorough and effective missionary work. They delight to remodel and tamper with whatever falls into their hands. This develops itself into a re- markable fondness for modifying religious creeds to suit their own views. As they have modified Buddhism, as they have rendered their own lan- guage and literature an inextricable muddle by re- peated innovations, so would they tamper with the Bible and its doctrines. It is really bewildering to consider the number of amendments that the native intellect could suggest to the Ten Commandments. In the first place, it would ease up somewhat the strictures on carnal pleasures. In the second place, while freely admitting the general principle that truth is a jewel, it would modestly intimate that an awkward statement of facts should always be avoided; and that the capacity to "take in" a brother man, instead of arguing moral degenera- tion, rather denoted mental acumen of a high phil- osophic order. In the third place, the Sabbath should be a jolly good holiday. Then they would indorse, without amendment, the commandments respecting idolatry, profanity, theft, homicide, and filial respect. The tenth commandment would be considered as a moral curiosity, theoretically prac- ticable, but entirely too high-flown for human nat- ure. The eleventh commandment, whereon hang the law and the prophets, would be left to individual discretion ; coupled, however, with the suggestion that should a neighbor chance to be too intense for 204 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the locality, the combined community should adopt measures for rendering the premises too hot for his comfortable sojourn thereon. Thus would there be a happy amalgamation of Buddhism, Shintoism, Confucianism, and Christianity, — an amalgamation, in fact, that would suit the pagans of all lands, — civilized or otherwise. Hut it is not from the natives that the mission- aries have to meet their greatest discouragements. It may seem strange to you, but all the persecution they are ever called on to endure comes from the foreign community. They are hounded by the press and by social scandal to an extent absolutely libelous. They arc the conventional target for in- sulting editorial wit and comment. Should one of their number chance to be indiscreet, this is the signal for a cowardly attack upon the entire body of this most refined and respectable portion of our community. I know of no subject connected with our social cosmos which the people here seem to feel them- selves more competent to discuss.' Now, if a per- son not familiar with law or seamanship were to attempt to instruct us upon those subjects, he might find himself the subject of considerable pointed advice from legal gentlemen and weather- beaten skippers. But lawyers, merchants, captains, editors, under-strappers in the Hongs, — men who have never read a missionary journal, or have never had ten minutes' conversation with a missionary, and who know absolutely nothing about their MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN, 205 operations, — discuss this missionary question with great warmth and with the most profound and complacent stupidity. They seem to assume that, because a man has Hved in Japan, he knows all about missionaries ! Because a man runs a tea firm on Water Street, and has never attended a native service, he is, therefore, competent to pronounce evangelization a failure ! Because a seaman drops into port about four times a year, has never seen a native chapel, and confines his investigations en- tirely to Kanagawa, he is able to pour into the ears of passengers stories about missionary shiftlessness and idleness! The cause of all this hostility is easy to see. The presence of missionaries is a continued rebuke to the greater portion of the foreign community, who are leading lives they would not think of leading at home. The natives are soon taught that these foreigners arc living beneath their duties and privi- leges. They soon learn to point this fact with cut- ting and contemptuous observations, which gall the recipients thereof exceedingly. They naturally say that the missionaries must be of a higher caste. And they soon begin to draw a line between the two portions of the community; one portion is bent on gain, it is selfish and grasping, it abuses its servants, deals harshly with the natives, and is licentious ; the other portion acts justly toward all, so that servants are anxious to secure them as mas- ters, and the merchants are always on the qui vive to open accounts with them. They learn the Ian- 206 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. guagc accurately and elegantly, and instruct the people carefully and thoroughly, and the people soon begin to love and respect them. It seems to be a universal feature of human nat- ure that conscious inferiority excites envy and hate. This is manifested prominently here. This bitter spirit, however, is slowly disappearing; at least it docs not strive to make itself so conspicuous as it did four years ago. You must not infer that the missionaries have no friends at all in the foreign community, for there are a few who do sympathize with them, and fully appreciate the difficulties under which they labor. Then, again, our missionary friends frequently find themselves annoyed by their well-wishers — people who have abundance of advice to offer respecting the carrying on of the work. Some people have such absurd notions on this subject both here and at home ! One advises all missionaries to live in native style. One wants them to farm in civilized style, and thus impress the people with the su- periority of our machinery. Some of them are surprised if one happens to return, after an absence of several years, with his complexion still fair, his manners still civilized, his tongue still able to articu- late the words of his native language, and his hair still disposed to part on one side and not possessed with an irresistible inclination to wriggle down over his shoulders in a pig-tail. And should one return after an absence of twenty-five years and exhibit no outlandish manners, still prefer a roof and bed to a MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 207 tent and mat, exhibit no ravenous appetite for rats, be able to tic his cravat and to put his shirt on beneath his vest, and still be able to preach without mixing in heathenish quotations from Confucius, there will be found those who will be smitten with incredulity, and will express serious doubts as to the ultimate evangelization of the heathens. A friend of mine told me the following story, which is certainly characteristic : A returned missionary was invited to dine with one of the " pillars " of the Church. While said " pillar " was pompously carving a leg of mutton, he patroniz- ingly condescended to ask a few questions about apostolic diet in pagan lands. " I presume, sir, that in the distant realms of barbarism and med- iaeval obscurity from which you have so lately emerged, that the article of food now before us is unheard of?*' ** By no means," was the reply. " We occasionally have a joint of it for variety." The " pillar " dropped his knife and fork and sat back aghast. " What ! A missionary eating mut- ton! And we only affording it twice a week! Great heavens ! I'll never give another cent to the cause as long as I live ! " Numberless are the objections raised against the evangelization of the heathens. In the first place we are met by the hackneyed question, " Why don't you keep your clergy at home to labor among their own degraded countrymen, and not be send- ing them off to waste their labors in foreign lands?" For two very substantial reasons, my friends. You 208 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. already have enough churches and preachers at home to dispense the truth to every man, woman and child disposed to listen ; and if you were to double the force at home, I seriously doubt wheth- er the results would be proportionately greater. Those who will not be reached now, will not be reached if a delegation of a dozen clergymen were to wait upon each individual of them. Therefore, let this portion of our civilized countrymen, who are too philosophical to be affected by a " Jewish myth," not act out the principle of the dog in the manger by keeping the truth from the Gentiles while ignoring it themselves. In the second place, \\\s- nationalizing and local- izing of Christianity is directly opposed to the genius of the Gospels. This course would be human and selfish. Christianity is divine, and is intended to conquer our selfishness. All the woes of humanity, with but few exceptions, spring from selfishness. Eliminate selfishness from our nature and you will eliminate sorrow and misery to a large extent from the list of human woes. The eleventh commandment is a direct and deadly thrust at human selfishness. The Jews rejected this com- mandment with Christ. And may we not truly say that selfishness is to-day a strong Jewish character- istic? Against this peculiarity of our nature, Christ was inexorable and uncompromising. His command was " Go ye forth into all the world," not ** Remain forever at Jerusalem wasting breath and exertions upon a perverse and stiff-necked MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 2O9 generation." And in parable he clearly intimates that many must be called because so few are will- ing to be chosen. Therefore, my friends, you who now wish to keep Christianity at home are acting out the same selfish principle that has been the curse and main impediment to human progress in all ages. No community or people can consistently act out the teachings of Christ without making efforts to give to others the rays of the same light. When a community ceases to be evangelical^ it ceases to be truly Christian. Again, it is urged that the expense of the work is great. Of course it is. Do you expect it to cost little or nothing? Where, then, would the oppor- tunity for you to show a self-sacrificing spirit come in? I have generally found that those who are loudest in raising this objection arc those who con- tribute little or nothing to the cause of evangeliza- tion. Would it not be more dignified for such to proportion their advice to their liberality ? It is a fact that the bulk of missionary contributions come not from the rich and the noble, but from those in moderate circumstances, and from the poor. If evangelization had to wait until millionaires were ready to furnish the funds, it would, in common parlance, have to hang its harp up under the wil- lows (a position in which not a few would like to see it). Again, it is loudly urged, the native Christians sometimes back-slide. But back-sliding is by no means common. And if it were, this phase of relig- 14 2 lO LETTERS FROM JAPAN. ious experience is not unknown in our cnv?i lands of glorious civilization and enlightenment. It is more becoming not to advance this objection. Again, it is urged, the native Christians are not really and truly converted ; they are insincere; they will not stand fast should persecution arise. Facts prove the contrary. Let the cliff of Pappenberg, and the crucifixions and tortures of Shimambara testify. It is safe to say that they will stand per- secution as well as some of our fat deacons that take such Pharisaical satisfaction in classifying themselves among the perfections of the nineteenth century. Again, it is urged that with such an outlay of money and labor, evangelization should proceed more rapidly. No doubt there are many who think that more tangible results should appear.- Let us consider some of the difficulties. Are we not too sanguine when we expect thirty millions of people to be acted upon in so short a space of time ? Are not we, who so rigidly proportion results to time and money, apt to be a little conceited about the progress of Christianity in our own country? Let us examine a little. Let us begin with Great Brit- ain. There, for thirteen centuries, you have had thousands of ministers at work. And, at the pres- ent moment, the force at work in the shires and cities of the United Kingdom can be numbered by the thousands.' And what are the results? Is Great Britain completely evangelized ? Is she what she ought to be, after all her centuries of MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 2 1 1 Christian teaching and advantages ? By no means. Nowhere in Japan will you find viciousness of so vile a character as you will find in the iniquitous dens of London, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and a few other civilized foci. These same remarks are applicable to America, and to France, Spain, Italy, and Germany. Do not, then, expect so great results from the small force in the field. Consider, also, that they have to con- tend with a difficult language. This language is not well adapted to express the profound and varied ideas of Christian theology. Terms and forms of expression have to be almost invented in order to present many of the ideas of the Revealed Religion. The natives have to be taught the mean- ing of the innovated phrases. All this, of course, much cripples the effect of eloquence and dialectic discourse. And, in addition to all this, the dis- solute behavior of the foreign community terribly injures the cause of Christianity. It is hard to answer the frequently propounded question : " If your religion is so very superior, why do such foul wretches come from your country?" And the ex- planation that they are not Christians, but sinners, wantonly living below their duties and destined to much severer punishment for so doing, is but half understood by a people accustomed from earliest time to nationalize religion, and who have no ideas of a spiritual kingdom and of an invisible, yet real, communion of the redeemed with Christ. Finally, it is urged with great gusto that native 2 I 2 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Christians do not bear favorable comparison with our Christians at home. It is triumphantly asserted that they retam many of their heathenish propen- sities after baptism ; that to eradicate these quali- ties, if not an impossibility, will be the work at least of several generations; that they do not pos- sess the high-bred Christian sentiment of Saxons; that a strong alloy of inherent superstition runs through all their nature ; that their moral percep- tions are positively obtuse when viewed from our stand-point ; that a well-balanced, sensitive con- science is a rare thing among them ; and that even after years of labor but few can be considered as examples worthy of imitation. Now just permit us to inform you that your comparison is sophis- tical and unfair. Is it legitimate to draw a com- parison between the first converts of a heathen countr}' and our carefully educated Christians who have had every moral advantage from infancy, who have been reared in the midst of every circum- stance tending to promote elevation of character, who have derived every possible benefit from cent- uries of accumulated instruction, who do not have to face the fierce prejudice and bitter persecution of friends and neighbors, and who are assisted in- tellectually and morally by many generations of inherited tendencies? Certainly not. You should compare them with the first converts of the Saxon and Celtic races. We must bear in mind that the early inhabitants of fair Albion did not become paragons of excellence as soon as they were bap- MISSIONARY WORK IN JAPAN. 213 tized by Saint Augustine. They retained for many centuries their barbarous and cruel customs. Nor can we speak in more flattering terms of sweet Ireland. For even at this day, after centu- ries of cultivation, but little of the fruit of Saint Patrick can be characterized as sans pareil. And coming down to later times, we must remember that his most gracious Majesty, Defender of the Faith, &c., King Henry VIII., would bear very un- favorable comparison with modern Christians. Nor would it be fair to cite as a specimen of modern Christianity that bellicose queen who was accus- tomed to slap her courtiers in the face, to lie and, dissimulate without stint, to swear at her noble lords " by God's blood," and to publicly interrupt sermons by telling clergymen to " quit their un- godly digressions.** Nay, more, it would not be very gratifying to national pride to sit in inquisi- torial committee on the moral tone of the entire Elizabethan age. And, bringing the question right home, could we candidly advise Japanese youth of to-day to pattern their actions after the naughty example of the future Defender of the Faith ? Ah ! My conceited scions of the Imperial race, are you all you might be and ought to be after thirteen centuries of Christian teaching? Be careful, then, how you criticise the product of only seventeen years of labor. Look to yourselves when you dog- matically clamor that a country which, for twenty- five centuries, has had only the dim light of natural religion to guide it, should bring forth characters 214 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. fully competent to comprehend and practice the precepts of our revealed religion as our most noble Christians do. But, incredible as it may seem, the most power- ful auxiliary of the missionaries is the Japanese Government. You may rest assured that the government never dreamed of rendering any as- sistance to the Christian faith when they began to introduce civilization. But they are now begin- ning to realize the fact that the foreign civilization that they have been so carefully importing during the past six years is the product of Christian prin- ciples, and that by introducing our civilization they arc introducing Christianity itself. This fact aston- ishes them immeasurably, and it is a fact that we ourselves do but dimly realize ; yet such is the case. A prominent counsellor, imported from England by the government, said that all Japan needed was civilization and beefsteak. The gentleman furnish- ing this advice was an infidel, and evidently did not realize the fact that whatever was good in the civilization of Europe and America was based upon Christian principles. The religion and the civiliza- tion of a country go hand in hand. Show me the Druidical mysteries, the fetiches of the African savages, and I will show you a degraded civiliza- tion. Show me the nonentities of Shintoism and of Buddhism, and I will show a civilization charac- terized by social and intellectual stagnation, and by spiritual and political degradation. Show me the MISSIONAR y WORJC IN JAPAN. 2 1 5 sensuous creed of the Turks, and I will show you the vilest civilization of to-day. Show me the comic mythology of the Greeks and Romans, based upon the vagaries of childish imaginations, and I will show you a civilization possessing many excel- lent qualities, but uninfluenced by any deep moral undercurrents, and characterized by selfishness and cruelty. In short, give me the general features of any religion, and I can show you, with reasonable certainty, the nature of the civilization prevailing among its votaries. These terms denote correla- tive conditions of society. Religion is the cause, civilization is the effect. And the Japanese, who have been so assiduously introducing our civilization, arc now startled with the discovery that they have been but pioneers for Christian missionaries. They now see that the in- tellectual qualities, the animal passions, and the selfish desires of nations under Christian influence, are controlled and curbed by some moral power that they had not noticed. And they also see that, but for the checking force of these moral princi- ples, the tremendous faculties of Europe and America would be dangerous to the world. While they have assiduously cultivated the intellectual powers of their youth, are intensifying their appe- tites and passions by nourishing and stimulating food, yet they have put no guide on the road, have put no brake on the wheels, have introduced no moral power to restrain the undue exercise of these mental and physical powers. They find Shintoism 2 1 6 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, and Buddhism quite powerless to do so. Nor can the copious and bitter draughts of infidelity, al- ready freely imbibed, accomplish this end. Nothing under the sun but the Gospel of Christ can do it. This fact was most whimsically acknowledged by the Japanese when the Mitsui Bank was started in Tokio. This is a national bank, and is backed up with the money of the government. Young Japan- ese had been specially educated abroad to carry on the banking system on approved foreign principles. They were intelligent, capable, and shrewd. They made excellent cashiers, tellers, book-keepers, and clerks, so far as the merely executive qualities were concerned. They possessed every intellectual re- (juirement necessary for carrying on a bank. But they were too intelligent ! They were so thor- oughly acquainted with financing that they under- stood many little methods of deflecting cash from the treasury into their own pockets. And there was no power except fear that could prevent their doing so ; and fear had but little effect, as there was hardly any danger that the capitalists, com- posed of effete Daimios and of government officers unfamiliar with banking, could detect how the cash disappeared. In this predicament, one of the bank officers, with great candor and solicitude, came and explained the situation to one of the missionaries. He frankly admitted that he did not believe in any religion whatsoever. He claimed that the Japanese intellect was of too philosophical a nature to accept the Jewish myth called Christianity. *' But," said MISSIONAR Y WORK IN JAPAN. 2 I 7 he, " your religion does something that our religions cannot do. // makes men hoficst. Now, we wish our employes at the bank to be carefully instructed in these principles, so that they may learn to dis- charge their duties with scrupulous integrity." This story is thoroughly characteristic. Fre- quently have I met men in America who have can- didly admitted that, though not professing Chris- tians themselves yet they would not care to live in communities where business was not influenced by Christian principles, and where they could not deal with Christian people. And if it were not for the factor of absolute integrity that lies at the foundation of the banking system of the nineteenth century, where would be our immense fabric of commercial exchange ? Were it not for the fact that Christian sentiment had made fidelity in com- mercial affairs to be of paramount importance, the international transactions of the present day would, indeed, be of a limited nature. At one time the government insisted that Chris- tianity should not be taught in their schools in any shape whatsoever. They even went so far as to insert in some of their contracts a clause to the effect that no instruction should be given upon this subject. Yet it is impossible to explain the senti- ment and the illustrations of our great writers with- out teaching much concerning Christianity. The vast bulk of our literature is so impregnated with Christian sentiment that it is absolutely impossible to eliminate or to avoid it while teaching this sub- 2 1 8 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. ject. A great part of my teaching in the govern- ment schools of Japan has been pure missionary work. It was necessarily so. It would have been impossible for it to have been otherwise. But I must close this letter. I could write a volume tracing the growth of our literature, our social customs, and our political institutions from the principles of the Gospels. But time forbids. I can only state in brief my candid conclusions upon this subject, derived from several years of close ob- servation. I shall not attempt to argue the matter, to quote voluminous authorities, or to make a te- dious demonstration by clumsy logical methods. But, in the language of Greenleaf, I will close by saying that the truth of any hypothesis is estab- lished by its coincidence with existing phenomena. Yours truly, Theopiiilus Pratt. THE CITADEL i>K t)WARI CAsTl.E. I Xatiz-f Photograph. ) LETTER XIII. A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. Kioto, Japan, August 3, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus : I shall start to-morrow on a tour through the provinces that lie north, east, and south of Kioto. This is the classic part of Japan. Our route will be northward across Lake Biwa into Echizen ; then, turning to the south, we will pass through Mino, Owari, Isc, and Kii ; and then we will cut over the mountains in a north-westerly direction into Yama- shiro. My traveling companion will be Mr. Yana- gashima, one of my scholars. He is well versed in Japanese history, and is very intelligent. I intend to carry no provisions along. I want to try the experiment of living for a month on Japanese diet, and see how it works. Good night. Aug. 4. — Left Kioto this evening at seven o'clock, and arrived at Oatsu, on the southern end of Lake Biwa, at ten o'clock. Distance seven miles and a half. Scenery very mountainous. We were stopped three times by the vigilant police. The war makes them active. Even natives have to carry passports. Put up at a hotel. Hotel-keepers charge for best accommodations about sixteen cents 220 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. per day ; for inferior, they charge about twelve cents per day. Oatsu is a town containing about thirty thousand inhabitants. Aug. 5. — Took one of the little steamers that ply across the lake. The trip to the other end of Lake Biwa is very fine. This is the largest body of fresh water in Japan. Many of the historic events in native history were enacted on its shores. Many of the legends and myths that arc most popular cluster around it. On the right is a hill around which a gigantic centipede is said in ancient times to have entwined itself seven times, and then buried its head beneath the waters under the bridge that spanned the river. On the left rises a lofty range of mountains, where lived the famous priest, Benk6, in his monastery. He was noted, the tradition says, for his vast power. On one occasion he stole a large bell and carried it off up the moun- tains. But the unhappy bell kept saying : *' Carry me back! Carry me back, Benke!" Night and day it ceaselessly cried out, so that the people all heard it. It gave him no peace until he complied with its request. His other exploits would fill a volume. At four o'clock in the afternoon we reached Shiotsu, at the extreme northern end of the lake. Take dinner h la Japonnaise, At half-past five we started for Hikita, some seven miles northward. The first four miles lead through a series of rice plateaus, picturesquely flanked by lofty hills. This was evidently the ancient head of the lake, as the A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN, 221 pebbly nature of the ground fully attests. At the end of the four miles we came to the boundary post between Omi and Echizen. The scenery now be- came grand. We descended into Echizen through a rugged pass. Put up at a hotel. The productions of the province of Omi are bleached linen, tea, crape, moxUy edges for tatamis^ porcelain, pepper, velvet, silk, fish called gengoro- funay eels, and carp. The productions of the prov- ince of Echizen are silver, lead, copper, coal, sul- phur, paper called hosho (the best paper in Japan, and used in ceremonial documents), mosquito nets, silk, trout, salmon, codfish, mulberry trees, hemp, tea, and lacquer. The word Oifti means " near the river." The word Echizen means "over the pass.'' Atig, 6. — Called for our bill. Here it is : 1. For night's lodging, supper and breakfast for two, 30 cents. 2. For sugar, 2 cents. 3. For peaches, 8 cents. Total, 40 cents. Took jinrikshas at half-past six. Rode for five miles through a lovely country to Tsuruga, on the Japan Sea. The harbor is shut in by lofty moun- tains. The place is enchanting. This is the port that will probably be the next to be thrown open to foreign commerce. ^^^g' 7' — Hired a boat to visit Jogo, a place some six miles up the western side of the bay. The boatman says that on one side of the bay the people gain their living by hunting and farming; 222 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. on the other side they live by fishing. He also says that the long pine beach at the extreme lower part of the bay was made in one night. . The temple of Jogo is beautifully located at the base of a mountain. Within a mile of it the peo- ple are forbidden to catch fish. Jogo is the popular name for the Empress Jingo, who went from this port on a raid into Corea many centuries ago. Her other half has a temple in his honor about half a mile off. Popular tradition says that he makes a visit to Jingo about once a year. Beside Jingo's temple a pretty cascade casts itself into a shaded pool. If you bathe in this water you will be free from sick- ness for a year — provided you have handed over to the priest that attends the shrine the full allowance of money. Here we found an old woman and a maiden under the water endeavoring to obtain the desired blessing. We then, on our way back, visited the ubiqui- tous shrine of Benierty picturesquely located on a little promontory. Then we pass a stone slab rising out of the water; upon it is an image of Jiso, the Buddhist priest. Those who are unable to swim are called stone Jisos. Through its breast is a small hole. The story goes that during a great battle fought five hundred years ago between Nitta and Ashi- kaga, a stray shot pierced it. The clumsy match- locks of the thirteenth century could never have done such execution at a distance of three miles. The yarn is charming, nevertheless. A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 223 Aug. 8. — Have been out on a tramp through the town of Tsuruga. We first visited the site of the ancient castle of Nitta. It was built on a steep cliff outside of the town. The position is very- strong, but Ashikaga led his legions right up the face of the hill and stormed the place. No trace of the castle is left, but the peasants in the immediate vicinity say, that in digging about the underbrush on the steep hillside, they sometimes unearth charred rice, which must be the debris of the burnt store-houses of the ancient castle. This was the last battle between Nitta and Ashikaga. Near this spot is the grave of Takayoshi Shinno, a great friend and defender of the ancient Mikados. His melancholy fate excites pity in the breast of every true samurai. He fought against the Imperial enemies in Kaga, Mino, Echigo, and Echizcn. He died prematurely, and was buried here. For cent- uries his sepulcher was unknown, but after the Imperial restoration the spot was discovered and marked. Some ancient families in the vicinity treasured up the fact and imparted it to the govern- ment. Climbing up the path and pushing aside the underbrush, you see merely an insignificant bamboo fence. Upon a square wooden post is written the name of the hero, the date when the name was written, and a strict prohibition against entering the inclosure. In the afternoon we went to Matswara, beyond the other end of the town. Here is the place where some three hundred and seventy-five samurai were 224 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. decapitated and buried about twenty years ago. These gentlemen were led by the Prince of Iga, whose head also fell on this bloody occasion. They were bitterly opposed to the introduction of for- eigners, but the Bakufu did not sustain their views. Then Takada, the prince, went roving with them through the provinces trying to stir up revolution against the Shogun. They came over the moun- tains into Echizen. But here they were stopped by the Kaga samurai. They delivered up their swords and bodies to the Kaga gentlemen and awaited the decision of the Shogun. The answer was decapitation to a man. The spot is marked with stone monuments. Aug. 9. — At 10 P.M. we took the steamer that goes fifty-five miles up the coast to Mikun^, the sea-port of the capital of this province. Aug. 10. — Reached Mikun^ this morning. The population is about fifteen thousand. Tookjinrik- sha for Fukui, twelve miles to the east. Arrived at II A.M. Fukui is built in the center of an ex- tensive stretch of rice-growing country. At half- past eleven we took jinriksha for Togu, six miles and a half to the east. The road led through rice and hemp fields. From Togu we walked five miles to Okubo. The road led through a pretty moun- tainous country. Hotel passable. People kind and attentive. Only one foreigner has ever been in the place. Atig. II. — Left Okubo and walked twelve miles to Ono. Our road led through a long stretch of A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 225 lovely mountain scenery. Hemp and trees produc- ing lacquer are extensively -cultivated. Ono is situated in a gem of a valley. The lofty mountains abruptly rise on all sides. The city contains about forty-five thousand inhabitants. It is well built. Everybody seems to be reeling silk from thousands of cocoons. Takada, in his tramp, passed through here, but was not very warmly received. From Ono we continued our southerly course, climbing a mountain covered with verdure to its very summit. From the summit the view was su- perb. Behind us lay Ono, the variegated fields, the sandy streams, and the engroved villages scat- tered through the glens. While in front of us, down in the rugged depths of the mountains, lies a sublime valley. A torrent pours through it. On its further slope lies a thatched village. Surely nothing can surpass this in beauty ! -Hunting and fishing are good. Only two foreigners have ever visited this section of country. The people are painfully polite. When you pass along the peasants remove their head-bands. Should they chance to be driving a large ox that compels you to step aside, they beg your pardon. The school-boys in the thatched temples, that have been turned into school-houses, come out and stand before the door. Their leader then gravely steps forth before his constituents and makes a low bow. This expresses the sentiments of the crowd. In this vicinity is an antiquated Shinto temple. The people about it are greatly troubled with 15 2 26 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. wolves. One of the voracious animals destroyed a man down in the hemp-fields last summer. Wild boars also do much mischief by rooting in the fields. Robbers also are a source of much annoy- ance. At this old temple is a caged wolf of huge dimensions, and both robbers and wild boars greatly dread the wolf. Therefore, the people pray to the wolf to be delivered from their enemies. They pray that three wolves may stand guard over the premises of each one of them. Although these sentinel wolves have never been seen, yet the peo- ple believe that invisible ones are actually guarding them and exert a mysterious influence over depre- dators. We spent the night at Nakashima, ten miles from Ono. Takada and his gang of ronins burnt this place in the most brutal and unprovoked manner during their "raid. Aug. 12. — We left Nakashima and followed the road through fine mountain scenery. At ten o'clock we crossed from Echizen into Mino. We now have wild and rugged mountains. The country is un- cultivated and much resembles the Adirondacks. The lofty mountains are covered to their summits with groves of walnut, oak, chestnut, beech, and horse-chestnut. A thick underbrush fills in all spare ground. Wild boars and deer abound. Here is also found the kamosishi, a kind of ibex. Legions of monkeys run wild everywhere. They sometimes descend into the regions of rice-fields and make sad havoc with the crops. We made A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 227 twenty-five miles to-day ; the last ten miles were indescribably grand ; the scenery was majestic ; the road went around the mountain side many hundred feet above the torrents ; sometimes it passed over dizzy chasms ; sometimes over scaffoldings built along the face of precipices; sometimes over frail bridges ; and sometimes over planks that trembled as you crossed the chasms they spanned ; the mountains have been packed together in the closest possible order, and they are about as steep as it is possible for them to be without letting slide the immense mass of vegetation that covers them. In fact, in some places, the face of a hill has slipped away, carrying the thundering avalanche of trees and rocks into the torrents below. We passed two lovely cascades. One is three hundred feet high. In one place we had to creep along the face of a clifl where a wrong step would probably have plunged us down fifteen hundred feet. At one place the ravine is spanned by a swinging bridge. It is said the architects derived their idea of the plan by seeing hundreds of monkeys join hands and form a cable from side to side. Old Takada came over the greater part of this road on horse- back. He was eighty years old. He must have possessed considerable vigor, for the road is really a rough foot-path. At ten o'clock we reached Tenjin. While Yanagashima was taking his bath, the floor fell out of the room and precipitated him into the yard, to the unfeigned horror of the land- lady, who was profuse in explanations and apolo- 2 28 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. gies. He, however, resumed his ablutions undis- mayed. Tired ? Rather. But he is developing into a first-rate walker. Aug. 13. — We made thirty-five miles to-day. In the morning we again passed through some magnificent scenery. The rocks indicate the pres- ence of iron and coal. The geology of the coun- try is very interesting. There has been much erosion and drift. In one place the water has worn for itself a deep channel through the rocks. By midday we struck the foot-hills, and were again in the region of pine trees. We passed extensive fields of taro, beans, millet, and rice. We found the people very inquisitive, but respectful. By three o'clock we reached Inozoka. From this point we took jinrikshas to Yorotaki, a pretty cascade about one hundred and twenty-five feet high. It is a famous resort for picnic parties. It is beauti- fully located in a glen filled with trees. The spark- ling spray combines beautifully with the sunlight and the shadows. Aug. 14. — From Yorotaki we went through a long stretch of level country to Gi-Fu, the capital of Mino. It is in a favorable location. Place is well built. The productions of the province of Mino are silver, copper, lead, wood for carving and engraving, melons, persimmons, tea, hemp, pepper, rice-beer, crape, cloth, porcelain, carp, trout. Aug. 15. — Spent in Nagoya, in Owari. This is one of the five great cities of Japan. Its castle is one of the finest. Upon its Tenshiu (citadel) A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 229 were formely two immense fishes plated with pure gold. They adorned the gable ends, and for miles you could catch their glitter. We spent a day in inspecting the castle and Tenshiu. This Tenshiu rises some three hundred and fifty feet from the waters of the moat. It is five stories high. In the lowermost story you can place two thousand soldiers. The timbers used in its construction are most massive. From the summit your eye takes in the waters of Owari Bay, the rice-fields of Owari Province, and the distant mountains of Shinano and Mino. From this lofty place the movements of an enemy can be accurately inspected miles away. This Tenshiu was almost impregnable against feudal assaults, but against modern weap- ons it would be useless. It would present a splen- did target for artillery practice. The general features of this castle much resemble that of Hirosaki. It is, however, more extensive. It was one of the strongest outposts of the Toku- gawas. Being only three days journey from Kioto, it was most conveniently situated for watching Yamashiro and the central Daimiatcs. Nagoya is the great center of inland commerce. The productions of Owari Province, of which it is the capital, are crystals, agate, silk, cotton, earthen- ware, ironware, and fans. Porcelain, of course, forms a vast article of manufacture. The city is built on a little rising ground that gently slopes down to Owari Bay, a few miles off. Aug. 16 — To-day we left Nagoya and continued 230 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. our journey due southward into Is^, the long, narrow province that borders Owari Bay on the west. This is one of the oldest portions of Japan. Our road is level, and we travel by jinriksha entirely. Two-thirds of Is6 is a rice-field. The mountains on the west separate it from Iga, the track of whose prince we have been tracing. We covered thirty-five miles to-day. Spent the night at Kambe. The productions of Is^ are tea, oil, wax, cotton, dyed paper, crabs, clams, lacquerware, tobacco, garden seeds, hydrangeas, copper, coal, and porce- lain called bankoyaki. The productions of the ad- joining Province of Iga are coal, sulphur, sand for polishing, and earthenware called Iga-yaki. Aug. 17. — We covered thirty-five miles to-day. We spent the night at Yamada (mountain-field). In this vicinity are the shrines of Is6. They are ranked among the oldest temples in Japan. The place is about five miles from Futami, where the sun is said to have first risen between two rocks that rise from the sea. Around Is6 cluster all the myths and legends of Shintoism, the primitive re- ligion of Japan. This religion was a pastoral re- ligion. The aboriginal hunters and tillers of the soil offered up the fruits of their toil to the un- known powers that controlled nature. The early temples were probably like wigwams, built of poles crossed at the top and covered with skins or thatch. Then more elaborate structures were built, but the original form was retained, and even to-day you find the roofs of all Shinto temples disfigured with A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 23 1 the projecting rafters that cross each other like the original poles twenty-five hundred years ago. And the heavy beams that resemble cannons laid across the ridge pole probably represent the logs that weighted down the thatched roof of some primeval shrine. Into this religion has become welded the doctrine of the divinity of the Mikado. Pure Shintoism is not idolatry. It was the worship of the Invisible by a simple pastoral community. It had no code of morality, no literature ex- pounding doctrines relating to pure life, and no teachings that can compare with the teachings of other great religions. All its temples are built in a style of severe simplicity. No idols are to be found in any of their temples. The only ornament is an enshrined steel mirror about a foot in diame- ter. Before this they bow and pray : " as the mir- ror reflects our faces, so may the Invisible reflect upon our minds our sins and duties." Shintoism is doubtless a vast improvement on some forms of idolatry to be met with in Asia. But its great weakness is, that while it recognizes the fact that men should be good, it utterly neglects to tell them how to be good. It fails to grive a single command- ment or evolve a solitary principle of morality. It is utterly inefficient to raise men even so high as Buddhism has done. If you believe the Mikado to be of divine descent and obey him, you can not fail to be a good Shintoist. It must always fail as a religion. The experience of four thousand years has shown that men need very minute and careful 232 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. instructions in the very difficult carrying out of so very simple a thing as being good. The temples of Ise are prettily located in spacious grounds, but in themselves they are not remarkable for architectural beauty. The present buildings have stood about a century. A lengthy description of these shrines would take us much beyond the limits of our letter. For further information in regard to Shintoism, I refer you to the paper on the ** Revival of Pure Shinto," by Mr. Satow, in the Asiatic Reports for 1874 or 1875. Aug. 18. — We continued our southerly course. We intend to visit the province of Kii and the cas- cade of Natchi, near its southern part. This is the cascade that steamers coming along the coast can see at a great distance. This section of the country has never been explored by foreigners. After going ten miles we had to leave our jinrikshas and walk. The country was very pretty and hilly. Owing to the uncertainty of the dis- tance between the last two towns, I am unable to say how much I walked to-day. Each traveler we met gave a different figure of the distance. Very few people anyway will give the same answer to the query as to how great the distance is. But the elasticity of this afternoon's walk ranged all the scale between four and fifteen miles. Atig. 19. — Walked seventeen miles to Nagashima. Then we walked over the mountains to a deep in- let, and took a boat from Furusatto to Shirora. A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 233 Distance, six miles. Then we walked a mile and a half over the hills and struck another inlet. Took boat again for Owashi. Distance, seven miles. Our entire journey to-day has been along the sea coast. On the right hand, the lofty mountains rise in indescribable grandeur. Panthers, deer, and wild boars abound in the valleys. The entire southern and eastern portions of this province are exceed- ingly mountainous. As the natives say, the moun- tains are literally placed side by side. In all eligible localities, the hamlets are nestled. This province produces crude camphor, tobacco, cotton, pepper, lime, candle-wax, umbrellas, round fans, little egg- shaped oranges, and lacquerware. The fishermen along the coast also bring in an occasional whale, which Yanagashima classes among the produc- tions. Aug, 20. — Left Owashi and walked seven miles over very steep mountains. Striking another inlet, we again took boat some five miles. These inlets are lovely. They are full of fish. Fishing-boats are scattered everywhere. Some are gliding in from the Pacific well freighted with spoil. Some are in the deep shadows of the headlands. When the fish will not bite, the anglers beat the water with a switch, so that the denizens of the deep may fancy it is raining. Should they then refuse to bite, they are well scolded. We then walked thirteen miles to Kinomoto. The walk was severe. The population of this place is four thousand. We hadn't been five 234 ^^ TTERS FROM JAPAN. minutes in the hotel before two policemen bounced in for our passports. What interested me most to-day was the univer- sal habit of smoking cigars. Even the women and children smoked. They take a camelia leaf and roll it into a cornucopia. This they fill with to- bacco, and go puffing along as if they had tin fun- nels in their mouths. Bundles of camelia leaves are sold all along the roadside for two mills per bundle. I have never seen this anywhere else in Japan. The people here are hearty and healthy. Their noses are really Jewish in shape. In these moun- tains you will find the people as they have been for two thousand years. The place is out of the way. Foreign elements have never mixed in. Here you find the pure Japanese race. The fleets of Javanese junks that probably drifted up here on the Black Stream during the past centuries would find this promontory convenient for landing. When the pop- ulation increased, it could pass over the mountains into Owari, Is^, and Yamashiro, and mix with the Ainos. But it offered no inducement with its wild mountains for immigration in return. The people are certainly an improvement on the Japanese I have hitherto met. The corruptions of feudalism also had less scope here among the rugged cliffs. And so the people of these mountains are about the same as they have been for many centuries. The climate along the coast is very delightful at all seasons. A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 235 Aug, 21. — Left Kinnemoto and went twelve miles by jinriksha along the sea shore. The road led through pine groves, across hills, and through much varied and beautiful scenery. Then took kago at Atawa and went fourteen miles to Hama- no-mia (shore temple). This place is within three miles of Natchi-no-taki. We spent the night at a Buddhist temple that has been turned into a hotel. Since the Revolution, this sect has become very much impoverished. Many of the monasteries have fallen into decay. We found two very valu- able relics at this place. One was a piece of cam- phor wood with an inscription upon it. The abbot said that it was thirteen hundred years old. We wanted to buy it, but he said money was no induce- ment to part with it. Another relic was a little bell heavily alloyed with gold. It produced a very sweet note. This was a thousand years old. It was well authenticated. It had been handed down for fifty generations from abbot to abbot. It was brought from China by the priest Ji-kaku Daishi. This relic he was induced to part with for a pecuniary consideration. Aug, 22. — Arrived at the falls of Natchi. It is about three miles back from the sea-coast. It is nearly five hundred feet high. Its source is a mountain stream that comes from the range of Natchi-san. The scenery surrounding it is very wild and exceedingly grand. Within a radius of a few miles are other cascades numbering, according to native estimates, forty-eight. None of them, 236 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. however, are more than half the size of this one. At its base are many shrines and tea booths for the pilgrims that flock hither every summer. On one or two occasions boats from passing steamers have landed crews to examine the falls. The people living in the vicinity are very respectful, and take ver}' little notice of strangers. There are no regu- lar hotels in the vicinity. The well-to-do people, living in the valley and on the steep mountain side, offer the hospitality of their roofs to visitors. When crowds are not pressing, they take turns in acting the host. We were referred well up the mountain side to a house situated on a bold crag overlooking the valley and the falls. So lovely was the place that we decided to stay here a couple of days and enjoy the scenery. Aug, 23. — Spent in examining the falls and in visiting some of the old temples. Our host showed us some letters that had been written by some princes in the time of Yoritomo, nearly eight hun- dred years ago. Yanagashima had some difficulty in reading them, as the characters dififered somewhat from the modern characters. One letter was from a feudal lord to his treasurer, ordering him to pre- sent a suitable gift to a certain samurai oi another clan who had respectfully descended from his horse when his lordship came down the road. Another letter spoke about the widening of the castle moat and the securing of workmen for the task. These letters would be very interesting to any one desir- ing to write up a history of old times. In this A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 237 vicinity are many such ancient documents. This whole promontory would be a fine field for anti- quarians. Aug. 24. — I must take it easy! I begin to find that Japanese diet is not quite so invigorating as our own. My eyes begin to be weak. The original aversion that I had for rice has disap- peared. I actually relish it as the hostess dips it out of the steaming tub. Rice tastes better when eaten with chop-sticks. It should be eaten piping hot. If the Japanese were to use a little more variety in their cooking it would suit my taste more. Almost everything is boiled. They do not seem to know much about roasting and baking. Rice is used at every meal. The side dishes are varied. The landlady comes in regularly and takes our orders. Shall it be trout, or beans, or pickled radish ? Or perhaps some shrimps would be pre- ferred ? When one gets accustomed to these dishes, he finds some of them very nice. But a person with a delicate taste would be a long time in getting accustomed to them. Japanese diet is certainly weak when compared with our own. You do not store up a reserve force of vitality when liv- ing on it. You can do just about so much work every day, but when you attempt to do more than your regular amount you find it very wearing. A jinriksha man will do splendid work for a couple of days, but if you keep him at it he breaks down. Many of these men die from heart disease every year. 238 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, Aug, 25. — Walked over the mountains some twenty miles and reached Hongu. The country is exceedingly rugged. Our course is now north-east to Coyasan and Osaca. The oldest temples in Japan are here. They antedate the shrines of Is6. They arc built upon an immense rectangular plat- form of granite about eight feet high. They are in a dilapidated condition. They are odd structures. Innumerable crows flit over the weather-beaten roofs, and fill the somber groves with their cease- less clamor. The legends say that in ancient times they were gifted with strange powers of speech. Aug. 26. — We left Hongu and climbed over the Endless Mountain for about ten miles. With the exception of Fujiyama, it is the hardest climbing I have done in Japan. The amount of water that you drink is surprising. There being no springs along the roadside, your coolie has to carry a large supply along. The mountain is about five thou- sand feet high. The view from the summit is ex- tremely grand. In all directions the mountains roll away in endless Avaves. A more rugged region can hardly be imagined. There are no large towns here, but there are great numbers of hamlets scattered all along the mountain roads. In one of the houses I found an old Tower musket with a bayonet. Inquiring v/hcthcr robbers troubled the people, I was informed that wild boars gave great trouble in the potato patches, and had to be fought fiercely, as they loved potatoes and became savage on being interrupted in their meals. We traveled A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 239 through this magnificent country for about twenty miles. Stopped for the night at Yagura, perched far up the mountain side. Aug. 27. — Continued our journey twenty-eight miles along the tops of the high mountains. The scenery, to be appreciated, must be seen. A typhoon came upon us and soon made us as wet as you please. My rubber cloak came in handy. There was something so weird and grand in thus promenading nature aroused that I count this as the most enjoyable day of our excursion. Passed the night at Otake. Aug. 28. — Walked eight miles more and made Coya-san. Determined to stop here a couple of days. Coya monastery is at the summit of a mountain five thousand feet high. Deep groves of superb cryptomeiria that have been cultivated with the greatest care for many centuries cover the moun- tain to its base. For miles around the shrines be- token the vicinity of the monastery. Coya-san is the oldest Buddhist monastery in Japan. It was founded by Kobu-Daishi thirteen hundred years ago. This same man introduced Buddhism into Japan. He selected this mountain summit and built a small temple, and spent his life in propagat- ing his creed. He lived a life of great self-denial. He rose early, prayed long and often, and fasted frequently. Instead of using a mirror, he looked into a cistern when he arranged his hair. When, after a long life of labor, his end drew near, he sent 240 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. all his companions away from the temple. He told them that when they no longer heard the sound of the bell that he tapped when he prayed, they might know that Kobu-Daishi was dead. Faintly hummed the bell all day long. Fainter were its notes as night drew on ; and in the gray dawn, when the priests slid back the shojccs, Kobu-Daishi lay dead upon the floor before Buddha in Nirvana, and was devoutly clasping his rosary. But the temple grew, and within a few years a vast monastery covered the mountain summit. Thousands of priests officiated at the shrines. The place became a city of priests. Commerce was in- terdicted ; trade was not allowed. Profound peace and quiet reigned. Women were not allowed within five miles of the base of the mountain. Sacred fires were kept perpetually burning from the original flame that Kobu-Daishi brought from India. Hundreds of these lights are kept in a vast room. They never go out. Priests watch them night and day. Some of the lamps must have been kept burning many centuries. When a prince dies he will donate a fund to the monastery to keep a lamp, lit from Kobu-Daishi's flame, per- petually burning. In front of this shrine is a huge meteoric stone in a large cage. The story is that when Kobu- Daishi went to India he flung it back into Japan to announce his arrival. After walking through many streets and avenues lined with shrines and temples, you strike out into A TRIP THROUGH CLASSIC JAPAN. 24 1 a long, somber avenue of pine trees that is over a mile and a half in length. On either hand are tombs. This is the cemetery of the monastery. Here is found the first tombstone erected in Japan. It is about five feet high. It is of stone, and is more like a pyramid in its shape than anything else I can compare it to. It is covered with Sanskrit inscriptions, like all the other graves. Many of the Daimios of Japan are buried here. Some of their tombs are very elaborate. Granite and bronze are the chief materials employed. All those buried here were first cremated. This ceremony was often attended with very imposing services. The Buddhist literature of the monastery is very ancient and valuable. It is all in Sanskrit, and is quite unintelligible to the priests in general. At present there are not over three hundred priests connected with Coya-san, but in its palmy days, before the Revolution, it numbered from three to five thousand. In the house set apart for a hotel, it is curious to notice all the servants and waiters being men. They all have shaved heads. I was also much in- terested in seeing weasels running all over the roofs. Upon inquiry we were informed that as the priests could not take life in any form, they became rapidly overrun with rats. Weasels were then introduced, and the rats disappeared. But there was nothing to drive away the weasels. So for centuries they have become permanent fixtures. When you ask the priests why they were not re- 16 242 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. sponsible for causing the death of so many rats, they simply reply that the rats could have left had they found the locality too dangerous ! Another feature of Coya-san is the absence of mosquitoes. So cool is the air that these tormentors are rarely seen. Were I disposed to dream away life in profound repose and ambitionless existence, I would select Coya-san. Aug. 30. — We are back again in Kioto, being well pleased and well tired with our tramp of six hundred miles. I am now engaged for a year, teaching at Kioto. The Satsuma Rebellion so drained the government funds that it was found necessary to close the school in which I was teaching at Tokio. I will endeavor to give you my impressions of Kioto be- fore long. Yours truly, Theophilus Pratt. THE GREAT BEIX AT DAI-BITZ TEMPI E. KIOTO. UVa//rr Photograf>h.^ LETTER XIV. KIOTO. Kioto, September lo, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus: Kioto is the most interesting city in Japan. A thousand years of history, poetry, and romance cluster around it. It is situated in the Province of Yamashiro (Mountain Castle), in the heart of Japan. High mountains surround it on the eastern, north- ern, and western sides, thus protecting it from the cold winds during the winter, while, during the summer, the sea breezes cool it from the south. Through the center of the city flows the Kamo- Gawa (River of the Wild Ducks). This noisy stream, let loose from the mountains on the north, comes tumbling along over pebbles, bowlders, and sand-bars. During heavy rains it assumes formid- able proportions. Three or four long wooden bridges span it, and connect the two halves of the city. The Kamo-Gawa flows southward through Fusim^, the southern suburb of Kioto ; thence it winds among foot-hills and rice-fields through a very pic- turesque country for about thirty miles, until it loses itself in the waters of Osaca Bay. In 1875, before the railway was constructed, 244 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. when I visited Kioto for the first time, I had to come up this river in a long, flat-botlomed boat. In old times this river was the principal means of approach from Osaca. In coming here from Tokio, you may choose from three routes. The quickest is by steamer to Kob6, and thence by railway for fifty miles. This journey requires about three days. The second route is by the Tokaido over Hakon6 Pass, beside the base of majestic Fujisan, through the fishing villages along the coast and through Nagoya, and then around the southern end of Lake Biwa through a gap in the mountains to Kioto. This trip occu- pies about ten days journeying hy jmriksJta, This was the route by which I returned to Tokio in 1875. It is a magnificent highway, shaded for a great distance by cryptomeiria of centuries' growth. The third route is by the Nakasendo (Inland Road). This is the grandest of all the routes. It comes directly through the inland provinces, crossing the magnificent mountains of Shinano. The population of Kioto numbers about five hundred thousand souls. The city is built in the usual Japanese fashion. In the center lies the now deserted Gosho, the ancient residence of the em- perors. It covers but a few acres of ground, and the gardens and parks are inclosed with a high wall. Skirting the city on all sides are groves, gardens, pagodas, temples, and monasteries. The encircling foot-hills are covered with them. These temples KIOTO, 245 and monasteries formed the pride and glory of Kioto. At one time in the city's history there were four thousand of them. Many of the monas- teries are surrounded by deep groves and acres of greensward and shrubbery. Immense groves of cherry trees are scattered over all the foot-hills and in all the gardens around the villas and temples, so that in the spring the city seems to be fringed with clouds of white and pink blossoms which, with a background of majestic mountains, form a scene of peerless beauty. Seen at such times from the top of one of the surrounding mountains, the city lies at your feet like a lovely garden — sweet as we might imagine a glimpse of paradise to be. I shall not attempt to give you a minute descrip- tion of the various temples of Kioto. The task would be indeed formidable. I send you, however, Satow's Guide Book to Kioto, which will furnish you considerable interesting information. I will only attempt to describe three or four of the temples that have most impressed me. Just back of my house lies the monastery of Chioin. It covers the entire hill side, and is one of the largest in the empire. The central edifice is an immense affair. Like all the native structures in Japan, it is built entirely of wood. The huge pil- lars supporting the immense roof are of kayakK The roof is a wonderfully heavy affair. Taking the tiles and rafters together, the thickness must be about ten feet. The object of so heavy a roof is to neutralize the effect of earthquake shocks upon 246 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the pillars. This structure was erected two or three hundred years ago. Far up amid the tangled maze of rafters, the priest points out to you the umbrella that the architect left sticking there cent- uries ago. This temple is considered the finest structure of its kind in Japan. It was built regard- less of expense. In the grove beside it is a belfry containing the largest bell in Japan. The height is said to be eighteen feet. I was unable to meas- ure it for myself as it hung in the belfry, but the thickness of the bronze at its mouth measured ten inches. Like all bells in Japan, this one has no tongue, but it is struck from the outside by letting a heavy log of wood swing against its massive sides. It requires eight men to properly manipulate this huge piece of timber in order to swing it with accu- rate precision, so as not to deaden the sound. I had the pleasure of hearing it rung several times. The sound is a deep-toned boom — grand and mag- nificent beyond expression. The trembling vibra- tions that follow the boom last quite a while, and fill the groves with soft and deeply melancholy melody. Leaving Chioin and skirting the suburbs in a northerly direction, we come to a singular structure known as the Kin-Kakku-Gi. In ancient times an emperor, tired of the seclusion of the Gosho, de- cided to abdicate. He accordingly built this resi- dence for himself in a most lovely locality at the base of the mountains, surrounding it with exten- sive gardens filled with lakes, dwarfed landscape, KIOTO. 247 and shrubbery. The ceilings and walls of the building were covered with sheets of pure silver. This location is specially celebrated for the superb view of the moon that can be had as it rises over the mountains. Here the emperor spent his life in meditation and in composing poetry. And the surroundings were certainly congenial to such occu- pations, for a lovelier locality would be difficult to find. On a clear night, the queenly moon floats above the mountain top, bathing the ravines and gardens in a soft, dreamy light ; and the dwarfed pines and the shrubbery, reflected in the calm waters of the lakes, seem but unsubstantial crea- tions of the fancy. Upon the other side of the city is another struct- ure of a similar character, known as the Gin- Kakku-Gi. It is upon a larger scale than the Kin- Kakku-GL It was built by another emperor for similar purposes. Instead of being covered with sheets of silver, however, it was covered with sheets of gold. It is embowered in gardens and groves. I shall not attempt to give any further descrip- tion of the temples of Kioto. Even at the present day, they are numbered by hundreds. Not only are the suburbs filled with these shrines and monas- teries, but the surrounding mountains abound with them. Near the summit of Hiyeisan, a cone that towers to an altitude of nearly five thousand feet, about seven miles north-east of the city, is a superb monastery that I shall describe more at length hereafter. 248 LET TERS FROM J A PA N. Kioto was the religious center of Japan. The emperor was the patron of religion, and Buddhism was the preferred creed. The monasteries were famous centers of ecclesiastical learning. As the priests were learned men, their monasteries also be- came centers of elegant culture and refinement — famous colleges, in fact, where the gentry were ed- ucated. Emperors have received tutoring within these sacred inclosures. Kioto was built over one thousand years ago. The emperor moved to this place from Nara. Although the surroundings of Kioto are so serene and lovely, yet its history has been one of almost continued bloodshed. For centuries it was the center of intrigue and civil discord. Repeatedly has it been burned to the ground. But during the past three hundred years, under the Tokugawa rCgimc, profound peace has prevailed, and the city has prospered greatly. I found the Kioto people to be very different from the Tokio people. They regard themselves as the most cultured portion of the empire. They highly pride themselves upon their aristocratic blood. They possess much supercilious pride and a vast amount of indolence. In few parts of Japan — I will go further and say that in no part of Japan — are foreigners treated with such cool and patron- izing contempt as here. Nor are the natives re- markably popular with their own countrymen. They characterize outsiders as uncultured and boorish — a criticism not very highly relished by Japanese at large, as you may naturally infer. KIOTO, 249 The people are much given up to pleasure. The theaters are numerous and well patronized. The various holidays and festivals are celebrated with processions and feastings. Religious festivals are exceedingly common. Each monastery has its ffite days ; the people celebrate them by turning out in immense crowds, dressed in gala costume, and thronging the streets and groves, picnicing and gossiping to their heart's content. The most extraordinary of all the holidays is the day set apart in honor of the courtesans. In other parts of Japan the observance of this day has ceased, but it is still celebrated with much zest here. I happened to be here last July when it was being celebrated. All day long the people were busy erecting booths, platforms, and scaffoldings along the streets where the procession was going to pass in the evening. At dusk the entire city was gor- geously illuminated with paper lanterns. The courtesans slowly paraded the streets in panto- mime, each group personating some domestic or social scene. One group represented a lady with her maids at work in the garden ; they were sprink- ling water upon the plants, dressing the shrubbery, and catching butterflies. The bushes, the flowers, the soil, and the general paraphernalia of a real garden surrounded them on all sides upon moving platforms and vehicles. The effect of the scene was capital. A lot of half-tipsy coolies helped along the ladies by pulling the vehicles through the street. 250 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Another scene represented silk weavers. There were the looms and the shuttles. There were the revolving reels and the rapidly forming warp and woof. While to complete the domestic scene in all its details, an imitation dog lay upon the floor and wagged its tail in obedience to the skillfully manipulated string of the attendant. In another scene the matron was in the kitchen preparing the evening meal. There were the oven and the kettle, and the mischievous child always in the way. The rice was steamed, the fish was broiled, and the salt radish was cut up, in a way fairly enough to excite the cravings of hunger. It took several hours for the various pantomimes to pass. The courtesans were dressed with great tiiagnificcnce. Some had on scv^cn robes, each one of which would have befitted a queen. Every- thing was very orderly. The ceremonies were conducted with great propriety, and the crowds showed great decorum and respect, as this was considered the courtesans' yearly offering of de- votion to the gods. During the summer the people in Kioto take things very easy. The surrounding hills and moun- tains abound in groves, cascades, and glens. These cool resorts are thronged with jolly picnicers all day long. The amount of rice, wine, and water- melon that a Jap can annihilate on such occasions is amazing. He gives up the entire day, and fre- quently a succession of days, to merry-making. He calculates to arrive at the shady glen before KIOTO. 251 the heat of the day has set in. A slice of water- melon is to be found in his hand at most any time before lunch. He and his companions lounge around upon matted platforms scattered all through the glen. Between times they smoke their pipes and gossip, occasionally stretching their limbs and uttering stentorian yawns that fairly shake the trees. Just before lunch they strip themselves for a bath in the cascade. This process is conducted with boundless sang froidy in view of the circum- stance that the glen is swarming with people. Having whetted their appetites sufficiently, they take hold of a tubful of rice and a cask of sak^ with a zest quite impossible to describe. Raw carp and soy are taken as relishes. After lunch, they again fall upon their water-melons, pipes, and bathing. Toward sundown another assault is delivered against the rice-tub and wine-cask. And in the cool gloaming they disperse and homeward fly, — provided none of them have been disabled during the assault. Such is a brief description of the salient points of Kioto. To go fully into the subject would require a book — which I do not intend writing. I am situated, as regards my house and social surroundings, far more pleasantly than when I was in Hirosaki. My house is an old temple near the entrance to the Chioin monastery. It was built about three hundred years ago, and was originally designed as a residence for the ladies of the Shogun's house- 252 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. hold in case they should chance to visit Kioto. But as the ladies never came, the priests utilized the house as a temple. It is very substantially built. A broad veranda surrounds it, and it has a heavy tile roof supported by massive timbers. There is but a single story, and as you may easily imagine, the ceiling is immensely high. A fine suite of six rooms constitute my apartments. The shojees are covered with gilt paper and are set in lacquered frames. They are beautifully orna- mented. In a wing attached to my house are three rooms for the boy, and also the kitchen. This kitchen I will describe more fully in the latter part of this letter. Surrounding these premises on all sides is a lovely and extensive garden, and we are inclosed by a wall through which ingress may be obtained by a stately gateway. I could not de- sire a more private residence. My neighbors are all Buddhist priests. The one on my right-hand is busily engaged every day in drilling a class of boys in the Buddhist chants. He keeps at it so regularly that I frequently find my- self unconsciously humming the monotonous scores of the dreamy rhythms. The priest on my left- hand is a very religious man, judging from the amount of praying that he indulges in. He spends two or three hours daily at his matins and vespers. He begins with a slow, droning chant, tapping on a little bell betimes. His chant rapidly increases in intensity, until you hear but a prolonged whir- ring sound accompanied by the silvery notes of the KIOTO. 253 humming bell. Then the sounds slowly subside until the prayer ends as it began in measured ca- dence and subdued tones. Then you know that the beads on the rosary have been counted. He goes over his rosary again and again, until I am fairly drowsy listening to him. As you already know, it is forbidden to the Buddhists to destroy life in any shape. As a nat- ural consequence of the following of this doctrine, the precincts of their monasteries abound in all kinds of life peculiar to the various localities. Cen- tipedes fully six inches long are frequently seen around here in the gardens. They sometimes get into the houses, and make themselves as disagree- able as possible. Should you hang your coat upon the walls, you will probably find one of these hor- rid creatures in the sleeve when you attempt to put it on again. Their bites or stings are painful but not mortal. Snakes and lizards also are about as plentiful as it is possible for them to be after centuries of pampering within these sacred inclos- ures. And if it were not for the friendly services of the "weasels, the audacious impudence and the obtru- sive familiarity of the rats and mice would speedily render the existence of man quite problematical. But it is not quite so easy to exterminate the snakes. They, however, avoid the presence of man, and keep clear of his abode. During the heavy rains last week, when I was in the bath- room, a small one fell from the rafters across my 254 L^ TTERS FROM JAPAN. shoulder and slipped down upon my bare feet. I jumped aside with a mighty spring, and the reptile squirmed through a crack in the floor out into the garden. I can not go out into my garden without seeing half a dozen lizards basking themselves in the sunshine, and I have no doubt that in the dense shrubbery and in the extensive bamboo copses scattered all around here, snakes could be found by the score. It is very fortunate that the snakes in Japan are of a harmless nature. In the vicinity of Buddhist monasteries in the tropics you will find serpents of great size, — provided such monasteries are not in the immediate vicinity of teeming popu- lations. But the most surprising creatures that seek refuge within these sacred inclosurcs are the foxes. A family of them live under my house. They are plentiful all around here. At night-time they come out and scour the suburbs and hills for poultry' and birds. They probably visit all the Inari shrines for miles around, feasting upon the fried wheat cakes that have been prepared for their special benefit by the fox-worshipers. During their ram- bles around my garden, they frequently come across my neighbors* dogs. After indulging in animated snarling and purring for about five minutes, they will part company. As the native dogs are too cowardly to come to close quarters, the foxes find their strange abodes about as safe as they can desire. My household arrangements are upon a very KIOTO, 255 simple scale. As my contract is only for one year, it will not pay me to buy very much furni- ture, and if this Satsuma rebellion continues much longer to drain the government funds, I may not stay out my year. Any furniture that I might buy now would be a dead loss when I came to leave, for the natives do not use European furni- ture, and the few missionary families here are al- ready well supplied. My bedroom is adorned with severe simplicity. I sleep on the floor after the native fashion. Dur- ing the day-time my bedding is stowed away in the closet. In one corner of the room stands my zinc trunk, which answers the double purpose of ward- robe and money-chest. A wash-stand and two chairs complete the furnishing of the room. All the floors throughout the house are covered with fine tatamis. My study has a table and two chairs, and my parlor has a table and four chairs ; the walls, corners, and sides of the room being orna- mented with curios and bric-h-brac. The dining- room has a table and three chairs, while the spare room is quite bare. My kitchen is about as interesting as any part of the house. It is without any furniture whatsoever — not even a cooking range. For cooking purposes my boy uses a couple of small earthen ovens, no larger than a pair of flower-pots. It is astonishing how he manages to cook at all. Yet he certainly does marvelously well with omelets, soups, broiled chickens, and fried potatoes. His fuel is charcoal. 256 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. This produces a powerful heat, and is compara- tively free from smoke. The only important uten- sil that he uses is a gridiron. All the other articles are of native production, and consist of an iron pot, a frying-pan, and a couple of insignificant clay bowls, in which he boils potatoes and puddings. With such primitive utensils he displays great in- genuity in preparing food. The other day I in- vited the two directors to dinner. The first course was tomato soup. Then came boiled fish, with ^^ig sauce. Then came broiled venison and baked pota- toes. After this came a quasi plum pudding, com- posed of currants instead of plums, and of suet and flour. The wine sauce accompanying it could not have been surpassed, although the " wine " was some brandy that he had clandestinely abstracted from my medicine chest. The dessert of this ex- traordinary dinner consisted of peaches, plums, and grapes. But every rose has its thorn. My boy will get drunk. About once a fortnight he goes on a spree and comes staggering into the kitchen an hour or so behind time. His apologies and prom- ises of reform are as profuse as can be desired ; but his periodical sprees come in regular order never- theless. I shall be compelled to part with him be- fore long. But as I am in the immediate vicinity of a Treaty Port, where competent cooks are plen- tiful, I shall not have much trouble in replacing him. It is truly amazing how these Japs pick up our style of cooking. They all soon learn to cook KIOTO, 257 fairly well ; and some of them become exquisite adepts in cuisine. So much for my household affairs. My school duties are similar to those in Tokio. I usually walk the three miles between my house and the school. The hours are from nine in the morning to three in the afternoon, Saturdays and Sundays being holidays. The scholars are mostly young men of the samurai class. As to my social surroundings I cannot say much, as they are very limited. There are only four foreign families here, three of whom are those of American missionaries. These people are hospita- ble and friendly, and I spend many a profitable evening in their company. I must now close this rambling letter. Kioto is a difficult subject to write upon if one wishes to avoid giving hackneyed information about the place. Yours truly, Theophilus Pratt. 17 LETTER XV. AN EXCURSION TO NARA. Kioto, September 17, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus: I TOOK a trip to Nara the other day. This city- is about thirty miles from Kioto. Having no pass- port, I was under the necessity of going and re- turning on the same day. We started off early in the morning in our jinrikshaSy and arrived there about midday. This gave us fully half a day to inspect the place ; and we had the cool night in which to return to Kioto. The trip was a thor- oughly enjoyable one, although rather wearisome. The road lay through a somewhat level country — fairly picturesque, but rather uninteresting; and we were glad enough to reach Nara in time for lunch I can assure you. Nara was the ancient capital of the emperors. It is situated among picturesque hills near some mountains. In its days of prosperity it was a large and handsome city, but its present popula- tion is not over twenty thousand ; and nothing re- mains of its ancient glory except the vast temple and colossal image of Buddha,* or DauButz^ as *Thc illustration on the opposite page is a reproduction from a Japanese painting that had hung on the walls of some 3" THK DEATH OK BUDDHA. {See Footnote on next fiage.) AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 259 the natives designate it. Otherwise the place bears no comparison with lovely Kioto. Passing down the long, straggling street that /orms the backbone of the town, you will see, on your left, an immense grove of stately pines and cedars stretching over hills and vales far away monastery or temple for about fifty years prior to its sale to the author at Nagoya in 1877. It was sold because the disestablish- ment of Buddhism as the State religion of the Japanese Empire had protluced great poverty in that sect. The illustration repre- sents the supposed scene at the death-bed of Buddha. So great a benefactor had he been that all creation is represented as mourn- ing at his death — personages of royal birth, celebrities of various nationalities, animals of varied species, fowls of the air, and even the fiends from hell are represented as l)ewailing the misfortune which the great mercifulness of Buddha's nature had rendered universal. At the top of the picture, descending upon clouds and mists, is represented the mother of Buddha, accompanied by female friends and preceded by a guide, coming from Paradise to witness the closing scene in the life of her illustrious son. Her lamentations are violent, because of the fact that the mystic medi- cine that she had sent to her son had been carried away from his bedside by some thieving cat, which had scampered up into a tall tree with it, thus rendering the recovery of the renowned philan- thropist impossible. To the left-hand side of the picture, high up among the boughs, may be seen the unlucky bag of medicine. The contents thereof have melted, and are represented as run- ning down the trunk of the tree. The artist, as a solemn warning to all future generations of feline depredators, and also, we may pre- sume, as condign punishment for the immediate freebooter that had absconded with madame's physic, has failed to represent a cat in any part of his painting. The entire scene is located by the artist upon the sea-shore, where the waves may be seen through the trees. In this representation he carries out the legend which chronicles Buddha as having died upon some part of the coast of Ceylon. 26o LETTERS FROM JAPAN. into the mountains. Looming above the trees you will see the massive roof of the temple con- taining the monster image. The tiles are im- mensely heavy, and are bound together with strong iron bands. The thickness of the roof is fully ten feet. Surrounding this central figure like attendant guards, are several smaller temples, scarcely show- ing their gables above the trees. Coming now to a long, stately avenue, we go up for nearly half a mile through two huge gateways to the temple. The gateway, through which we first pass, merits a special description. It is a large, double-storied tower, about fifty feet high. The upper story is filled with dilapidated idols. Through the lower passes the gateway. On each side of the portal are two gigantic images about twenty feet high. Their faces are distorted in the most hideous fashion, and the weapons in their hands are poised in a threatening manner. The ancient coating of red paint has dropped from their bodies, and the heat of many centuries has warped the hard wood, so that the muscular arms and legs have split open to the center. These images are the gods of wrestlers and mighty men of valor. People desiring to excel in physical strength come here to worship. Their method of devotion is rather singular. The prayers are carefully written on small pieces of paper, which, after having been chewed up into spit-balls, are then deliberately flung at the grim deities — it being considered quite essential that the missiles should stick fast. The AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 26 1 monsters are covered with these concise supplica- tions. Passing through this gateway, we enter upon a continuation of the avenue. The stately pines screen us admirably from the sun, and the green- sward on all sides refreshes the eyes nearly blinded with the glare of the dusty road from Kioto. Under the trees are tea-booths furnishing refresh- ments to travelers and devotees. Appropriating some seats in the shade, we plunged into the depths of a water-melon, and ate vermicelli and pickled plums for the space of half an hour. Continuing our stroll down the avenue, we came to a second gateway, through which we passed into a vast court-yard. On fite days, several thousand people are accommodated within this spacious in- closure. On the other side of it stands the temple. This building was originally of a bright vermilion color, but the rains of centuries have washed it bare. Across the face of the temple runs a high vestibule whose roof is supported by large wooden columns. The entire structure is of wood. The roof is supported by sixty huge wooden pillars. From one of the pamphlets distributed by the priest within the vestibule the following informa- tion is derived : " The original temple of Dai-Butz was built in the reign of the Emperor Shiomu, the forty-sixth Emperor of Japan, who lived about 1524 years ago. It took eleven years to cast the, idol and to build the temple. Four hundred and twenty-nine years 262 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. after the completion of the temple, during one of the civil feuds, Taira-Shigehira, a famous chieftain, destroyed it. Five years thereafter it was rebuilt, and the image was recast. Four hundred and eighty-four years then slipped away, and a fierce battle took place between Matsunaga-Hisahide and Miyoshi-Yasunaga, two feudal chiefs, during which the image and the temple were again destroyed. And about seven hundred years ago the present edifice was built ; and the present head and shoul- ders, which had been melted during the previous conflagration, were recast." Closing the pamphlet and crossing the threshold of the temple, we sec Dai-Butz looming up before us to the height of seventy feet. In the middle of the temple is an immense stone platform nearly two hundred feet in circumference, and ten feet high. Upon this platform is constructed a smaller one of solid bronze, six feet high. Its surface is composed of bronze petals of the lotus flower. Seated cross-legged upon this flowery throne is Buddha in Nirvana, — a stupendous, olive-colored image. This is the largest bronze image in the world. The actual height of the idol, measuring from the bronze platform, is fifty-three feet and five inches. It is proportioned for a standing image one hundred feet high. Turning to our pamphlet, we find that this image is seven hundred years old. Seven succes- sive castings were made before a satisfactory piece of work could be produced. AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 263 Three thousand tons of charcoal were consumed during the operation. The total weight of the metal used is four hundred and fifty tons. The alloys are proportioned as follows : Gold = 500 pounds avoirdupois. Tin = 16,827 " " Mercury = 1,984 " " Copper = 986,080 " " Total = 1,005,391 " " Taking for granted that the figures transmitted to us by antiquity are accurate, it will appear that this idol contains nearly 300,000 pounds more of metal than the Colossus of Rhodes contained. And its proportions must be almost the same. The following figures will convey to your mind some idea of the immense size of this image : Height from throne. . . •• *• floor Length of face Width " •• Length of eyebrow . . . " *• eye Breadth of nose Height ♦* " Length of mouth •• •• ear Width across shoulders " ** breast... ** '* abdomen Length of upper arm . ** " forearm.... 53 5 70 16 9 5 5 4i 3 9 2 9* I 6 3 7 8 5 38 7 18 18 19 15 264 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, length of palm " middle finger Length from knee to foot Diameter of knee Circumference of middle finger Height of each lotus petal Width '• • Height of each curl on head Diameter of each curl on head. {There are k^ curls on the head ) Diameter of back of throne Length of each ray protruding from back of throne. Height of temple Length" " Width •• " 5 5 23 7 5 6 30 I 75 83 170 290 170 6 'si' The image is hollow, the average thickness of the bronze being about one foot. The lower parts and the bronze pedestal, however, must be almost solid. It has been cast in separate pieces, and these have been joined together with a kind of metallic cement, leaving a barely perceptible mark. The surfaces of the lotus petals composing the pedestal are covered with minute engravings repre- senting temples, dragons, combats between fiends, shrines perched on little knolls, various kinds of flowers, and a few other heathenish conceptions. The left hand of the image extends along the knee, with the third and fourth fingers slightly raised. The open palm projects over the knee as if offering something to a needy individual, or showing the plausibility of some pet idea. A grand piano could easily be set upon the hand AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 265 thus opened ; you could comfortably lie down in the palm, and you sit upon the thumb as you would upon a log of wood. The position of the right hand is somewhat different. The wrist is slightly elevated above the right knee, the open hand being raised at right angles to the forearm as if trying to push something back, — a repelling ges- ture. The eyes are half shut. The face is fat and flabby. The general expression is sleepy and good natured. The image is represented as dressed in a simple priest's robe. The folds and creases have been cast with wonderful accuracy. Behind the image is the gilt back of its throne, upon which are sixteen brackets holding sixteen bronze images, nine feet high each. In front are two colossal bronze vases, containing bronze lotus plants, twenty feet high. Perched on the rim of each vase is a large bronze butterfly, with a span across the wings of five feet ; and upon each side of the image is an immense wooden statue forty feet high. Everything, in fact, has been planned upon an immense scale. The only thing approximating to a musical instrument is a huge drum with its head battered to shreds. The floor is of hardened earth. The gigantic pillars are formed of massive, wedge- shaped slices of wood, bound together with iron bands. The ceilings and walls are quite bereft of paint; the spiders spin their webs in unbecoming proximity to His Majesty's head. At first sight, the proportions of this image are 266 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. very deceptive. Looking up at the middle finger, you would not be apt to guess its length at more than two feet, yet, upon measurement, it will prove to be five feet long ; but, after taking a few meas- urements, the tremendous proportions gradually dawn upon you. This, then, is the materialized conception of Buddha in Nirvana. The dreamy reveries of the persecuted Brahmin have thus found ponderous shape in this remote corner of the world. Under the blistering and enervating heat of India, what strange visions were evolved from the brain of that mysterious individual whose dreams of Nir- vana have shaped the religious natures of millions of human beings for over two thousand years ! Leaving the drowsy atmosphere of the temple, we sauntered over the grounds of the monastery. A covered way leads to a grove on the hillside. Climbing a long flight of broad stone steps, we came to an old belfry containing a large bell. The bell, according to my pamphlet, was cast 628 A.D., having been made at the special request of Shittio- Tenno. Its dimensions and composition are given as follows: Height, 13^ feet. Diameter at mouth, gyi feet. Thickness of metal, \o}i inches. Amount of copper, 26 tons and 600 lbs. " " tin, I ton and 500 lbs. Total weight, 55,100 lbs. AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 267 In the vicinity of this belfry are several booths for the sale of trinkets, charms, and mementoes. Old pieces of bone, horn, and ivory, have been carved into tooth-picks, combs, hair-pins, etc, for the devotees and visitors to purchase. You will also see some old swords and spears, said to have been used by the retainers of Hid^yoshi in the invasion of Corea three hundred years ago. Returning from their victories and conquests, they hung up their weapons here to show their gratitude for the successful issue of the enterprise — much in the same way, I imagine, as the shipwrecked Roman sailors hung up in the temples their dripping gar- ments to testify their appreciation of Neptune's merciful assistance. And, as the dampened tunics have long since been taken down from the moldy walls, so these ancient blades are rapidly disappear- ing before the impetuous advance of our mercenary curio hunters. The masses of the Japanese are very religious, or superstitious, as some choose to term it. Bud- dhism gained a hold on the popular heart that Shintoism and Confucianism failed to gain. Not satisfied with erecting this immense image, they constructed another one, almost as large, at Kama- kura, near Yokohama. It is in a lovely glade on the Pacific coast. It was cast about six hundred years ago by order of the Shoguns, whose capital at that time was Kamakura. 1 he height of this image is forty-four feet. The physical proportions, how- ever, are much smaller than those of the one here 268 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. in Nara. Its head is bent forward a trifle more, and its hands are folded. In other respects it is an exact copy. The temple that formerly sheltered it was carried away by an earthquake wave. Five successive tidal billows came rolling in from the Pacific. As the last surge, black with people and the debris of the city, rushed down the valley, it carried the temple out to sea. So he sits there in the open air, his head looming above the pine- trees, and his face turned toward the peaceful waters of the ocean — typical of the dreamless Nirvana. The bronze is assuming a dull green color, being affected by the corrosive influence of the moist winds that come from the Pacific. There is a staircase inside of the image. A large window in the back floods the cavernous vitals with light, showing the names of scores of ambitious foreigners scrawled in all conceivable places. Late in the afternoon we began to think of returning to Kioto. We had rambled over the grounds and had inspected every nook. The monastery showed decided marks of neglect. The leaves covered the avenues and the green- swards, and the lichens and the moss seemed to take melancholy satisfaction in creeping into all the crevices of the old shrines. What somber reflections such scenes excite! Here in the belfry hangs the bell that sent its sol- emn tones through the glades and groves, calling the monks to chant their matins and vespers, while AN EXCURSION TO NARA. 269 Europe was yet in mediaeval gloom. The Algon- quins battled with the Iroquois beside the waters of the Hudson while these mellow tones trembled through the upland woods, summoning the votaries to chant their monotonous rhythms before the grim monster presiding within the sanctuary below. One can almost fancy he sees the phantom-like proces- sion of yellow-robed priests sweeping through yon- der gateway, across the courtyard, up the steps, and into the evening shades of the gloomy building. They prostrate themselves before the sable god, dimly perceptible through the dusky shadows and the smoke of the burning incense. The huge drum shakes the place with its bellowings, while the bell rends the air with its throbbing notes — drowning the murmurs of the assembled throng. The priests now increase the volume of their chants, their notes are pitched on a higher key, and their rapid hummings fill the immense room with a tempest of prayer. The immense brazen gongs strike up, the drum shakes the place with its stupendous din, the bell sends one continued wave of clangor rolling up among the dusky pines and down over the town nestled among the foot-hills — and the people then know that the dread god is being propitiated. As the chants increase in rapidity, the long pro- cession marches and counter-marches, prostrates it- self, kneels and rises with bewildering celerity. In the faint twilight a weak imagination could almost fancy the placid features of the image to relax into a smile in contemplation, forsooth, of such pageantry. 2 70 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. The din now gradually dies away, the drum and the bell are silent, the torrent of supplication subsides, the tapers are extinguished, the smoking incense on the altar expends its fumes, and the procession files out in solemn order through the shadows of the portals. Unbroken silence again settles upon the place, and the people slumber peacefully, know- ing that his majesty has been pacified for the night ; while the belated peasant, hurrying through the somber avenues, as he sees the shadows of the gloomy pines cast upon the crimson walls of the sanctuary, hastens his steps lest his untimely in- trusion arouse the latent ire of unseen powers. When the morning mists float slowly away from the rice-fields, the long line again marches across the court-yard and through the portals; the same pageantry, din, and turmoil again rouse the echoes of the place, and the drowsy town folk then know that the morning prayers are being offered up, and they feel safe, for how can so fine an idol turn a deaf ear to such pompous supplications ? And so, for more than twelve hundred years, this perpetual round of devotion has continued. While empires have fallen, while arts, sciences, and civiliza- tion were passing through troubled periods toward a noble maturity, the rhythm of these chants — equally unintelligible to the people and to the ma- jority of the priests — has been supposed to propiti- ate the dread influences of mysterious elements. Ambitionless, spiritless, debasing, the teachings of Buddhism have given slip to the centuries, doing AN EXCURSION TO NARA, 271 but little to elevate humanity ; and now the light dawning from the east has startled the votaries at their shrines, and has roused them from their leth- argy. And the decayed leaves tangled amid the unkempt grass by the gales of autumn — silent wit- nesses of the neglect settling upon the place — sug- gest the decadence of the most ingenious religion ever invented by the human mind ; and whether our brain-proud philosophers are willing to admit the fact or not, yet the conclusion seems clear, that the tenets of Buddhism have been found insufficient to raise mankind to that high plane of morality and religious development to which the divine teachings revealed through the Redeemer have been able to raise the nations of Europe and America. Riding home in the night, chasing the village lights for hour after hour, I could not resist the dreamy influence of the sweet tones of the monas- tery bells that trembled across the rice-fields at regular intervals. Such melancholy melody ! How solemn and subdued were their suggestions ! Life, they seemed to say, is undesirable ; existence is but a curse. Let us crush all our desires, all our passions, and all our impulses, until we have elimi- nated them. Then our being will be merged in the Infinite. We shall cease to have independent existence. We shall be Nirvana — annihilated! Yours truly, Theophilus Pratt. LETTER XVI. FUJIYAMA. Kioto, September 27, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus: In looking over my journal the other day, I came across the account of my trip up Fujiyama two years ago. As subjects for letters are now becoming rather scarce, I will send you a written- up account of it. Almost everybody writing about Japan has something to say about Fujiyama. This naturally makes the subject somewhat stale, nevertheless it is one that will stand much elabo- ration. Fujiyama is the center-piece of Japanese scenery. It is the first point of land that the approaching traveler sights as he comes bounding over the waves a hundred miles away. We spied its dim outlines at daybreak rising specter-like against the rosy tints that suffused the horizon. All day it loomed up before us ; its flattened crest and snow- ribbed cone towering superbly above the massive mountain ranges around its base. How the pas- sengers admired its magnificent proportions ! One of them, an Englishman, had climbed the stu- pendous cone and had slept upon the summit. How charmed we were with his description of FUJIYAMA. 273 sunrise as seen from that summit, and of how the water froze there in midsummer ! I then resolved to climb the mountain on the first favor- able occasion. We gazed on its expanding outlines and changing phases with increasing admiration. When we passed between the headlands and steamed for hours up the bay, we found much else to take our notice ; yet we frequently turned our eyes Fuji-ward to admire its lovely propor- tions. As we lay at anchor at Yokohama, the clouds, like long banners, trailed midway from its sides, and the radiant lines of sunset formed a background of striking beauty. The lover of nature never forgets this first view of Fujiyama. Lovely Fuji ! Well art thou called the matchless one! What wonder that the artists of the thir- teen provinces within sight of thy stately majesty make thee their inspiration ? In August, of 1875, I made my arrangements for climbing Fujiyama. My traveling companion, whom we will designate as Jack, was also a teacher in the government schools in Tokio. Naturally we made congenial companions. Our plan was to go to Kob6 by steamer, and then to return over- land to Tokio by way of Kioto, and Fujiyama. We were going to climb up from the sea-shore and descend on the opposite side toward the Hakon^ range. Taking the steamer at Yokohama, we reached Kob^ in a day and a half. Then we went by train to Osaca, where we tarried a couple of days " doing " 18 2 74 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the place, as the " Globe Trotters ** express it. Then we took a flat-bottomed river-boat and were poled and towed up the Kamogawa to Kioto, where we tarried ten days '* doing" the city. Leaving Kioto, we traveled in jinrikshas along the Tokaido for nearly three hundred miles until we reached a village on the sea-coast near the base of Fuji- yama. Jack had already gone on ahead to meet some friends at Hakon^, intending to return and meet me at the base of the mountain by the shore, but a violent typhoon was raging along the coast, so that I was detained here a couple of days. On the morning of the third day the storm had passed away and left the atmosphere beautifully clear. Being hidden behind a promontory, we were as yet unable to see Fuji. We now found ourselves unable to continue our journey by the Tokaido, as the torrents pouring from the moun- tains had swollen several brooks that ran across our road to such an extent that they were quite impass- able. We therefore took a fishing-boat and deter- mined to round the promontory and reach the base of the mountain by sea. Shipping our jinrikshas and luggage, we (the boy, the coolies, and myself) jumped into the boat, while a dozen fishermen put their shoulders to the prow, and we were launched with a shout into the foaming surf that came thundering in from the Pacific. The skillful scullers soon had us out into steadier water be- yond the danger of capsizing. FUJIYAMA. 275 When we had rounded the promontory, Fuji in all his majesty stood before us. The air was so clear that it seemed as if we could see the very bowlders on the summit. There was nothing to distract the gaze, as the mountain stood quite alone, many miles from any range. It swept up directly from the shore. Nature was in her loveliest mood after the hurricane. The air was as clear as crystal, and the fields of waving grain and the woods and villages upon the majestic slopes of the mountain stood out as distinctly as possible. The morning sun bathed the rugged cone with purple tints of strange beauty. With one glance you saw the general features of the landscape ; directly before us lay the beach ; then came a belt of rice-fields ; then came villages, orchards, and wheat-fields stretching several miles up the gentle slopes ; then came a girdle of woods winding around the mountain about midway up, forming a vast band nearly ten miles wide ; finally came the cone of lava and cinders, forming a mas- sive cap fully four miles wide. The distance from shore to summit was nearly thirty miles. The altitude of the mountain is'nearly thirteen thousand feet ; yet so clear was the air that the summit did not seem to be further off than two or three miles. The waves of the ocean were of a glorious blue. The bold promontories toward the north and to- ward the south plowed the deep half-way to the horizon, making an immense semicircular bay that bathed the base of the mountain with perpetual 276 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. foam and spray. Lovely Fuji ! What wonder that the fisherman along the distant coast, as he sees thy ghostly form spread against the evening skies, ad- mires and adores thee ? What wonder that when thy brow is black with clouds that sink midway to the sea, — dread harbingers of the coming storm — he fears thee ? After sculling along the shore for some distance, we plunged through the surf, and shot high up on the beach. Crossing this, we found ourselves in ricc-flelds flooded with the recent rains. The cool- ies were frequently half-submerged. When we had floundered half-way across this uninteresting sec- tion of country, we spied Jack coming from the op- posite direction. His trowsers were slung over his shoulders, and he was wading along like a stork. Our meeting was cordial and informal. We spent the greater part of the morning in wading through this flooded district. We finally reached a village upon the slopes, where we changed our clothes and lunched. In the afternoon we journeyed several miles around the slopes in order to reach the path that led to the summit. This stretch of country between the mountain and the ocean was indescribably beautiful. Villages, shrines, orchards, gardens, and wheat-fields were spread over the gently undulating slopes in great profusion, and were wildly pictur- esque and charming. The circumference of the base of Fuji on this line around the slopes is sixty miles. It takes three days to make the journey, FUJIYAMA. 277 which is one of the loveliest imaginable, as the scenery is perpetually changing with each spur that you round. Late in the afternoon we reached the path that led to the summit. We went up the slopes for a short distance and stopped for the night at a tem- ple that frequently was utilized for the accommo- dation of travelers. It would be difficult to find a more enchanting locality. Beauty was on every hand, — whether you watched the blue waves speckled with sails, or the villages nestled amid the groves and gardens, or the mists chasing the waving billows in the wheat-fields on the slopes overhead. And then the sunset bathing the land- scape, and the twilight tingeing the ravines and the woods with sable hues! How shall I describe all this? At seven o'clock next morning we packed our few articles of luggage on the back of a mountain coolie, and, with our boy, started for the summit. We walked through ten miles of wheat-fields up a gradually ascending slope. The mists lay heavily along the mountain side, obscuring the view com- pletely ; but soon after we had started the air cleared, and the day became delightfully bright and pleasant. So clear was the atmosphere that it seemed as if we could have seen almost any object on the summit twenty miles distant, yet, at that very moment the cone was thronged with white- robed pilgrims quite invisible to us. By eleven oclock we had reached the woods. 2 78 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN, We followed the narrow path through them for six miles until we reached the barren cone. These woods are very dense. Were you to get lost in them you would have much difficulty in getting out again. A gentleman connected with a survey- ing party strayed into one of the ravines here and nearly perished of hunger before he could be found. The trees are pines, beeches, and bam- boos, all tangled up with vines and impenetrable underbrush. The ascent through the woods was so steep that we made frequent halts. The foliage completely obstructed our view during this portion of the journey. At the last resting-place on the verge of the woods we stopped for dinner, which con- sisted of boiled rice, sardines, crackers and tea. Here was a temple in honor of the gods that preside over the mountain. Precisely what the nature of these divinities may be is a matter of doubt to myself. Great phenomena in nature seem to be always connected in the human im- agination with mysterious powers. Starting with this as a basis, the Shinto priests feel themselves justified in trading on the situation by selling sacred trinkets to the pilgrims, and in setting up a huge contribution box in a conspicuous place for the offerings of the devotees. Religion and the " hat ** seem to be correlatives even here. As July and August are the only months during the year in which Fuji can be safely scaled, the season for these priests is very short ; but, as many thou- FUJIYAMA. 279 sands improve this opportunity to climb up, their business must declare steady and encouraging divi- dends. Up to this point in the ascent, people may be carried in kagos, or may ride on horseback ; but from this point upward everybody must walk. Arming ourselves with long, filleted staffs, pur- chased from the priests, we continued our journey and reached the cone at about two o'clock. The scene was immediately changed — not a bit of ver- dure lay before us — nothing but lava, rocks, and cinders. The temperature now became rapidly cold, and we were cautioned not to lose our breath lest we should have difficulty in regaining it in such rarefied atmosphere. The ascent now became incredibly steep. We took a zig-zag path up the cone, for it would have been impossible to have gone straight ahead without the assistance of ropes and ladders. Even then we found our faces almost touching the rocks in front of us as we climbed. We rested every five minutes or so, and it took four hours for us to scale this last stretch to the summit. How in the name of human endurance our coolie managed to carry sixty pounds of dead weight up this moun- tain is a matter of marvel. I presume it is merely a question of practice, but may Providence spare me from such practice ! From the edge of the woods to the summit, at intervals of half a mile, are eight resting-places. These are huts constructed of lava rocks, and 28o LETTERS FROM JAPAN. roughly floored inside. When the terrible gales are sweeping the cone, it would be impossible for anything like a house to stand here. We rested at each hut, and made and drank some tea. We were informed that all the water on the cone was brought from the base of the moun- tain, as there were no springs or wells in this heap of cinders, and the snow in the ravines was inaccessible. This impressed us as rather strange. The ravines did not seem so very difficult of access after all. I presume this was merely an excuse for selling the water and netting a handsome dividend. Hut what created a far more lively impression upon us was the host of fleas in all the huts. They swarmed ! Pilgrims from all parts of the empire, bringing every variety of species of these insolent parasites about their clothing, had pro- duced a cross-breed that possessed an energy and vivacity in their method of assaulting the person that were incredibly effective, and which cast quite in the shade all the efforts of their constituent ancestors. At five o'clock we reached the last hut just be- neath the summit. Here we took supper. As yet we had experienced no difficulty with our breathing. Here we had to submit to a bitter attack from our unrelenting enemies, the fleas. While we ate they did likewise, and theirs was certainly the heartier meal. Jack raved like a pirate. He scalded him- self with some hot tea, which he very naturally up- FUJIYAMA. 281 set during a frantic effort to reach the middle of his back before the enemy had left the scene. But we were comforted by the assurance that there were no fleas upon the summit, and that we would con- sequently have a refreshing night's rest. Up to this last hut these vile tormentors do not find the weather too severe for them to pursue their preda- tory habits, but upon the summit they are com- pelled to succumb to the cold. Upon that spot you stand in the only place in the empire where fleas do not exist. But fifteen minutes' climbing lifts you from torments to serene bliss. . Leaving the eighth resting place at a quarter to six o'clock, we proceeded to climb the last stage of the ascent, which required about fifteen minutes of exceedingly steep and arduous work ; and at six o'clock we stood upon the summit. But what a summit it was! Totally different from our expec- tations. Seen from a distance, the top of Fujiyama seems to be perfectly flat. We had expected to find a sort of plateau with a kind of depression in the center caused by the crater. But we found the summit to be a rugged country. It was three miles in circumference, and was covered with lava hills, one of which was two hundred feet high at least. The crater was encircled by these hills, and was about two miles in circumference. It was not over two hundred feet deep and was entirely in- active. We found quite a village of huts built of lava rocks. Hundreds of pilgrims were occupying them. 282 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. The proprietors of these quasi hotels bring every- thing up from the base of the mountain, and, from a native stand-point, keep a pretty fair larder. As a matter of course, everything is expensive. It costs fifty cents to pass the night on the summit. This is very fabulous indeed for people who can be accommodated at any of the ordinary hotels within the empire for only twelve cents per night including supper and breakfast. We found a corner of one of the huts unoccupied, and at once appropriated it to our own use. While the boy was preparing supper, we rambled over the hills and bowlders, viewing the matchless scenery. We found it necessary to wrap ourselves up warmly, as it was exceedingly cold. A scum of ice was already forming on the water in the pails. Al- though the atmosphere was very rare, yet we did not experience any difficulty with our respiratory organs. This was probably due to the fact that our lungs were very sound. The view from the summit of Fujiyama is mag- nificent beyond description. On one hand you have the Pacific Ocean, and on the other hand you have thirteen provinces of Nippon. You become dizzy as you gaze down the steep sides of the cone, over its sable girdle of woods, and upon the slopes at its base. It is terribly precipitous. You feel as if you could jump down upon the empire. Thou- sands of feet beneath you the clouds and the even- ing mists are beginning to gather around the mountain side. They mass themselves in huge FUJIYAMA. 283 billows against the woods until it seems as if the ocean itself had risen upon the mountain ; now the upward currents of air strike the clouds from below and they are tossed upward in huge columns like smoke arising from some vast battle-field, — and your view is again unobstructed. You see the grand mountain ranges of Hakon^, colossal in themselves, lying like dwarfed hills beneath you, and stretching away until merged in the obscurity that veils the horizon. In their midst lies lovely Hakon6 Lake like a mirror in the hills. As far as you can see, to the east and to the south, are mountain ranges diversified with sweet valleys and lovely lakes. The setting sun tinges this landscape with somber hues, and the deepening shades of twilight steal- thily sweep the entire scene from your view. Hun- dreds of pilgrims are now standing around in many groups, chanting prayers, clapping their hands, and bowing their heads in reverence of the magnificent scene. Perhaps you imagine that they are worship- ing the setting sun. But they do not know them- selves what they are adoring. The beauty and the solemnity of the occasion would of themselves naturally call forth spontaneous expressions of superstitious admiration from simple-minded peas- ants. Here was the monster that, but a few years before, had sent forth a mighty stream of fire and smoke thousands of feet into the air. It covered the country with stones and ashes for nearly a hun- dred miles around. It roared, and thundered, and 284 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, quaked. The surrounding country was terribly shaken. Yeddo was thrown to the ground, and was burnt up ; while over twenty thousand of its inhabitants were destroyed in the frightful disaster. Yet here lay the crater peaceful and harmless be- side us! Where had the terrible and mysterious power gone? What wonder that the untutored minds of the people were smitten with reverential awe when in the presence of such surroundings? Here reposed serenely beneath their tread the crest that had beckoned the fleets of Perry and had guided the navies of the empire. We picked our way back to the hut and effect- ually demolished the supper prepared for us by the boy. Hiring several comforters from the land- lord, we burrowed beneath them and slept soundly enough. In the morning we rose to see sunrise. The scene differed totally from that of sunset. The billowy clouds lay banked from the base of the cone to the horizon in every direction, just as if the ocean had risen up during the night. We were several thousand feet above them in clear air. Suddenly the clouds parted about midway toward the eastern horizon and the rays of the glorious sun shot through into our upper atmosphere, suffus- ing the cone with a gauzy, tremulous light, exqui- sitely weird and fascinating. The clouds soon rolled away to the horizon and we had the heavenly panorama of the previous evening spread around us. In this rare atmosphere, the rays of the sun are FUJIYAMA, 285 very powerful. While we kept within the shade, we were blue with cold ; yet when we allowed the sun to shine directly upon us, we could almost feel its rays blistering our skin. Breakfasting as well as we could with chattering teeth, we proceeded to descend the cone on the landward side toward Shubashiri, the town whence almost all foreigners start to climb up. We made the descent within four hours. We ran nearly all the way down. We rushed down the cone at a fearful rate, taking long jumps and landing knee- deep in cinders and ashes. Jack, in one of his fly- ing jumps went over a huge bowlder into a group of pilgrims climbing upward. How in the world he avoided killing or maiming some of them is a mystery to me. Two of them were knocked down outright. One of them picked himself up with a grunt and went on his way. The other one took to his heels in great terror at the strange apparition of a heavily bearded head, a long body, and a pair of mammoth boots, all clattering down the rocks without any apparent intelligence to guide their wild career. And he was in a fair way to beat the record down to Shubashiri when the shouts and laughter of his companions recalled him. Poor fellow ! He was as pale as death. He had never seen a foreigner before, and such an abrupt intro- duction rather unsettled his nerves. He did not show even a scratch, yet he had been thrown upon his back while his heels had been kicked into the air with such force that one of his sandals had been 286 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. hurled into a neighboring ravine ! He said that the only thing that frightened him was the shaggy- beard of the Ejinsan. He did not know what to make of it ; and as he wa§ pressed for time for re- flection, he acted upon the impulse of the moment and made for home. The ascent of Fujiyama is by no means a dan- gerous or very difficult one. Provided sufficient time be taken, almost any one possessing average powers of endurance can scale it. Thousands of pilgrims climb up every year. Many of these are old men. Many of them are women. We saw an old woman on the summit, who was said to be eighty years of age. I have no reason to doubt that she was. Lunching at Shubashiri, we pushed on to Ha- kon6 in the afternoon, arriving there in the night. We stopped at a hotel on the border of the lake. Above the mountains encircling the opposite shore of the lake, rose the cone of Fuji, continually re- minding me during my stay at this delightful sum- mer resort, of one of the pleasantest trips I have ever made. Lovely Fuji ! Farewell ! Yours truly, Theophilus Pratt. LETTER XVII. THE SATSUMA REBELLION. Kioto, November i, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus : The Satsuma Rebellion, which has been raging since the beginning of the year, is now ended. As the theater of war was limited to the Island of Kiushiu, we have seen nothing of it. Nor has it been an easy matter to collect reliable information, as the reticent government officials were the princi- pal reporters of the military operations. For eight terrible months the Imperial troops have been struggling with the rebels, shut in by the moun- tains and hemmed in by the sea, while we foreign- ers have been left to gather information as best we could. However, by means of the Yokohama news- papers, and by conversation with those returning from the scene of hostilities, I have been able to follow the course of affairs pretty well. This war was the dying struggle of Feudalism with Imperialism. It was a contest quite as mo- mentous to the destiny of the Japanese Empire as was, to us, our rebellion of 1 861. The Imperial Government had long been expecting the outbreak, therefore they were to a certain extent prepared 288 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. for it. Yet, as with us in our war, they did not anticipate so fearful a conflict. The soul of the rebellion was the elder Saigo. The Satsuma clan, of which he was a member, were the rebels. Saigo was the ideal of feudal chivalry. He was admired and feared, not only by his own clan, but by all Japanese. All that was brave, shrewd, and magnanimous, was attributed to him. He was the ideal samurai^ — typical of all that was noble and grand in Japanese estimation. He was considered the ablest soldier in the empire. Dur- ing the war of the restoration, nine years ago, he led the Imperial forces against the Shogun, and vanquished him. As that war is but a prelude to the present conflict, I will briefly outline it here. At the commencement of that struggle, the em- peror was in the Gosho (Imperial castle in Kioto) under the surveillance of Tokugawa, who yet con- trolled the Imperial person. He filled the castle of Kioto with his retainers. Prestige rested on his banners. He was the authorized ruler of the empire. Those who disobeyed his orders were rebels and traitors. But his authority, while not yet openly defied, was barely tolerated by Satsuma, Tosa, and Choshiu. These mutinous and powerful clans were gathering their warriors around the Gosho ostensibly to present certain petitions to the emperor, but with the secret intention of wresting the Imperial person from the Shogun's grasp and making him the actual sovereign of the realm. Until they could accomplish this adroit diplomatic stroke THE SATSUMA REBELLION. 289 their status was that of rebels and traitors; but with the Imperial person in their possession, they could obtain a revocation of the Shogun's authority to rule the empire, and could strip him of all his emol- uments and power. Satsuma and his allies would then be the enforcers of the Imperial decrees ; while the Shogun and his allies would be rebels and traitors if they disobeyed the Imperial man- dates. For months the hostile clans were busily occu- pied in collecting their forces around Kioto. Aidzu and Tokugawa gathered theirs from the north ; and Tosa, Choshiu, and Satsuma hurried theirs up from the southwest. As yet there were no open hos- tilities, but the hostile retainers glared savagely at each other in the streets. It needed but a spark to kindle the flames of civil war. Saigo and Kirino were on hand fuming for a favorable opportunity to commence the strife, and the opportunity soon came. Kirino precipitated the conflict by expelling the Shogun's forces from the vicinity of the Gosho, and securing the " legal grip " of the emperor's person. After a series of desperate encounters, the Imperialists drove the Shogun's forces south of Fusim6 toward Osaca. Here they rallied and were led back to Fusim^, with heavy reinforcements, where they were met by Saigo's forces in the rice- fields. It is said that on this occasion Saigo, by superior strategy, defeated thirty thousand troops with only seven thousand men. The larger body of soldiers found it almost impossible to deploy 19 290 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. in the slushy fields. Saigo therefore enveloped the heads of the long columns with nimble skirmishers that speedily dissolved the huge and unwieldy mas- ses into a routed rabble. The Shogun fled in wild disorder to Kob6, where he embarked for Yeddo on an American steamer, and, retiring to his castle at Shidzuoka, he took no further part in the contest. But his followers kept up the fight for a year. They were driven slowly northward into Yesso, where they were finally vanquished. The Province of Aidzu was terribly punished for its obstinate resistance. Sword and flame followed that hardy clan into its mountain home in the north, and reaped a fearful harvest among the peaceful villages and hamlets of that grandly mountainous Daimiate. At the close of hostilities, Saigo, instead of in- dulging in promiscuous proscription of the hostile leaders, magnanimously pardoned them. This act endeared him greatly to the people, and made him the most popular man in the empire. Satsuma now became the Imperial pet. Favors without number were showered upon that war- like clan. Saigo was made generalissimo of the Imperial forces. The highest offices in the realm were filled by Satsuma men. It seemed as if too much could not be done for this clan. Its slightest frown would apparently fill the Imperial bosom With great solicitude, and the will of Saigo became law. His family was exalted ; his friends commanded the finest appointments at the empe- THE SATSUMA REBELLION, 29 1 ror*s disposal ; the army, the navy, and the civil service were filled with Satsuma men. At the same time it must be conceded that the Satsuma men were exceedingly brave and capable. Years of independence had developed in them ex- ecutive abilities not attained by less favored clans that had been subjected to the immediate control of the hectoring Shogun. The Satsuma samurai were certainly clever, daring, and hospitable. At the outbreak of hostilities, Satsuma was generally conceded to be more than a match for any clan in the empire. And, by the close of the war, the ardent members of that clan began to consider themselves a match for the empire itself. The bestowal of so much honor upon Satsuma naturally excited the jealousy of other clans by no means deficient in able men. As the government became firmer, this monopoly of Satsuma began to be abridged, and men from other clans were also fa- vored with honors. And it soon became apparent that the power of Satsuma had ceased to be om- nipotent. Although the members of that warlike clan did not exactly relish this state of affairs, yet they possessed too much good sense to take as yet any serious offense at the way the tide was turning. When the government, in 1870, abolished feudal- ism, and dispossessed the Daimios of their Daimi- ates, Satsuma obediently fell into line and supported the new regime. During the rebellions in Saga and in Choshiu, the allegiance of Satsuma remained unshaken. 292 LET TERS FROM JAPAN, But at last the conservative spirits of Satsuma became discontented. They stood aghast at the rapid strides civilization was making. They saw feudalism and old Japan drifting hopelessly out of sight. Truly the old days were never to return ! The privileges of the samurai were being curtailed. Centralization had set toward the Tokio Govern- ment, and in a few years the glory of Satsuma would be merged in the empire, — its resplendent individu- ality would be a matter of history. Deep and omi- nous mutterings were heard. For two years before the actual commencement of hostilities, it was evi- dent that a tremendous conflict was brewing be- tween the conservative and the liberal elements in Japan. Nevertheless the government steadily pur- sued its policy of introducing whatever it found worth imitating in the customs of foreign countries into the political and social fabric of the new Japan. At last the great Saigo grew sullen. He with- drew from Tokio and went to Kagoshima, the capi- tal of Satsuma. To a great extent this province was quite independent of the government in the management of its internal affairs. Thither flocked the dissatisfied Satsuma men. The locality was emi- nently adapted as a place for brewing sedition, as it was perfectly free from government surveillance, and by the beginning of this year Saigo and Sat- suma were in full revolt. It was fortunate for the government that all the leading men of Satsuma did not go into revolt. It was a noticeable fact that those who had been THE SATSUMA REBELLION, 293 abroad and had obtained liberal ideas were loyal to the emperor. The younger Saigo remained stead- fast in his allegiance. So did Okubo, the Minister of War. But, above all, the navy, filled with Sat- suma men, and commanded by a Satsuma man, re- mained faithful. Had the fleet not prevented the rebels from reaching the mainland, the issue of the conflict would have indeed been doubtful. Had Saigo been able to hurl twenty-five thousand men upon Kioto or Tokio, it would have been a black day for the government. With the navy at his dis- posal, the empire would have been at his merey. Great was the terror throughout the empire when it became known that Satsuma and the great Saigo had rebelled against the government. The very name of Saigo was a tower of strength to the cause that he advocated. His personal magnetism and popularity were unbounded. The government feared Satsuma less than they did that one man. I was in Tokio at the outbreak of the war, and can well remember the fear that pervaded all classes. Many feared that Saigo would appear in Tokio in a few days, leading on his fierce followers to plunder and proscription. The emperor and his court hastily went to Kioto, and awaited there the issue of the conflict. The wildest stories were afloat. It was reported that the frogs on the western shore of some pond had been engaged in warfare with the frogs on the eastern shore of the pond, and had vanquished them after a long struggle. " Ah ! " said the superstitious ones, " the sword-hilt is in the 294 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. West and the chrysanthemum is in the East.*' Some one said that the heimitty or common people, composing a large part of the Imperial forces, would never be able to face the samurai of Satsuma, — that one saimirai would put five hcimin to flight ; and as the troops marched through Tokio on their way south they were the recipients of pitying com- ments signifying that they were but so much meat for Saigo's swords. It was now time for the men of Aidzu to have their revenge on Satsuma. They eagerly volun- teered their services and flocked to the death- grapple with their ancient enemies. Many wild young samurai of other clans also enlisted from mere love of fighting, and many others went in on principles of general hatred for Satsuma. These fierce warriors, trained from boyhood to the expert use of the formidable double-handed swords, were valuable auxiliaries to the government in the moun- tains and ravines of Kiushiu, where hand-to-hand conflicts were fierce and frequent. Early in January Saigo took the initiative. De- spairing of winning over the navy, he marched his troops northward into the Province of Higo. I presume that his precise plans will never be known. Some say that his object was to conquer the Island of Kiushiu and proclaim it an independent repub- lic ; others said that he intended to march rapidly to the Shimonos^ki Straits and cross over to the mainland before the fleet could intercept him ; once on the mainland, and his prospects were flat- THE SAT SUM A REBELLION. 295 tering of raising the entire country in revolt and of working his way to Kioto and Tokio with ranks ever swelling with malcontents ; while others said that he was short in his supply of arms and ammu- nition and desired to equip his forces at the maga- zines in Kumamoto Castle in the northern part of Higo, about seventy miles north of Kagoshima. I think the last theory is not improbable. And it is quite likely that after overrunning Kiushiu they would have declared an independent form of government of some description, with Saigo at its head. Could they but capture the castle with a bold dash they would start with grand prestige, and would also have a stronghold in a wild and mountainous country from which to operate upon any part of Kiushiu. The troops were consequently hurried forward with great speed. Although it was midwinter, yet the roads of that country were entirely free from snow. The winters of southern Japan are lovely beyond description. Satsuma was reputed to be able to muster sixty thousand warriors; Saigo's forces, however, did not exceed twenty thousand men, so far as I can ascertain. Kumamoto Castle was garrisoned by about three thousand troops, and it was well sup- plied with military stores. Strategically consid- ered, the point was of vast importance ; for until the place had been captured no army from Sat- suma could get to Shimonos^ki Straits, or operate elsewhere upon the island with any degree of suc- cess. The Imperial Government was well aware 296 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. of this fact and had evidently well prepared the place for a violent attack. Saigo's men were but partly armed with rifles. The most of them were equipped with the keen double-handed swords of feudal times, and with daggers and spears. It seemed to be their opinion that patrician samurai could rush into close quar- ters with the hcimin and easily rout them — grant- ing even that they were armed with rifles and bay- onets. And it was reported that the astute Saigo ordered his soldiers not to kill the poor plebs in the government ranks, but rather to slash them well about the legs so as to disable them and ren- der it necessary for each man thus wounded to be borne off the field by two able-bodied comrades — thus depriving the opposing ranks of three soldiers instead of one. This policy argued to the native mind a keen insight into the military qualities of the hcimin. There can be no doubt, however, that Saigo led up against Kumamoto from i$,ooo to 20,000 as brave and desperate men as Japan could furnish, and, as for that matter, as formidable an array as any troops would care to face. Upon their ban- ners w^s inscribed the suggestive motto, '* If we conquer y we arc Imperialists ; but if we are van- quished, then are we rebels'' In Japan, even, success constitutes the difference between patriots and traitors. As everything depended upon celerity of action, Saigo hurled his forces fiercely upon Kumamoto. THE SATSUMA REBELLION, 297 The town and the suburbs were speedily reduced to ashes, but the troops within the castle repelled all assaults with the most unexpected bravery, pug- nacity, and skill. They fought magnificently. In the first place, they were well protected by massive walls and towers from which they could use their deadly rifles with terrible effect upon the ranks be- neath, and in the second place, they were officered by brave and skillful samurai^ who filled them with courage and pugnacity by their example. Upon their stubborn resistance hung the issue of the war. In vain did Saigo clamor at the gates and hurl his legions against the walls. His slaughtered warriors filled the moats and ravines to no purpose. It must have been with boundless chagrin that he found himself compelled to settle down to a long siege of this impregnable place. His only hope was either to take the garrison by surprise, or to starve them out. On several occasions his soldiers endeavored to scale the ramparts at night, when the absence of daylight would render the rifles less deadly until close quarters had been reached, when they hoped to sweep away the hostile plebs with a few cuts with their blades. But every assault failed. The garrison was always on the qui vive^ and it was found that swords and bayonets were not wanting skillful hands to ply them within the Imperial ranks when it came to a question of close quarters. On one occasion, two hundred of the most des- perate of Saigo's men pledged themselves to either 298 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. make a lodgment within the castle or to perish in the attempt. They chose a dark and stormy night for the desperate venture. Stripping off their clothes, and taking their swords in their hands, they crept through the gloom toward the fatal moat. None of them ever came back ; and, next morning, the Imperial banners, floating defiantly above the turrets, seemed to invite other bands of fanatics to enter the slaughter pen and be butchered with rifle, revolver, bayonet, and sword. Every day spent in besieging the castle lessened Saigo's chances of success in his enterprise. The government forces were being hurried from all parts of the empire, and were rapidly closing in around Kumamoto. Saigo found that he would soon be environed by the Imperial troops. He decided to turn upon them and rout them before they had quite hemmed him in. Leaving a small force to watch the castle, he marched to the northward to meet the advanc- ing forces. He came in collision with them among some mountains and rice-fields. A series of terrible conflicts ensued. The Imperial troops found great difficulty in deploying in the soft mud and narrow ravines. Before they had forced their way through this section of the country they had suffered heavy losses. They were constantly exposed to the at- tacks of nimble bands of samurai springing from every spot suitable for ambush. . Hurling them- selves madly against the troops, they often created sad havoc with their swords among the disordered THE SAT SUM A REBELLION. 299 crowds weakened by toilsome marching through a broken country. It is said that in the earlier en- counters the Imperial troops were badly decimated by these sudden onslaughts, and it is not to be won- dered at, for these expert swordsmen can make a bad mess in a confused crowd. When Sir Harry Parkes visited the emperor at Kioto several years ago, his twelve dragoons, armed with lances, sabres, and revolvers, were attacked by two fanatics who suddenly sprang upon them from an alley. So quick were they in their movements that nine of the men were disabled with frightful gashes in an incredibly short space of time. The fanatics would have escaped without a scratch had they not been cut down by a couple of Japanese accompanying the body-guard. But while the Imperialists lost heavily, the rebels also suffered severely. They found that the heunin possessed much obstinate pugnacity, even if they did not possess the dashing bravery of the samurai. In addition to all this, the Imperial forces were being constantly reinforced, while Saigo found it almost impossible to raise recruits just as soon as it became manifest that he was playing a losing game. He soon found himself facing overwhelming num- bers. After several weeks of hard fighting, the rebels were forced back upon their lines at Kuma- moto. They found themselves in a state of siege. For many weeks they kept up the unequal contest from behind their breastworks and trenches. The Imperialists held them there at bay while they 300 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. sent troops into their rear to cut off their supplies. And, to make matters yet more hopeless, Saigo now found his supply of ammunition nearly ex- hausted. His hopes of success were completely blasted, yet he determined to continue the struggle. Finding himself nearly surrounded, he raised the siege of Kumamoto Castle, and betook himself with his remaining followers to the most moun- tainous and inaccessible parts of Kiushiu, and there kept up an annoying guerrilla warfare for many months. At last his indojnitable energy seemed to weary of the useless contest. Every hope was ex- tinguished. He resolved to lead his followers back to Kagoshima and die in a last desperate struggle at home. Breaking away from his pursuers, who had chased him from place to place with the great- est persistency, he passed rapidly into Satsuma, in the vicinity of Kagoshima, upon which he des- cended like an avalanche, driving out the few sol- diers that the government had left there. The astonished Imperialists, however, speedily recovered from the bewilderment produced by this sudden onset, and speedily collected thirty thousand troops around the unhappy rebels. Then came the closing scene. A friend of mine, who was in command of one of the steamers in the harbor, gave me a full account of it. "The Im- perial forces," said he, *' numbered fully thirty thousand men. The rebel army had dwindled down to six hundred men. They were intrenched upon a hill-side in the immediate vicinity of the THE SATSUMA REBELLION. 30I town. At daybreak I was awaked by some heavy rifle firing, and was told that Saigo was being routed out of his den on the hill-side. Climbing the mast, I could see large detachments of government troops busily at work. With my glasses, I could see bodies of men (rebels I presume) scampering over the hill in all directions. They were evidently entirely without ammunition, and were being butch- ered mercilessly by the troops, who could shoot them down at a distance with rare impunity. Within an hour, everything was over. When things had quieted down, I went ashore with a Japanese officer to see what we could. *' Everything seemed quiet and orderly. The sol- diers were demurely standing by their arms in line of battle. There were fully thirty thousand of them, all armed with rifles. They completely sur- rounded the hill upon which Saigo had been in- trenched. In many places they had constructed bamboo fences around the hill — so much did they fear that this terrible Saigo would again break through and escape. But he and his chiefs all lay dead upon the hill. We passed through the lines, and went to where they were all laid out in a row. They had evidently committed suicide. Saigo had performed the hara-kiri. A friend had then cut off his head and was running away with it when inter- cepted. His body was a large and fine one. Upon the breast stood the gory head of its unfortunate possessor. We stood for quite a while watching the crowds of Imperial officers that came up. This 302 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. man had been their commander-in-chief for many years, and the old feeling of respect and admiration for him was yet uppermost in their minds. As each one recognized the features of Saigo in the ghastly scene before him, he instinctively saluted the corpse by touching his cap. They conversed in subdued tones, and seemed to be sincerely sorry that it had been necessary to sacrifice so fine a man." And so ended the Satsuma Rebellion. It cost the government upward of fifteen million dollars to quell it. To us this sum seems small enough, but it is a very heavy load for Japan, I can assure you. It was a cause of grim satisfaction to the rebels that they had at least inflicted heavy losses on their enemies. The government lost upward of fifteen thousand men in battle ; which, con- sidering that they had only about forty thousand men in the field, is a tremendous percentage. But the benefits resulting from the war will be substan- tial and far-reaching. The government can now exercise control over the internal affairs of Satsuma, and that spirited little province will cease to be a hot-bed of sedition. The Japanese Empire is now an established fact. Yours truly, Theophilus Pratt. KlINS Oh THR llTADKI < >K AlDZl' L AMI t. LETTER XVIII. HIYEISAN. Kioto, November lo, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus : One of the most enjoyable excursions in the vicinity of Kioto is the trip to the summit of Hiyeisan, a mountain of almost solid granitic for- mation, situated about eight miles north-east of the city and overlooking Lake Biwa from an altitude of nearly five thousand feet. It was the scat of one of the finest Buddhist monasteries in Japan. Its priesthood contained over five thousand mem- bers. They owned the entire mountain and much of the territory around its base. At one time they are said to have levied tribute from some of the adjoining provinces. In those days of their power they bade defiance from their rocky eyrie to the Shoguns themselves. But about three- hundred years ago they were totally vanquished by Nobunaga, the Shogun preceding Hid^yoshi. Since that time, repeated humiliations have crushed their towering ambition. Their monastery is now almost deserted : but its surroundings and its his- tory are nevertheless exceedingly interesting. I 304 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. will, in connection with a description of the monas- tery, take this occasion to give you a few observa- tions upon Buddhism, derived from several years of careful observation and eager research. Leaving my house after breakfast, accompanied by the boy. who carried our lunch in a basket, we walked through several miles of fields and gardens until we came to the hills at the base of the moun- tain. The intervening country was beautiful. As we rose above the foot-hills and surrounding moun- tains, we obtained a view of the Yamashiro Val- ley, that was lovely beyond description. Kioto, embowered in groves and gardens, lay far beneath us beside the glittering shoals of the Kamogawa. There lay the religious heart of the empire, sur- rounded by its temples and shrines. The road up the mountain was well shaded and plentifully suj>- plied with delightful springs of water bubbling up from numerous granite basins. The scenery from every point was superb. The slopes were deeply wooded and formed safe retreats for wild deer and boars ; and the glorious pheasants, startled by our footsteps, whirred past us ever and anon. Just before reaching the monastery, we had a view of Lake Biwa, that was surpassingly lovely. This lake is lovelier than Lake George ; and it is nearly twice as large. The scenery around its shores is far grander. The lake, with its inclosing mountains, forms a huge basin constituting Omi Province. The blue water lies beneath us, bearing HIYEISAN. 305 on its bosom boats and steamers. Spread around the shores are lovely green fields and villages. I have seen grander scenery in Japan, but there is none more beautiful than the glimpses of Lake Biwa as seen through the trees from the sides of Hiyeisan. Turning a sharp bend in the road, we come in view of the monastery in the forests of magnificent cryptomeria among whose topmost branches the roofs may be seen like dovecotes in the trees. Although the mountain was an inexhaustible quarry of granite, yet the builders of the temples never used a bit of stone in their buildings. Everything was made of wood. In the old days the monastery had scores of huge temples all through these superb groves up here within this lovely vale, and within half an hour's climb of the summit, and shrines innumerable were scattered along the roadside away down to the foot-hills. The monastery, in the days of its prosperity, was indeed a magnificent institution. From it, as a center, roads branched out into all the provinces around the base of the mountain. The abbot claimed the entire mountain and liberal slices of adjoining territory. His shaven emissaries made regular circuits of his little realm, collecting the revenues and superintending matters generally. He was a great power in the land, not only dictating terms to the neighboring Daimios, but frequently waging successful war against them. The abbot had a very elastic title. The legends report that 20 306 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. an ancient monk requested from the authorities some land upon the mountain, whereon to build a shrine in honor of Shaka (Buddha). He desired as much land as his mat would cover. This apparently- modest request was readily granted. Whereupon the mat, upon which the monk was sitting, began to spread out in every direction, by means of super- natural influences, until it had covered the entire mountain, thus securing by this pious fraud an immense piece of territory. Should this abstract of title fail to convince the incredulous, the legen- dary archives furnish another title, to the effect that the monk was decreed as much land as he could reach with his staff while he stood still. Whereupon the stick began to lengthen until it reached the foot-hills, thus including the mountain within its scope. Should either of these claims fail to convince, I doubt not but what the incredu- lous will find an inexhaustible supply of titles within the monastic archives from which to choose. Centuries ago, when the monastery was founded, the mountain was wild and rugged enough. Pine, oak, beech, kayaki (the finest hard wood in Japan), maple, and bamboo trees covered the slopes and cliffs, while impenetrable underbrush filled the rav- ines. Monkeys filled the forests,and wild boars,deer, bears, and panthers rendered the place a grand hunt- ing-ground for valorous Daimios from the adjoin- ing provinces. It was truly a wild and magnificent country. But in the course of years the undergrowth was cleared away from the vicinity of the monastery, HIYEISAN. 307 and thousands of cryptomeria were planted there, which in a few years embowered the whole vale and plateau in their cool embrace. Roads were laid out through the forests on all sides. They wound around the spurs, zig zagged down the slopes, and hugged the edges of the ravines, until they emerged into the green fields. The waters of the delicious springs that had erstwhile trickled through the rocks into the brooks gushing from the mountain side, were zealously captured and imprisoned for awhile within the stone fountains by the roadside, where the weary pilgrims could drink of them and be refreshed. Eligible localities were selected for booths, where the travelers could with a glance take in the Eden-like beauties of Yamashiro, or the sparkling glories of Omi clasped with emerald fields and sunk thousands of feet within the rugged mountains. From these eyries you can view with solemn feelings the majesty of the parting day as the shadows, lingering upon the mountain sides, stealthily creep over the fields upon the blue waves beneath, where scudding boats are flying homeward on bended wings. Here the moonlight and the zephyrs, sporting with the somber hues of night, seem to tremble at the mellow notes of the match- less bells tolling in the belfries of the monastery. Here the tired pilgrim can drink in the beauties of nature, while his nerves, cooled by the delicious water and the fragrant winds, are eminently suscep- tible to the sublime influences and the grand inspira- tions of the surroundings. Three times have I 3o8 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. climbed Hiyeisan, and yet do not find myself tired of its scenery. The fame and popularity of the monastery spread through the entire country. Thousands of pil- grims enriched its coffers with their contributions. Princes were votaries at its shrines, being desirous of propitiating the unseen powers of this world and those of the next — whatever they might be. New temples of vast proportions and elegant design were put up. Innumerable shrines for the propitia- ting of every conceivable influence in the Buddhist calendar were scattered everywhere, so that the throngs could take measures to ward off all imagin- able ills that might be lying in ambush against them. The simple quarters of the primitive anchorites de- veloped into luxurious and commodious establish- ments. The clothing of the monks became elegant, and the food became rich. Sak^ became a common beverage. The fatted fellows too often spent their evenings in drunken stupor instead of religious meditation. The strict vegetarian diet of their sect was discarded, and flesh, fish, and fowl were abundantly partaken of to the great scandal of the orthodox brethren, who abstained from eating anything that had been animated with the breath of life. In those bacchanalian times, you doubtless would have seen the bald-headed monks sallying forth to hunt the beasts upon the mountain with spears and arrows. Ah ! those were indeed roar- ing times, Julius Marcellus. Nor were these fatted monks satisfied with hav- HI YE I SAN, 309 ing the monopoly of things spiritual, but they must needs dabble in things temporal. After centuries of uncurbed indulgence, their soaring pride and vaunting arrogance induced them to dictate in mat- ters relating to the State. Now, if there is any point upon which the Japanese temporal authori- ties are sensitive it is upon the question of their prerogatives. Touch them there, and they blaze with fury. Dare to question their authority over the people, and you excite the fiercest and bitterest passions in their natures. The bellicose brethren of Hiyeisan might have gone on for ages whacking each other's shins, and fetching the gore from each other's shining pates, until every nerve in their bodies jumped with anguish, while practicing the intricacies of the fencing art with heavy bamboo foils — nay, more, they might have exercised acts of summary justice within their own domains to a lim- ited extent without being interfered with. But when they began to meddle in the general politics of the neighboring regions and to fling their formidable semi-spiritual and semi-military organization into the balance, then was reached a point of audacity that could not be tolerated by the ruling powers. A wild and horrible contest ensued. Terrible battles were fought. The fierce monks were forced back from point to point. They were slowly pushed into the ravines and up the slopes of Hiyeisan, stub- bornly contesting every vantage ground. Finally they were shut within the walls of their monastery, where they were well-nigh annihilated ; and the 3 1 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. magnificent monastery was razed to the ground. All the superb temples with their gorgeous para- phernalia were swept out of existence. Desolation marked the place for years. After the assassination of the terrible Nobunaga, those monks that had escaped the sword timidly came back to their mountain home and began to build again. In a few years the ancient glories of the place began to revive ; but the monastery never again attained its former magnificence. The buildings, though grand, were not as magnificent as those of yore. The monks were never as numer- ous as in old times ; nor did they develop the mili- tary traits that characterized them before their fearful humiliation and decimation. The place, however, soon became a great Buddhist monastery, and a popular resort for pilgrims. But the monastery of to-day is almost deserted. Since the disestablishment of the Buddhist religion as a state religion, the funds have been cut off ; and the revenues collected from the pilgrims during the summer are insufficient to keep up the establish- ment. While many pilgrims may visit the shrines, yet, being but poor peasants, but little money is dropped into the coffers by them. The monastery always depended for its chief support upon dona- tions from the wealthy classes, who now have cast aside their ancient creeds and stand forth as arrant atheists. But even the present temples are worth inspecting. Although not so exquisite as those of Nikko, nor so majestic as those of Kioto, yet they HI Y EI SAN, 311 are splendid specimens of native architecture, and the grounds of the monastery are lovely even in their unkept condition. From many parts of the place you can peep through the trees upon the blue waters of Lake Bivva, — a scene in itself suffi- cient to repay you for the exertions of the journey ; and if you will go beyond the monastery and climb the summit behind it, you will obtain a splendid view of the surrounding country, extend- ing as far as Osaca Bay on the south (which may be seen on a clear day), and as far as the mountains of Echizen on the north ; while to the east and west endless mountain ranges stretch toward the horizon. The Buddhists are the champion monastery builders of the world. In the rugged mountains of Thibet, in Ceylon, in the islands south of Asia, in the vast provinces of China, and in Japan, you will find these stately and elaborate institutions wherever an exceptionally lovely locality is to be found. Many centuries ago have these nature- loving anchorites pre-empted all the choice spots. And it must be conceded that they have rendered great service to mankind by beautifying spots and localities that otherwise would have remained wild fastnesses, and by cultivating the aesthetic part of human nature, by holding Nature herself in her loveliest moods before its gaze. Who can doubt that the thousands of peasants, who have left the slime of their native fields and the miasmas of their filthy villages, and have visited these cool retreats 312 LE TTERS PROM JAPAN, in clean vesture for a few days during the sultry summer, go back to their drudgery with more cheerful minds and with a few fresh ideas about the lovely world beyond the borders of their wretched hamlets ? Love for nature is one of the characteristic ideas of Buddhism. Shaka himself was powerfully in- fluenced by it. The son of a king, brought up amid luxury and refinement, possessing a sensitive and sympathetic nature, and gifted with a keen and philosophic mind rarely found in one of his rank, he is suddenly brought in repulsive contact with human misery. The reaction upon his nature was intense. It produced melancholy meditation and a violent distaste for the garish frivolities of the sen- suous court in which he had been brought up. Meditation begat a thirst for further facts relating to the affairs of human life. He flies from the court and its hateful associations. He wanders about among men, and becomes familiar with the details of human life. With his mind well stored with ac- curate facts, and with his heart sickened with scenes of cruelty and misery, he left the society of men and fled to the solitudes of nature, hoping there to generalize upon the facts he had collected, and to evolve some supreme principle, some great and general law that should regulate human passions and cruelty, and thus lessen the terrible misery of mankind that he saw prevailing everywhere. After years of profound thought, he evolved the grand idea that if men would be merciful to all liv- HIYEISAN. 313 ing creatures, then the suffering in this world would be greatly reduced. Carrying out this idea into practice, he formed a law to the effect that no creat- ure animated with life should be killed. This, he thought, would prevent homicide and the needless slaying of dumb creatures. Evolving yet further from his soulful meditations, he conceived the idea that for man to live above the miseries of this life and to obtain an exemption from miseries hereafter, it was necessary for him to eliminate from his mind all thoughts and desires whatsoever,, to make his mind a void and keep it in that condition until utter mental abstraction had been attained. Then, in the course of years, when the body died, the mind would merge into nothingness, — the original con- dition of the universe, according to his ideas, — and the human desires and passions, which were mere ac- cidents of matter clogging the mind, would be anni- hilated. And the mind would also be annihilated, for Nirvana means nothing else. In accordance with this theory, he enunciated the dogma that this utter mental abstraction could be attained before death, and whoever attained it thus during life, would become Nirvana at death. But that if any one neglected to attain this mental abstraction before death, then his desires and pas- sions would still hold his mind captive and would force it into new forms of existence ; would pass it through ceaseless existence for cycles of time until it had again become endowed with the human body, when it would have another chance for Nir- 314 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. vana ; which, if it again neglected to attain, it would again be whirled through the ceaseless miseries of mundane existence. In other words, existence is a curse. Cease to exist, become Nirvana, and you will be freed from everything. The first proposition was better adapted to the people. Hence we find them respecting animals and treating them considerately. Although, as a matter of course, some of them were killed for food, yet, the effect of centuries of teaching was, to make the people of Burmah, China, and Japan, to a large extent, vegetarians. This accounts for the rice diet, perhaps. It has also made them mild in disposition. The second part of the proposition could not, of course, be fully comprehended or practiced by the masses of the people. It was a theory brooded upon by the monks alone. And even among them it was a rare thing to see a monk endeavoring to attain Nirvana. It was a mysterious doctrine that but few of them tried to put into practice. But should any of them ever feel disposed to put the theory into practice, there was always the dark room reserved for him in some secluded part of the monastery where he could immure himself. The natural result of trying to banish earthly cares from their thoughts, led the monks to seek retired localities among the mountains congenial to such an existence. This led to a romantic and beautiful system of monastery life, which was probably copied by the Romish Church and introduced into Europe. HIYEI$AN, 315 The monastic life in Japan, during the days when Buddhism was the state religion, must have been charming and romantic. Embowered among the grand mountains of the empire, they were secluded from the world, and yet exercised great influence upon it. The faith was introduced from Corea and China fully fourteen centuries ago, possibly earlier. It found the people to be amiable barbarians well- disposed to supplement their vague pastoral re- ligion (Shintoism) with something more substantial. Sites for temples and monasteries were speedily selected. And in a few years, or centuries, rather, a superb system of monasteries filled the empire with unsurpassed beauty. Magnificent groves en- vironed them. Cooling streams bubbled through their spacious grounds. The deep shade and silence of their superb forests of cryptomeria, that clothed the mountains with stately grandeur, called up the pensive moods of millions of pilgrims during many centuries. All the surroundings of these grand institutions, — the icy streams pouring from moss- covered basins, the sweet shade, the bracing air, the melancholy solitude, — all brought man into com- munion with nature that could not fail to benefit him. Here lived the monks for centuries, high up in the exhilarating atmosphere with their soul-stirring surroundings. Sworn to celibacy, their ranks were replenished with recruits from the seriously inclin- ed members of the community, usually from the middle classes. Fugitives from the vengeance of 3 1 6 LET TERS FROM J A PA N. political adversaries frequently found refuge with the brotherhood. Sometimes a man of property would endow them with all his possessions, and retire within their ranks to count the beads and chant the prayers. Sometimes those saddened by reverses and disappointed in their aspirations slipped away from home and friends to dream away the balance of their lives in the routine of religious duties. But by far the larger proportion of the brotherhood was composed of those who had no special ambition or aim in life, and who could be easily induced by the proselyting monks to enter the sacred walls and be assured of a life of comparative ease and comfort. I am not aware that any of the monks ever at- tained Nirvana, I do not think they were much inclined to that sort of thing. I do not think the happy, volatile, and inquisitive temperament of the Japanese could ever have endured the weary years of stupid, deadening abstraction indulged in by Chinese and Hindoo devotees. They much pre- ferred a life of quiet contentment, with plenty to eat and drink, and with no anxiety about worldly matters. Chanting the orisons at daylight, break- fast at about seven o'clock, light household duties during the morning hours, dinner at twelve, study, meditation, and recreation in the afternoon, chant- ing the vespers at sunset, and a long night for sleep, — there you have the whole business in a nut-shell. What an opportunity for moral and intellectual development ! What might not have been accom- HI Y EI SAN. 317 plished during a thousand years in the way of enlightening the world ! Yet nothing was accomplished. Aside from beautifying and developing temple architecture, from creating magnificent forests and avenues around their retreats, and instilling into the people a certain amount of reverential awe and love for Nature, the monks did nothing for the intellect- ual or the moral development of Japan. They made no inventions or discoveries in any of the departments of science. They added nothing of any special importance to the literature of the empire. No agricultural improvements are attributed to them. In no way were they con- nected with the political advancement of the people. Ambitionless, spiritless, deadening, their lives were just like their creed — a hopeless endeavor to merge existence into oblivion and Nirvana. Their lives were perfect blanks. The vast majority did not live by the strict rules of their sect. They evaded almost every require- ment. They followed the inclination of their vol- atile natures. They indulged in the entire list of vices. They were gamblers, libertines, drunkards, and sodomites. Rarely would you find good and pious men ; and these were unable to stem the tide of corruption that prevailed in the monasteries. Although not so warlike, the monks throughout the empire were no better than those of Hiyeisan. A life of utter idleness and sensuous ease, without any elevating power in their religion sufficient to 3 1 8 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. master the bent of their passions and appetites, completely neutralized any elevating effect de- rivable from their lovely surroundings. What literature they did produce consisted of wild and improbable legends invented by their vivid imagi- nations and tacked on to the life of Shaka, or on to that of some canonized monk. * There is absolutely nothing in Buddhism to elevate mankind as the religion of Christ has done. This conclusion, I think, is sound. It is the result of long observation. The teachings of Shaka are a wild dream, a weird speculation, a fantastic theory, an ingenious hypothesis of a sincere and noble soul blindly groping for some principle that * In order that you may understand why the descriptive portion of this letter should here abruptly merge into an argument, it may be well to explain that the method of reasoning herein followed was one evolved from many hours of animated discussion with my schol- ars during several years of teaching. Some of my pupils were keen and intelligent young men who had become versed in all the skep- tical arguments of the age against Christianity. It was always un- derstood that I, while in no sense a sectarian, was a firm believer in the doctrines of Christ; and furthermore, that I was always ready to take up the gauntlet in defense of my beliefs whenever a scholar desired to discuss such subjects; provided, however, that the dis- cussion was in legitimate connection with the lesson of the day and did not conflict with other duties. As a matter of course, the young men, arguing in English, did not always express themselves clearly or idiomatically; but, after comprehending their full meaning, I always reduced their ai^uments, as a matter of courtesy, to intelli- gible shape, prior to combating them. The majority of their argu- ments were weak and easily disposed of. Some of their attacks, however, as you will probably admit in reading the balance of this letter, were by no means easy to noeet. HI Y EI SAN, 319 should explain the mysteries of life and death. It is claimed by some Boston philosopher that the funda- mental principles of Buddhism and those of Chris- tianity are the same ; that both are identical in underlying truths; that both are human religions, and that the religion of Christ will not elevate the Asiatics any more than the religion of Shaka has done ; that each religion is specially adapted by nature to those countries where it prevails. What a wild statement ! No thinking and candid man who has lived for any number of years among Buddhists would ever say this. Nobody who knows anything about the practical workings of Buddhism from personal experience could ever have the audacity to make so false a statement. Your Boston philosopher has evidently derived all his ideas of Buddhism from books. It is impos- sible to account for his inaccurate conclusions in any other way ; unless we assume that he harbors a bitter hatred against the religion of Christ, de- rived, as is sometimes unfortunately the case, from bitter associations during childhood. Let us argue this matter a little. All institutions must be judged by their effects or results. As it has been expressed, " from their fruits shall ye know them." There is no other test that can be applied. And this test is a perfectly satisfactory one. Now, I lay down the reasonable proposition that the object of religion is to elevate the spiritual and moral nature of man. If it fails to accomplish this, then what is it good for? Is it 320 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. merely to breed superstition among childish men and women? If that is all it can accomplish, it had better be abolished. Now let us apply this test to the religion of Christ and to that of Shaka. Buddhism has been in the world about twenty- five hundred years. It has prevailed for two thousand years throughout all eastern Asia. The religion of Christ has been in the world only eighteen hundred years. It has prevailed through- out western Europe for less than thirteen centuries. Twenty-five centuries ago, Buddhism commenced to operate upon people who were the most refined and civilized in existence. They had a literature fully two thousand years old. They had cities and palaces of vast size and magnificence. Eighteen centuries ago England was inhabited by a race of tattooed savages living in caves and fens. Cities were unknown. Marshes and dense forests covered a group of cheerless and uninviting islands with mists and fogs dripping from above during the greater part of the year. The condition of Den- mark, Germany, and France was but little better. There were no cities, no bridges, no literature. Forests and marshes covered the face of the country. Fierce savages rendered these regions more dangerous than the wild beasts. Paganism of the grossest and stupidest description prevailed. And Spain was not much better off. While Italy was peopled by a race of warriors whose fierce natures and sensuous appetites were violently hos- HIYEISAN. 321 tile to such curbing as the teachings of Christ in- culcated. Now what is the moral and spiritual develop- ment of Europe to-day as compared with that of Asia ? Is it not immeasurably superior ? Nay, can you compare the moral and spiritual condition of Europe with that of Asia at all ? I think not. It is vain and foolish to attempt to argue that the religion of Christ has not accomplished this won- derful change. It is silly and wicked to try to confuse the Romish Church with Christianity, and then urge that Christianity has retarded the de- velopment of science and of man's intellectual and spiritual nature. The religion of Christ, those principU-s enunciated by Him, never were antago- nistic to the development of human knowledge. But, on the contrary, by purifying man's moral nature and delivering him from the cloying ap- petites of* his animal being, these principles, when conscientiously practiced, have always tended to elevate his spiritual nature and to give tone and strength to his intellectual powers that eminently fitted him for scientific research and profound in- vestigation. A consistent practicing of the prin- ciples of Christianity invariably tends to develop man's bodily, mental, and spiritual nature. A con- sistent practicing of Buddhism deadens and dwarfs the bodily, the mental, and the spiritual powers of man in a most shocking manner. In direct propor- tion as races consistently follow the spirit of the teachings of Christ, in the same ratio will they be- st 32 2 LE TTEKS FROM JAPAN. come elevated in their triple natures. This seems to me to be a sound and logical conclusion based upon accurate facts. Therefore I say that facts show that the religion of Christ, or Christianity used in my sense, has elevated those nations consistently practicing it infinitely above those nations consistently practicing Bud- dhism, or the religion of Shaka. It is, therefore, the better religion, even from this stand-point alone. If the fundamental principles of Buddhism were the same as those of Christianity, they would equally have elevated the moral and spiritual nature of man, would they not ? Those principles had a keen, shrewd, and intelligent race to operate upon. The races of Europe possess no faculty of mind, soul, or body that the races of Asia are not also endowed with. The vast difference between the European nature and the Asiatic nature of to-day lies in the fact that the religion of Christ has demanded the development of a higher set of faculties and quali- ties than Buddhism has called for. A thousand years spent in developing these nobler elements of the soul has resulted in the evolution of a race whose social, political, and moral instincts are so infinitely superior to those of Asia that you would hardly believe the people of these two continents could have sprung from the same stock. The religion of Christ has shown itself to be able to elevate mankind infinitely more than Buddhism has done. This of itself would naturally lead even a casual observer to suspect that its fundamental HI Y EI SAN, 323 principles must be not only superior to those of Buddhism but also vastly different. And so they are. Let us compare them. Buddhism teaches that existence is undesirable ; that our appetites and passions should all be crushed and eliminated ; that we should strive to attain Nirvana, thus merging existence into anni- hilation ; and that if we do not attain Nirvana, we will be compelled to endure ceaseless cycles of existence. In short, it teaches that existence is a curse, and thus degrades every human faculty by endeavoring to dwarf and crush them into nothing- ness. If everybody put such teachings into prac- tice, mankind would be exterminated within a generation — for it is the privilege and the duty of every Buddhist to strive to attain Nirvana. The result of such doctrines is the stultifying and deadening of all human faculties, and the produc- tion of mild, ambitionless, degraded people. Now, on the other hand, the religion of Christ teaches that God created man for a life of happi- ness in this world, and for a life of greater happi- ness in the world to come; that He endowed us with appetites and passions that were to be curbed and enjoyed ; that the proper regulation and en- joyment of them are productive of physical, men- tal, and spiritual development ; that Christ himself, the son of God, was our example in these matters, and had set forth principles and rules for our guid- ance in these matters; and that if we patterned our lives after His, all would be well. 324 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Again : The religion of Christ teaches the doc- trine of the atonement, and the doctrine of the re- pentance and remission of sins without any earthly mediator, but by direct communion with God. Shaka never taught any such doctrine, nor have any of the prominent expounders of his faith ever breathed or hinted at so sublime a remedy for human woes. The majesty, the power, and the in- definable beauty of this doctrine alone give Chris- tianity a hold upon the affections and sympathies of a fallen race that the stony precepts of Shaka never approximated to even. Again: The religion of Christ teaches that we shall see our Redeemer in the next life ; that we shall know and be known of him ; that we shall have a conscious, happy, and glorious existence through- out all eternity upon the performance of certain easy conditions in this life. Shaka taught that we should be annihilated. Whatever his disciples in succeeding centuries may have taught, there can be no doubt that Shaka himself inculcated the doctrine of annihilation, — Nirvana. Again: The religion of Christ recognizes the worth, the merits, and the virtues of woman in a manner absolutely unknown to Buddhism. It reaches with its fostering care that half of the hu- man race which Buddhists not only ignore but treat with contempt. Again: The religion of Christ is perfect. It was given to us in a perfect condition. Nothing has been added to it in eighteen centuries. Nor HIYEISAN. 325 have the culture and refinement of nearly two thou- sand years been able to suggest any improvement, to make any amendment, or to find any defect therein. It is perfect, — just as we received it from the hands of God, and just as we should expect God to present a code of morality to man. It leaves no doubt as to its origin. It emphatically and distinctly declares itself to be from God, the Father. This point is dwelt upon with great clear- ness, and is frequently repeated. Its teachings meet all human requirements. No emergency in life is too complicated for it. If consistently and intelli- gently practiced, it will produce perfect happiness in this life. On the other hand, the religion of Shaka was full of imperfections. It was fearfully vague and indefinite. Its cardinal doctrines were annihilation and transmigration. It had an exceed- ingly meager moral code. His followers have patched up its weak points in succeeding centuries. They have built upon it an imperfect system of mo- rality. In a word, it shows every possible trace of its human origin. It never claimed to be of divine origin. His followers may have made this claim in its behalf, but there is no satisfactory evidence that Shaka himself ever made any such claim. It is ex- ceedingly imperfect and lamentably feeble in all its details, — ^just like human productions of that de- scription. Again: Christ is a clearly defined and distinct historical character. His birth, life, teachings, and death are pictured with great minuteness and de- 326 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. tail. Four historians record these facts without any material contradiction, and the testimony of a vast throng of witnesses is in evidence to corrobo- rate the substantial accuracy of those histories. He was crucified and held up to the gaze of the world so conspicuously that none of his followers have ever attempted to question that fact, no mat- ter how humiliating and galling might be the heathen taunt about a God hung between thieves. The existence and deeds of Christ are as thoroughly established as those of Julius Caesar. But, on the other hand, Shaka and his deeds are almost a myth. That he was the son of some Raj in northern Hindostan, — possibly near Benares or Sarnath, — seems tolerably well established ; that he taught the doctrines of annihilation and transmi- gration seems pretty clear ; and that he died in exile may, perhaps, be accepted as a fact. But beyond this, everything is a mystery. The best authorities cannot make more out of his history. The mass of legends woven around his life by cen- turies of succeeding devotees I rule out of evi- dence. It is most untrustworthy hearsay. If I were to apply the rules of evidence as strictly to the historic proof of the life and deeds of Shaka as I apply them to those of Christ, he would certainly be a mythical personage. Again: But why waste any more time? I could easily write a book showing the world-wide difference between these two great religions. But it is useless to try and make any comparison be- HIYEISAN, 327 tween them at all. The fundamental principles underlying them are as divergent as the east is from the west. The religion of Christ is divine. That of Shaka is a superb generalization of a human soul groping for the light. It is the device of a sympathetic nature striving to fathom the mys- teries of human life. It is the most ingenious theory ever propounded by mortal man. That is all it is. True, the votaries at its shrines encom- pass one-third of the population of the globe ; but it is fatally weak and deficient to meet the moral requirements of mankind for all that. Nor will another batch of legendary amendments patched on to the mass of stupid myths already smothering Shaka's poor generalizations ever make it equal to Christianity. Strip off the superin- cumbent mass of devices that the Romish Church attempted to tack upon Christianity, and you will have the pure doctrines of the Gospels. But when you strip off the monastic lore from Buddhism, what have you ? Almost nothing. Here we have in Japan an amiable and intelli- gent race of people, a people whose natural endow- ments are unsurpassed. They have lived in one of the loveliest climates in the world, with a bracing and exhilarating atmosphere. They have been surrounded by scenery of matchless beauty and magnificence. And, for nearly fifteen centuries, they have been under the influence of Buddhism. Surely, if there be any great elevating power in nature and in Buddhism, it should have raised the 328 LE TTERS FROM J A PAN. Japanese people beyond their present level. Surely these thousands of monks, communing with nature in their sequestered retreats for so many centuries, ought to have evolved some theory whereby their fellow-men might have been elevated. But they have not done so. This seems to me to be con- clusive that men, of themselves, unaided by divine revelation, cannot rise to so exalted a condition as they can when assisted by divine revelation. They at least have never shown the disposition to do so. But your Boston philosopher triumphantly an- nounces that because some of the principles of Christianity are found in the teachings of modern Buddhism and in Confucianism that, therefore, Christ was merely a human reformer enunciating principles of human nature ; that there was noth- ing supernatural about it at all ; that any human being can evolve these principles from his inner consciousness by concentrating his attention there- on ; that because human beings in Asia have enun- ciated some of the identical principles contained in the Decalogue and in the Gospels, therefore there is no reason why all the principles of the Decalogue and of the Gospels might not have been evolved by human beings in coming ages without any super- natural aid or Divine Revelation ; that Christ was merely a reformer enunciating general principles of human nature and of human conduct, which same principles undoubtedly could have been evolved in the future by other men — because it is in evi- HIYEISAN. 329 dence that some men did actually evolve or enun- ciate some of those principles entirely by them- selves. I think I have stated the philosopher's argument in full. Now let me state my argument in favor of the theory that Christianity is of divine origin. Either the universe came by chance, or it was the creation of some intelligent being. Now, which is more probable, that this infinite system of revolving worlds was the work of an intelligent creator, or that it was merely a chance? Any one who believes that the universe came by chance is fit to believe anything. Of course, the universe was created by some intelligent power. Now this Creator formed man with strong appetites and pas- sions, and with tremendous moral powers, which, if unrestrained and unguided, would quickly have wrecked him. Is it not reasona|^le to suppose that he would have given him a moral code whereby he might be guided and elevated? Certainly. Of course, it is possible to conceive that a man might sit down and evolve these moral principles of his nature all by himself, just as a boy might evolve in the course of years all by himself the rules of arith- metic. But it would be the work of a lifetime in all probability. Of course, there is nothing intel- lectually impossible in this conception. But the probabilities are that it would never be accom- plished by any one alone ; but put an arithmetic into the boy's hand and he will master the science very soon. Theoretically, he might evolve every- 3 2,0 LE TTERS FROM J A PAN. thing for himself, but practically it would be a pure impossibility. Just so with the principles of Christianity. They are all simple enough when once enunciated. There is nothing intellectually impossible in conceiving men to be able to evolve them unaided by divine revelation, but has any one ever done it ? The united intellect of Japan, China, and India have only worked out a few of them in several thousand years, and they might in future cycles of time evolve the balance of them ; but, in the meantime, mark the moral stagnation of the people. Is it reasonable to suppose that a kind and merciful Creator, after forming man with such tremendous moral powers, would have cast him adrift to work out the problems of life with only such principles as he could himself evolve? What progress do you suppose the world would have made ? I believe Christ was divine because I do not think it would have been possible for any single man to evolve a perfect system of moral ethics. I do not believe a single man could have evolved, within thirty-three years, a code of morality so per- fect that the criticism of the keenest intellects during eighteen centuries has not been able to suggest a solitary amendment thereto. None of the sciences of to-day are the work of a single individual. They are the result of the combined thought of centuries. When a man has spent a lifetime in evolving a single new principle or law we designate his intellect as colossal. We admire HIYEISAN, 331 and almost adore him. His praises are sung from generation to generation. Newton spent twenty- years in evolving a theory which a school-girl can learn and glibly rattle off with abundant expla- nations within a few hours — to all appearances thoroughly comprehending it. Euclid spent twenty years in evolving the principle of a single proposition which a school-girl can now master in an hour ; and can eloquently enunciate it as well as the old phi- losopher himself, who deemed his labors worthy of the sacrifice of a hecatomb of oxen. We designate Euclid and Newton as colossal in- tellects, and so they were. And now do you believe that the son of a Jewish carpenter, sprung from an ancestry of tradesmen, with no educa- tional advantages, could have evolved a system of moral ethics so perfect in every detail that the civilization of the nineteenth century can not find a single flaw therein? If you believe this, then you can believe anything. I, for my part, believe that Christ was God incarnate. I believe that His teachings were divine revelations. Upon no other hypothesis can I account for their matchless purity and perfection. I deem them to be divine reve- lations because such belief is consistent with my ideas of an intelligent and merciful Creator, giving to the helpless being that he has endowed with such tremendous powers, a moral code suitable for controlling his primitive nature ; and, further, as this being attains to higher conditions of intellec- tual development and social refinement, such belief 332 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. is consistent with my ideas of a kind Creator sup- plementing that primitive code with a system of moral ethics suitable to the complicated conditions of mankind in all ages and among all races. And I know that my belief in these doctrines has been an anchor to my soul in the troubled waters of this heathen community, keeping me from forms of vice that I would have yielded to had I consulted merely my animal instincts. Sincerely yours, Theopiiilus Pratt. ■-^.^ ^t EM^<^K^^^a^^^^^lHI SI ^^p ^iPN J^k\ rarl m-- -. • ■ i ^^•^^jB^^ : t 'n mf T^' __3^ P -^ "^^i^lMr" r f ■■■^^ Si yl,-. g^^ ^# .45^ |p^ D Vl^' 1 id ■flT' '1 Uci^i- ^TN I •«i si-*- »5 i LETTER XIX. SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. Kioto, Nifvemb^2S, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus : After generalizing upon facts derived from four years* experience among the Japanese, I have ar- rived at a number of conclusions that will now be submitted for your perusal. In the first place, I regard the Japanese as the most genteel smokers in the world. The use of tobacco, as indulged in by them, so far from being a filthy habit, is, in fact, an elegant accomplish- ment. It is a habit in which the women can in- dulge with perfect propriety. It is not character- ized by the disgusting expectoration so common with us. In short, tobacco smoking, as indulged in by the Japanese, is in no sense a vice. We Saxons debase ourselves by our manner of using the weed. We are not satisfied with smoking it in huge masses, but we mumble over huge quids of it, and stuff vast quantities of it up our unoffending nostrils. Such barbarism in the use of tobacco is unheard of in Japan. The natives smoke but minute quanti- ties of it at a time. A small pellet of it is put into a delicate pipe, and only a couple of whiffs are 334 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. taken thereof. That description of Japanese smok- ing, which characterizes it as " two whiffs and a spit," is accurate so far as the whiffing is concerned, but is entirely inaccurate as regards the spitting. After his night's slumbers, a Jap usually gives a tremendous yawn that serves as a rising bell for the household, and brings forth his little pipe, whisk- ing off seven or eight whiffs in rapid succession, tapping the rim of the brazier between times by way of emphasis. During the day-time he will in- dulge in about twenty seasons of such relaxation — supplementing the original allowance, of course, with additional puffs whenever a call is received or given. The entire amount smoked during a day would not equal, if compressed, the bulk of an or- dinary cigar, or the abysmal capacity of a meer- schaum bowl. Nor is the strength of the tobacco the Japanese use to be compared to the pungency of the weed that we employ. Smoking, as thus gracefully and moderately indulged in, can never injure the health. Another advantage of the Japanese system of smoking is the utter absence of any offensive odor lingering about the clothing. I can well remem- ber how my chum at college, — a most inveterate smoker, — would scent up, not only the clothes upon my person, but also the very bedding in the room. And, for months afterward, the carpet and the tablecloth would be impregnated with a stale and rank smell that was intensely disagreeable. But I never fully realized the vile barbarism of our SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAP A N^. 335 method of using tobacco until I rented a Japanese house in Tokio and kept " stag hall '* therein with an Englishman, who was an inveterate smoker. He always affirmed that he never expectorated while smoking. Whether he was really unconscious of any such action on his part, or was merely perpe- trating a grim joke, I can not say ; but the condi- tion of the tatamis around the spittoons, and of the shojees and well-polished verandas, — silent wit- nesses of his inaccurate marksmanship, — must have filled the inmost soul of our landlord with horror and disgust. On one occasion, I inspected a native house in company with the landlord. It had been occupied by a German. We went through rooms that seemed to steadily become filthier as we progressed in our tour. The previous tenant had evidently dis- pensed with the use of spittoons entirely. Nicotine was spattered everywhere in indelible stains. The dining room, which had evidently been the scene of the principal orgies of the fiend and his boon companions, presented a scene that fetched a groan from the depths of the landlord's innermost parts, and fastened wrinkles of disgust around the corners of his mouth that lingered there as long as we were on the premises, and I know not how long there- after. Verily, smoking is a social problem wherein the balance of criticism is decidedly in favor of the Japanese. But, regarding the use of sak^, I cannot speak quite so favorably concerning them. Drunkenness 336 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. prevails throughout the empire in a mild form. I use the term " mild," because it certainly is mild when compared with the gross and bestial baccha- nalian displays so common with Saxons. The tame diet of the Japanese does not tend to pro- duce violent appetites. During the year, you do not often see a drunken person on the streets. On public holidays, however, and particularly around New Year's Day, it seems to be deemed every- body's privilege to get rollicking drunk. Lord and vassal, samurai and heimin^ master and servant, in- dulge in sake until all caste distinction is forgotten, and bacchanalian good-fellowship characterizes all proceedings. If the master has been kind during the year, his servants gather about him and lift him up in the air half a dozen times or so. This elevation is supposed to be typical of their high esteem. Some indulge in childish tricks upon each other ; some reel around the streets hiccoughing forth barbaric odes that harrow up civilized tym- panums immeasurably ; while others assume a se- date and prof6und expression of serene gravity, which ultimately culminates in a " boozy " slumber. Sake is strongly alcoholic in its composition ; and, when heated, it flies quickly to the head. The Japanese, however, drink it from such small cups that it takes them some time to get tipsy off it. The Japanese certainly are not such swillers at drink- ing as Saxons are. They would gaze with amaze- ment upon some of our Germans, who swill down daily their ten or twenty glasses of beer ; or upon SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 337 those Englishmen who use a bottle of brandy in a day ; or upon those Irishmen who drain off whisky as if it were only so much water. Yet, in the course of a year, a vast amount of sak^ is con- sumed in Japan. But, on the other hand, I am not aware that delirium tremens is known in the empire. It is certain that drunkenness does not create the same havoc in Japan that it does in Europe and America. The reason for this may be found in the fact that sak^ is the only liquor in the country, and it is by no means pleasant to the taste. Habitual users of it have informed me that the only reason they use it is, not because they like the taste, but because they love its exhilarating effects. Grape wine, or wine of any other description, has never been known in Japan. Beer, ale, porter, and brandy were never made. But when these various beverages are manufactured at prices that will place them at the disposal of the people, I fear the Japanese will be afflicted with intemperance to a greater extent than they now are. They love the taste of our sparkling wines, and are fascinated with their stimulating effects. And, without any moral power to check their appetites, it may be feared that they will speedily degenerate into a nation of topers. The temperance problem is one yet to be solved by the Japanese of the future. * But let us now compare the Japanese race a * One of the most common queries of my pupils was : *' Master, why is it that your skin is white, while ours is brown ? And why is it that there should be different races of men ? " Not being able to 22 338 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, little more closely with the Caucasian race. After that, we will be in a better position to review some of their social characteristics. It is my belief that all mankind sprang from Adam and Eve, and that the present vast difference in races is to be attrib- uted to difference in climate primarily and chiefly, and to difference in diet secondarily. I do not accept the proposition that the remote progenitors of the various races were various species of anthro- pomorphous apes, that had been evolved from the lower forms of animal and vegetable life preceding them in those various countries. Nor do I accept the proposition that the various complexions of the various races of the present time is to be attrib- uted to the difference of the constituent elements entering into the composition of the vegetable and animal life in these various countries. Let us rea- son from the logic of facts a little. If you expose yourself in the hot sun, you be- come tanned. If you expose yourself to the severe winds of winter, you become chapped. In either case your complexion is darkened. But if you stay in the house all the time, your complexion becomes lighter. These are three universal and well ascer- fumish them with any satisfactory answer from such scientific works as I could obtain, I was forced upon a line of investigation and gen- eralization based up>on facts derived from traveling and reading, which resulted in the conclusions herein set forth. As the subject is one that is open to much speculation, and is one yet involved in doubt, I presume that I may modestly submit my own theories as evolved from class-room discussion, without kindling the wrath of professional scientists anchored to their own pet deductions. SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 339 tained facts. Generalizing therefrom, we say that extremes of temperature darken the complexion, heat making it black and cold making it reddish. Now, as the truth of a hypothesis is established by its coincidence with existing phenomena, let us compare the above theory with existing geograph- ical data. In the torrid zone, you will find brown and black people, and in the frigid zones you will find reddish-brown people, while in the temperate zones you will find white people, and people whose color approximates to white. But let us go a little more into details. Follow the equator around the world, and you will find the blackest people living upon it and in its immediate vicinity. As you leave the equator and go northward or southward toward the temperate zones, you will find that complexions become proportionately lighter. The Eg>'ptian is lighter than the Nubian ; the inhabitants of Spain, Italy, and Greece are lighter than the Moor or the Arab; while the inhabitants of northern Europe and of the British Islands have decidedly lighter complexions than those of southern Europe. But when you go further northward and reach the land of the Esquimaux, you find the peculiar copper complexion produced by exposure to extreme cold. In Asia, the same law holds true. The Arab, the Afghan, the Thibetan and the Chinese are much lighter in color than the Hindoo, the Singhalese, and the Malay ; and, going farther north, we find the Tartars and the Japanese to be of lighter com- plexion than any of those people just enumerated. 340 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, Many of the Tartars and Japanese are almost as fair as the Saxons, some, indeed, having com- plexions quite as fair. And, going yet further northward, we find the aborigines of Siberia along the cheerless seas of the frigid zones to have a copper complexion. The same general law holds true in the Western Hemisphere. The aborigines on the equator in South America are darker than the Red-skins of North America. The present population of Amer- ica cannot be fairly cited to uphold my theory, because they have immigrated from Europe at a comparatively recent date. But the query may arise as to whether the ultimate complexion of the people living in the United States will be reddish- brown, like that of the North American Indian. To this query a negative answer may safely be given, for the Indians throughout the North American Continent were continually exposed to climatic changes. They were more like animals living in the open air than like human beings. Whatever the darkening tendency of exposure of the skin to heat and cold might have been, it cer- tainly had a fair opportunity to operate upon these savages. But after a few centuries, I think that the complexion of the inhabitants of the Southern States will be found to be of a tawnier hue than that of their Northern brethren. Coming to Japan, we find our hypothesis illus- trated with startling exactness. The heimin who labor in the fields, and whose ancestors for many SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 341 centuries have been thus exposed to the sun, are darker in complexion than the higher classes. The mercantile classes who for centuries have lived in cities, dwelling within the shade, are lighter in complexion than the peasants, who for centuries have labored almost naked in the rice-fields. The fishermen along the coasts are also of a darker complexion ; and the samuraiy who from remote times have taken their ease within the shade, are quite fair in complexion, some of them, indeed, being almost as white as Saxons. Some of the court ladies, in fact, are quite as white as the fairest Saxon. So we have here in Japan a race like ourselves; a race sprung from the same progenitors, a race with precisely the same spiritual, intellectual, and physical qualities. We have developed a higher set of faculties, and consequently possess nobler natures. Our meat diet gives us a finer physical development. Milk, butter, and meat give strength and rotundity to the flesh and muscles, and a fresh and plump appearance to the face. An exclusive rice diet gives a sallow complexion. Milk, cheese, butter, beef, and mutton have never been used by the Japanese at all. There are no goats in the empire, and but few cows. Boiled rice, with the merest nibble of meat and salt radish, has formed the diet of the masses of the people for many cen- turies, and they are a feeble race to-day ; while the Caucasians and the Tartars, who have lived on meat and milk from time immemorial, are to-day 342 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the most vigorous portion of humanity. I have no doubt that with several generations of our diet the Japanese will become in every way our peers phys- ically. This, however, is a social problem that must be left for time to solve. The Japanese arc a very amative race. They are not licentious like the Turks, but are strongly in- clined to be sensuous. Their low diet has, to a great extent, kept down the grosser passions of their nature. Wc now come face to face with that strange institution of the feudal Government of Japan known as the Yoshkvara system. This was a system of legalized prostitutioa It was not only legalized but it was under government patron- age. The government support of such an institu- tion has been whimsically accounted for by Darwin in his Descent of Man on the hypothesis that the government feared that the Japan Islands would become eventually too full of people, and that they therefore took this method of keeping down the population. But the Legacy of lyeyas says that it was done to restrain the passions of the samurai within proper limits, so that there need not be end- less floggings to keep the hordes of warlike re- tainers in order. And this is probably the true explanation. Macaulay says that an Englishman and a Frenchman will reason to opposite conclu- sions frequently from the same fact. And it is not an uncommon thing in the realm of science for two minds to reason to opposite conclusions from the same premises. One of these conclusions, however, SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 343 must be an exceptional one. Some minds are fond of reasoning to exceptional conclusions. It seems to me that Darwin's mind was of this order. He showed it in reasoning about the descent of man from anthropomorphous apes. Given the facts that the physical structure of animals bears a striking resemblance to that of man, and that man seems to be a later production, Darwin prefers the con- clusion that man was evolved from lower animal forms during countless ages instead of the conclu- sion that these facts argue that all creatures Were made upon the same general plan by the same Cre- ator. The Yoshiwara system was undoubtedly the pro- dilction of feudal licentiousness. With three millions of fierce samurai to control,, it was no wonder that the Tokugawas should have hit upon this low method of curbing the violent natures of their retainers. What better method had they ? Neither Shintoism nor Buddhism furnished any adequate moral check upon the passions of the military classes. They therefore developed the Yoshhvara system all over the empire. And the Daimios of the provinces heartily indorsed the system and laid out "worm-eaten spots" in all their capitals and great cities. Much money was lavished upon these foul localities and they were made attractive hells. Vice was there made to appear in its most seductive forms. Luxury and refinement were impressed into the service of this wretched avocation. The misery of the human 344 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. soul was stifled and soothed by elegant surround- ings, and a tolerant and condoning social senti- ment made it reputable for persons of good fami- lies to take wives from the Yoshiwara, and for mothers to sell their daughters to the proprietors of the brothels. The history of the Yoshiwara system is inter- woven with tales of the wildest debauch, of the black- est despair, and of the most romantic and hopeless love. The brave youth from the provinces, where valor is yet a virtue, is smitten with the subtle in- fluence and wrecks his fortune and his health upon some coquetting courtesan who soon bestows upon another victim the withering spell of her hellish charms. And now the wanton and beautiful wretch is herself ensnared. She, upon whose smiles the bloods of the town fondly linger, becomes touched with the fire that burns the heart ; and, realizing the fearful position in which she has been placed, immolates herself upon the shrine of hopeless love, and tinges the scandal of the town with melancholy tales of her blighted passion. In such a social atmosphere was the young samurai brought up. What wonder that they degenerated into a class of reckless libertines ? The only marvel to me is that there was any virtue at all left among the people. That wonderful provision of Providence, known as the Natural Religion, has truly kept this people from degenerating into a race of voluptuous imbeciles. Coming now to the social condition of the SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN, 345 Japanese, I consider it safe to say that the relative position of the sexes is about the same as it is in all countries. I am old-fashioned enough to be- lieve that God created mankind in accordance with certain general laws that can not be changed by us. It seems manifest to me that He made man to be the unit of political power, and woman to be the unit of social power. He has made man to be the aggressive, the progressive, the governing power in the world. He has made woman to be the conserv- ative and refining power in the world. It is man's nature to be democratic and liberal. It is woman's nature to be fond of social distinctions, to be aris- tocratic. It is man's nature to compete and con- tend not only with his fellow-man, but also with Nature herself. Following this impulse, he has developed all the political institutions of the world, and has also covered the globe with cities, rail- roads, navies, and productive fields. But it is woman's nature to shrink from contest and to en- twine her affections around those she loves with engrossing and tender devotion. She has filled the world with homes, with sweet and tender recollec- tions,with elevated sentiment and religious impulses. She has been the friend, the companion, and the affectionate counsellor of man in all ages and in all countries. This relative position of the sexes pre- vails all over the world. Wherever the condition of woman is degraded, there also is the condition of man correspondingly low. And wherever the condition of woman is elevated, there is the position 346 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. of man correspondingly high. But their relative positions are always about the same. Man is al- ways the progressive, the aggressive, the governing power ; woman is as generally the conservative, the refining power. Mankind cannot change this rela- tive position of the sexes. By the force of our natures wc must act out our respective parts until some greater power shall otherwise ordain. I hate and despise the tendency in England and America to antagonize the sexes. Those female agitators, who endeavor to make their sisters dis- satisfied with their lot, and who proclaim that man is but a usurper who has violently seized upon the more desirable positions in life, and has forced woman into less desirable, and inferior positions, arc but insulting the dignity of their own sex. That which God has ordaintd, call thou not inferior. Each position is highly honorable. Neither is in- ferior. Neither is superior. The world cannot afford to lose the gentle qualities of women, for there is nothing in the masculine nature that can replace those qualities. While in Japan woman has always been the friend, and the companion of man, and has been the mother of the rising generations, man, on the other hand, has always been the governing power. He did not usurp anybody's right. He was dele- gated by the Creator to be the controlling force. He has founded the political institutions of the empire ; he has built the cities and the navies of the realm ; the bridges, the highways, the temples, SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 347 are all the work of his hands. All the textile man- ufactures, the matchless embroideries, the lovely lacquer ware, the exquisite porcelains, the magnifi- cent bronzes, the intricate carvings, are his produc- tions. The carpenters, the masons, the stone-cutters, the blacksmiths, the artisans of every description, have always been men. All the severe labor that has reclaimed the land of this empire from waste and desolation, and has made it into a vast and lovely garden, was performed by men. And the immense annual expenditure of toil and patience that is now required to keep these millions of acres under a state of cultivation, is furnished by men, and bear in mind that all this is done without any claim of superiority on the part of the men. The Creator has designed them for this work, and by the force of circumstances they naturally and cheer- fully obey the hidden power that controls them without ever thinking of sounding their own praises for so doing. Generally speaking, the Japanese men make kind and affectionate husbands ; and the women make virtuous and exemplary wives and mothers ; and the children are certainly the happiest little imps in the world ; their parents fondle and spoil them most effectually, and, at the same time, never lose their control over them. The non-irritating nature of the native diet has much to do with such serene nerves and temperaments. I have never seen a child whipped in Japan; on three or four occasions I have seen a reproving mother administer a mild 348 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. slap over the head, which correction invariably brings the little recalcitrants to order. The husband has absolute control over the person of his wife ; at the same time, I have never seen a man strike a woman in Japan, yet I believe that there is considerable pinching and slapping done on occasions when those strange and ungovernable spells of exasperating ugliness, known as tantrums, settle down upon their matrimonial horizon. On these occasions there is considerable free hitting, biting, and scratching indulged in on both sides of the house ; but the greater strength of the husband invariably leaves him master of the situation, and the belligerent household speedily resumes its se- rene and happy course. On such occasions, unless physical force were resorted to, it would be difficult to say where matters would end ; for the women are very childish, and, in their paroxysms of fury, might speedily demolish the household, unless re- strained. These family jars arc not of frequent occurrence, but they make up in intensity for their rarity. It is far more common for women to quarrel with each other than for husbands and wives to quarrel. I was once passing down a village street when I heard a tremendous commotion. Two women, upon opposite sides of a street, were railing at each other at the rate of about sixty miles an hour. The atmosphere fairly glowed with vituperation. I arrived upon the scene just as they rushed at each other, spitting, scratching, and biting like a SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 349 couple of furious cats. They were clawing each other in terrible earnest when the husband of one of the combatants rushed upon them and tore them apart, hurling one of them to one side of the street and the other one to the other side, where they respectively glared at each other awhile and then cooled down. In a few minutes they were quietly discussing the misunderstanding and were, to all appearances, upon amicable terms. When I was living in Tokio I became acquainted with an occurrence that was shocking yet unavoid- able. We were keeping house in Ban-cho. Our cook lived with his wife in a distant wing of the house. His lady persisted in bathing during the summer in our front yard. We instructed our cook that this scandalous proceeding must be stopped as we did not care to have our visitors confronted with any such spectacle. He accord- ingly ordered her to desist from using our garden as a bath-room. But, behold ! next day found her again bathing in the shrubbery. We complained to the cook at once, and he said he would see that it did not happen again. We soon heard a fearful scream. The cook quietly came into our parlor holding in his hand a hoc handle, with which he had crept up behind his unsuspecting spouse and had inflicted a terrible blow upon her bare back. He said that he did not think we would be again annoyed by his wife, but that, if we were, to report immediately and he would make her " eat stick" without limit. We felt like making him " eat 350 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. stick " for the balance of the day. But, upon sober thought, we came to the conclusion that nothing could be done except to forbid any further per- sonal chastisement upon our premises. What can you possibly do with such people? They are mere children. Yet, while all this sounds very hor- rible, and we feel inclined to hold up our hands and denounce such barbarism, we should modestly bear in mind that we do not need to go back very far in English history to find that women were nearly drowned in ducking stools, and were flogged upon the bare back through the streets. Truly we live in a strange world ! And the incongruities of the nineteenth century are the strangest part of it. You may easily infer that the question of Woman Suffrage has not yet agitated Japan. This ques- tion cannot arise until the question of popular enfranchisment is up for discussion. At present, no one in Japan has the right of suffrage. The emperor and his cabinet rule with absolute power. In a few years, however, there will undoubtedly be some sort of Parliament or Congress convened. Then will there be limited suffrage in some shape or other, after which it may be safely presumed that universal male suffrage will gradually be adopted. Then will the people be in the interest- ing position to discuss female suffrage. I appre- hend, however, that by that time the general dis- inclination and inaptitude of women for political life will be so clearly demonstrated in Europe and SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN, 351 America that the Japanese will be relieved from any violent commotion on this subject. But it will be interesting, nevertheless, to briefly review some of the pet arguments advanced in favor of Woman Suffrage in Europe and America, and to see how they will fit Japan. I am constrained to stir up this hornets' nest because of the fire-brand that you inconsiderately hurled at me last month, through the medium of the United States mail, in the shape of a pamphlet written by a rabid agitator of the opposite sex, whose bitter denunciations, aimed at the sex to which I have the misfortune to belong, placed me under a cloud of humility from which I am now but timidly emerging. You will therefore kindly make allowance for my demoral- ized condition, and you will excuse any heresy that may chance to crop out in my very humble opinions. One favorite argument in favor of Woman Suffrage is that there should be no tax- ation without representation. It is urged that women hold property, and pay taxes on property, and yet do not have any voice in making the laws of the country. There is a plausible revolu- tionary ring about this argument that is, at first, very catching. But a close inspection will reveal its fallacy and speciousness. It is quite true that women holding property are compelled to pay taxes thereon. And this is quite just and reason- able, because this property is protected both in times of peace and in times of war by the civil and military power of the State. This power of the State 352 LETTERS FROM JAP A N^. is based upon masculine force. By means of this masculine force, order is maintained, enemies are kept away, and the property becomes enriched and enhanced in value by the peaceful and bene- ficial influence of a civilized community. Such fa- vorable conditions would not exist in turmoil and war. Masculine force is the power that keeps the peace. This service must be paid for by property, whether owned by man or woman. This general principle holds quite as fast in Japan as in other parts of the world It should also be borne in mind that the number of women holding property is very small when compared with the number of men holding prop- erty. Men are, and have always been, the accu- mulators, the originators, the makers of property. It is a rare thing for women to accumulate or make property. Other and more important duties demand their attention. Almost all the female property holders in the world have been fortunate enough to inherit their wealth from male kindred, who, perhaps, have spent years of severe toil in accumulating it ; and they must take the property with its incumbrances as well as v/ith its benefits. They are at full liberty to revel in its princely revenues, which they have done nothing to earn. But, on the other hand, they must also pay the annual tax that the Board of Assessors placed op- posite to it when it was held by father, husband, brother, or uncle. It is the property that is taxed, not the individual. If the property comes to her SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN, 353 incumbered with mortgages, tax-arrears, or other debts of her father, she must pay off these Habili- ties or the property will be auctioned off by the creditors. Property is taxed irrespective of the sex of the party holding the title deeds. Now, if the vast mass of property in this world had been accumulated by women, there would be some justice in the claim that they should have a voice in legislation affecting it. But almost all the property in this world has been accumulated by men. They are the busy workers who have developed the resources of the earth. Women rarely accumulate property, as they were not de- signed to compete, to struggle, to concentrate all their thoughts and efforts on such things. They have neither the time nor the inclination for severe and laborious application in pursuit of wealth. Now men have made equitable laws regulating property in general. These laws are just and im- partial, and do not unjustly discriminate against property held by women. Therefore I fail to see why universal suffrage should be granted to women because a few of their more fortunate sisters have inherited from their male kindred a certain amount of property, which, in the course of time, will probably revert by inheritance to some male kinsman, or will be gradually reabsorbed by male competitors in the vicissitudes of trade. Suffrage should be based upon some general law in nature, not upon exceptions. This observation will also be found to be applicable to Japan. 23 354 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. Furthermore, legislation is powerless and absurd without the ability to enforce its mandates. The power that enforces laws should be the power to make laws. Man is the power that enforces laws in this world. Therefore I fail to see why the bas- ing of suffrage upon man as the unit of political power is not a correct general principle. To illus- trate our theory, let us suppose that universal male and female suffrage prevails in the United States. Suppose that all the women vote to have a mon- archical form of government, and that all the men vote to have a republican form of government. The women, although outnumbering the men, could not enforce their wish against the men through lack of power. But, on the other hand, if all the men were to vote in favor of a monarchical form of government, and all the women were to vote in favor of a republican form of government, the men could readily enforce their wish in the matter. Men, as a matter of courtesy, may unite and agree to give women equal right of suffrage with themselves. But this would not increase the en- forcing power of the state at all. Paper money has a purchasing power when it represents gold and silver. Let the bullion cease to exist, how- ever, and where would be the purchasing power of your paper money? If you issue twice as many bills as there is specie in the country, you reduce their purchasing power by one-half. In precisely the same manner a paper ballot represents the po- SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 355 litical unit behind it. If the voice of the ballot-box be disobeyed, you call out your police forces and your armies and enforce its mandate. Man is the power, the coercive force, in the state. Without that implied coercive force, your laws become inef- fective and ridiculous. Women may meet in legis- lative halls and pass resolutions and formulate de- crees at pleasure, but it is man that they call upon to destroy the trespassing rat that is carrying con- sternation into their ranks and disturbing the legis- lative equipioise of their deliberations. To increase the number of ballots in the box will not necessarily increase the coercive power in the state. Men may grant the privilege of casting these ballots to their mothers, sisters, wives, and daughters, under the mistaken notion that they are merely conferring a right. But, in reality, they are sharing their birthright as a matter of courtesy with their families without realizing that they are disturbing the political equipoise of the land, and are opening the door for dangerous and humiliat- ing complications. Another argument that has been advanced in favor of Woman Suffrage is that woman will purify the ballot-box. Inasmuch as there are nearly as many bad women in the world as there are bad men, and as woman does not appear to have cleansed society from its many evils in the course of several thousand years — the realm where they reign supreme — it is quite incomprehensible to me how they will do any better at purifying ballot- 356 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, boxes. For you can not discriminate in this mat- ter and give the right of suffrage to the virtuous women alone, but you must confer this right on all women alike. And I can assure you that I would prefer life in a pagan country to going up to the ballot-box in company with a gang of drunken, cursing women on election day. Bad men are disagreeable enough on such occasions ; but may Providence spare us from bad women ! The fact is, that if woman had been designed to exercise the right of suffrage she would have exer- cised it long before our day. And, if she has not been designed to exercise the right of suffrage, all the legislation in the world will not create in her any inclination or aptitude for it either in Japan or anywhere else. I have no patience with those women who neglect and ignore those feminine qualities without which the world would be badly off indeed ; who degrade their own sex by perpet- ually striving to be masculine in sentiment and deed, and the burden of whose complaint seems to be a protest against God for not having created them as men. I do not like to see these agitators slighting so large a portion of the human race. Leaving, now, this great question of Woman Suffrage to be settled by the good sense of future Japan, we will briefly consider in conclusion the complicated and troublesome question of Capital and Labor in Japan. Under the feudal system this was a very simple question. The three great divisions of society — SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 357 the samurai, the tradesmen (merchants and arti- sans), and the peasantry, were separated by un- yielding barriers. The samurai formed the aris- tocracy; the tradesmen dwelt in the cities and towns ; the peasantry were the country folks. In a population of about thirty millions, it is fair to estimate the samurai at about three millions, the tradesmen at about fifteen millions, and the peas- antry at about twelve millions. Centuries of cul- ture and refinement, centuries of affluence and power, centuries of privilege and political pre- rogative, had been thrown around the samurai, until the laws of heredity had developed features that were expressive of noble emotions and a de- portment typical of dash and politeness. They looked upon the tradesmen with supercilious con- descension, and upon the peasantry with supreme scorn. While a marriage between an impecunious samurai and the daughter of a wealthy merchant might be tolerated, it was impossible for a samurai to marry into the family of a peasant. These two classes have been distinct for so many centuries that, as regards tastes, disposition, and language, they are almost as dissimilar as different races. The coarse patois of the tillers of the fields is fre- quently unintelligible to the samurai ; while the high-flown diction of the samurai, abundantly in- terspersed with Chinese words and with endless honorifics, and containing long sentences padded to death with verbiage and circumlocutory phrases, was utterly unintelligible to the peasantry. Com- 358 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. munication between the two classes was almost entirely cut off. The profoundest respect was ex- pected from the peasantry. Whenever a samurai passed along the highway, the peasant must re- move his head-cloth and get off from his beast of burden. On the other hand, what was the condition of the peasantry ? Centuries of oppression had pro- duced a race of inoffensive and amiable boors. The baby, tumbling around upon the tatamis in the hamlet, was destined to develop into a low-browed, plodding peasant, destitute of any ambition or noble sentiment. How could it have been other- wise? Centuries of monotonous diet, centuries of unvarying routine of daily occupation, have pro- duced an uninteresting similarity of traits in all the peasantry throughout the empire. And these cir- cumstances have really developed a distinct class of people, having coarse features, base natures, and cringing dispositions. They have never enjoyed edu- cational advantages of any description. They have had no social advantages. Nor have they ever, from the remotest times, been favored with any political power or privilege. Nothing but their animal instincts have been developed. No matter in what part of the empire you may be traveling, you can always single out the peasantry because of their hereditary traits. For over a thousand years they have been the tillers of the soil, the hewers of wood, the bearers of burdens. Nobody has ever encouraged them to develop the higher instincts of SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAM. 359 their souls. None of the nobler faculties of their minds have ever been cultivated, if, indeed, they have ever been credited with possessing any such faculties at all. As a natural result of this course of treatment they are to-day ignorant, superstitious, and coarse. Yet they are industrious and frugal in their habits, amiable and docile in disposition, and exceedingly patient and submissive. But they are also very obstinate in adhering to their own ideas and customs, and, consequently, do not become ready converts to civilized innovations. Their credulity and superstition are very strong. The grossest myths to be found within the creeds of the realm have always found them to be staunch votaries. They were, in fact, but serfs cultivating the ground for their feudal lords, and their condi- tion does not appear to have been any better than the condition of the serfs in Europe during feudal times. Midway between these two classes come the merchants and artisans. Like the middle classes in all countries they formed the backbone of the country. They were more refined than the peas- antry, having possessed for centuries better educa- tional facilities than the poor sons of the soil. Their very occupations were a continual means of education. They did not possess the daring and the polish of the samurai^ but they were intelligent and enterprising. They did not possess the ambi- tionless natures of the peasantry, yet they were thoroughly submissive, and paid cringing deference 360 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, to the samurai. While not vacillating and cynical in their religious beliefs, yet were they not as grossly ignorant and superstitious as the peasantry. Nor were they characterized by that reckless prodigality and extravagant wastefulness that seem to accom- pany the leisured classes everywhere, but they were frugal, prudent, cautious, and conservative. For centuries their occupations have been hered- itary, until the peculiar traits of their trades seem to have impressed themselves to a certain extent upon their natures. Under the old feudal system, the capital of the country centered in the hands of the feudal lords, the samurai y and the high-grade merchants. Prac- tically the Shogun and the Daimios controlled the capital of the entire nation. The produce of the land belonged to them. Rice was the medium of exchange. It was known how many kokus, or bushels of rice, each Daimiate was capable of pro- ducing. A certain percentage of this was claimed by the Shogun as tribute. A bare pittance was set apart for the cultivators thereof, and the balance went to the Daimios who pensioned their hordes of samurai with immense quantities of it, and stored the balance in their warehouses to purchase services and merchandise from the artisans and merchants. Their magnificent collections of silks, porcelains, bronzes, and lacquerware were paid for out of this reserve fund ; and as they thus held the necessary of life, they were in a position to drive very one-sided bargains with the helpless trades- SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 36 1 men. When in special need of hard cash, they would set their own valuation upon the rice, and intimate irresistibly to some rich merchant their wish that he should purchase it at that price. These dignitaries had practically " cornered " all of that article within the four seas of Japan. The masses were helpless. It would be difficult to con- ceive of a more absolute oligarchy. Labor was completely at their mercy ; they dictated whatso- ever terms they chose, and those terms were the bare existence of the laboring classes. Labor was looked upon by the samurai with absolute con- tempt. It was degraded and despised as only effete aristocracies can despise it. The laboring people were poor beyond our conception. It is no exaggeration to say that, on an average, twenty millions out of thirty millions of the population lived on less than five dollars per month, and that the average laborer lived on less than three dollars per month. Rice and the merest nibble of vege- tables and fish constituted their diet, and cotton fabrics of coarse quality served as clothing. Only the rich could afford silk goods, or a mixture of silk and cotton. The average house did not cost over five hundred dollars, and the only furniture was a few sets of bed-quilts, cooking and house- hold utensils, tatamis^ and a few ornamented sho- jees and screens. Newspapers were unknown, and books were rare. Correspondence with adjoining provinces was phenomenal when indulged in. A person grew up in his native hamlet, and never 362 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. went twenty miles from it in his lifetime. A per- son who had crossed the mountains into an adjoin- ing province, or had, perchance, roved as far* as Yeddo, acquired the reputation of a traveler, and was quoted by his neighbors as an authority on such subjects. Nor were the wealthy people at all affluent in our sense of the term. Ten thousand dollars made a rich man. Fifty thousand dollars made an exceed- ingly rich man. Very few were ever worth one hundred thousand dollars. The richest merchant Japan ever had lived in Yeddo about one hundred years ago. He is reputed to have amassed by a series of bold speculations a fortune amounting to five millions of dollars. He started in life as an orange merchant ; he imported them by junk from Kiushiu, a distance of over six hundred miles. On one occasion a long spell of tempestuous weather kept the various orange fleets coast -bound ; he, however, boldly put to sea and reached Yeddo, where he sold his fruit on an empty market at a fine profit. On another occasion, when Yeddo was swept by one of its terrible conflagrations, he bought up all the lumber, and "cornered" the market, so that when the city was rebuilt every- body had to purchase their materials from him, and he was enabled thus to amass a fabulous for- tune. But, as before observed, such fortunes were phenomenal. The foregoing description will convey to your mind a fair idea of the condition of capital and SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN JAPAN. 363 labor during feudal times. But when the country was thrown open to foreign intercourse twenty-four years ago, the existing relations of Japanese society became changed. The tradesmen became affluent oflf foreign commerce ; while the haughty samurai^ scorning to defile themselves with anything savor- ing of labor or trade, became impoverished. This state of affairs culminated in the Revolution of 1 868- 1 870, when the Daimios surrendered their prerogatives to the government, and the samurai^ stripped of their hereditary privileges, were reduced to the level of common subjects. Some of the lowest grade samurai drifted into trade and labor ; some had sufficient means to be indifferent to the change ; a few actually died of starvation ; but the vast proportion of them drifted into government employ and into the government schools. As matters are now shaping themselves, it is not im- probable that in a few years the government will base a titled peerage upon this remnant of the old feudal aristocracy. At present, the clashing between capital and labor is hardly known in Japan. The masses will be many years in forgetting the old distinction between themselves and the upper classes. They yet regard the samurai with instinctive fear and respect. They yet look upon them as beings in- herently superior to themselves. But the day will surely come when the laborer will begin to question his own inferiority. He will query whether he has not more than merely the right to exist ; whether 364 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. he is not entitled to a few of the pleasures, and to a few of the relaxations of this life ; whether he should not have a few mental diversions and hours of leisure to devote to his spiritual development. He will rise above a condition of mere animal con- tentedness and be ambitious to promote the welfare of his family as well as his own. When that time comes, the Japanese will sec the application of the tenth and of the eleventh commandments, which contain, in fact, the only principles that can adjust this question here or anywhere else. When men learn to do as they would be done by ; when they learn to show that consideration for the unfort- unate condition of others that is demanded by the Gospels, and when those in lowly circumstances learn to curb their envy and their jealousy of those more fortunately circumstanced than themselves, then will be evolved that mutual regard and consid- eration between the moneyed classes and the labor- ing classes, that will solve this vexed problem in all countries. Sincerely yours, TiiEOPHiLUS Pratt. THK THKEE ESTATE> LETTER XX. OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS. Kioto, December 5, 1877. Dear Julius Marcellus: A person can not live long in Japan without coming a good deal in contact with English people. They constitute a large proportion of the foreign community in the far East, and form an important social and commercial factor in this country. Hardly had Commodore Perry concluded his famous treaty with the Shogun before England and the European Powers were loudly clamoring for similar treaty privileges, which, as a matter of course, could not well be withheld from them. They speedily filled the Treaty Ports, and, for a number of years, plied a vigorous business. The numberof foreigners in Japan to-day is not over three thousand ; and I do not think it an unfair estimate to place the number of English residents at fully fifty per cent, of the entire foreign community, while we Americans who opened up the country do not number over twenty per cent, of the community. But, although our element is decidedly in the minority, yet it is a powerful and an active ele- ment, not only in the civilization of Japan, but also 366 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. in forming the social tone and the public sentiment of the general community. Our English cousins, who have India all to themselves, and who do pretty much as they please in China, find in Japan an aggressive and independent sentiment that docs not submissively yield to British ideas and dictation. To say that the British lion chafes and growls under this unaccustomed treatment would be put- ting it in exceedingly mild terms, when the English newspapers of Yokohama, like flaming volcanoes, are belching forth the indignation of their country- men at some contrary action on the part of the Japanese Government, or on the part of the refrac- tory Americans. The continued mutterings and rumblings of the press would keep the community in a state of chronic disturbance were it not for the fact that we have learned that when it is quietest, then British interests are being conserved ; but that when it is loudest, then our interests and those of the country are being promoted so as to antagonize those of our cousins aforesaid in some way that they do not relish. We have therefore come to look upon the press as a delicate meter indicating the relative progress of the country and of British interests ; and we feel cheerful when it is noisiest, resting assured that British influence and rapacity have been checked by some untoward event, and we grow suspicious when the turmoil subsides for any great length of time, fearing lest their grasping proclivities are being unduly gratified at the expense of the outside community. OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS, 367 The antagonism between British and American ideas is sharper in Japan than it is anywhere else in the Orient. Our views are perpetually coming in violent collision. Perhaps the most marked con- trast between our method of dealing with the Jap- anese and that of the British is shown in our postal treaty with Japan, and in our theory respecting the Shimonos^ki indemnity. When we made our pos- tal treaty with the Japanese about four years ago, dealing with them as if they were intelligent equals, the new departure was met with derisive scorn by the English community. With the same verbose and acrimonious logic that they used nearly a hun- dred years ago in predicting the speedy failure of the ** Yankee Republic," — that, in fact, they have used at each critical juncture in our history ever since to demonstrate the worthlessness and im- becility of our democratic institutions — they said that the Japanese were unable to conduct a postal system upon foreign plans, that they were abso- lutely untrustworthy, and that dire confusion and endless delays would result from their inexperience and shiftlessness. Yet the Japanese have managed the matter with great ability and credit to them- selves, and similar treaties will speedily be con- summated with other nations. . Regarding the Shimonos^ki indemnity, our theory is that it was a vast sum of money unjustly extorted from a feeble government that was rent by internal dissension, and at a time when it was vainly endeav- oring to quell rebellions among semi-independent 368 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, clans, and to punish those fierce clans for their aggressions upon foreigners. To extort millions of dollars from the Shogun for the acts of rebels on the borders of the empire, after he had done his best to punish them for their depredations, and after the injured parties had already exacted a sanguin- ary vengeance for the misdeeds, we considered un- just. We said that the indemnity thus extorted should be refunded, and we expressed our willing- ness to return our share of it at once. The horror and the indignation of our British cousins at being asked to return money upon which they had already tightened their grip can better be imagined than described. A tremendous controversy arose upon the subject. This strife yet continues. How it will end, I cannot tell. But I trust that our coun- trymen will eventually return their portion of the spoil, whether England ever does so or not. There are three well-defined classes of English- men in Japan. The first class is composed of fair- minded and courteous individuals who are not so bigoted in their notions about Albion's superiority as to be unwilling to concede merit to others out- side of their own nation. They are willing to learn something about other countries. They do not pride themselves upon their ignorance of America and of American affairs, but they really feel gratified in being sufficiently familiar with American geog- raphy to be able to locate Yale College in Con- necticut, and Harvard College in Massachusetts, and to be able to state that Philadelphia is a city, OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS, 369 and not a State. As far as they have any pro- nounced political views, they are generally liberal and democratic in their tendencies. They are in- telligent, sociable, and cosmopolitan in their na- tures. The second class is composed of full-blown, hearty specimens of humanity, who take life easy and endeavor to avoid as far as possible all worry and bother. They are plodding workers and hon- est, moderately energetic business men; but at the same time they take all the holidays the law allows — feeling grievously abused, should the number be curtailed — and invariably appropriating all the extra ones that they can legitimately obtain. They are excellent judges of the respective merits of porter, snipe, and pig, but have hazy and indef- inite views oh political theories differing from their conservative ideas about monarchy and aristocracy. As connoisseurs of horses, dogs, and trout, they are sans pareil ; but their perceptions of the beau- ties of republican institutions are hopelessly ob- tuse ; and, although they are indefatigable hunters and anglers, yet they never develop sufficient men- tal acumen to take exceptions to the views of the Lojidon Times, the Daily News, or any other one of the journals from which they cram their brains with political lore. They make tough enemies, hospitable friends, and conservative subjects ; but they invariably prefer hearty good fellowship, well backed up with a substantial array of stuffed veal, ale, and pudding, to exhausting political controversy. 24 3 70 LE TTERS FROM J A PAN. And about anything relating to the history, the geography, or the institutions of America, they are mildly and complacently stupid ; nay, more, they arc exasperatingly stupid. We can exciTse the French poet who located alligators and palm trees upon the shores of Lake Erie, but when one of our own flesh and blood, in this age of railroads, telegraphs, and liberal ideas, does not possess a school-boy's knowledge of the United States, we must really protest against such abominable igno- rance. We cannot accept the silly excuse that it can not be expected of Englishmen to be acquainted with the affairs of a country not yet a hundred years old, and whose habits and customs are not recognized among the cultured classes of Europe. The third class of Englishmen that we come in contact with is the most disagreeable class of peo- ple imaginable. They are not only grossly igno- rant about American affairs, but they glory in parading their wretched ignorance on every avail- able occasion. They are bigoted, intolerant, and conceited. These are the individuals who rant in- terminably about distorted statements relating to American affairs, derived from hearsay and subsi- dized government periodicals. These scions of fair Albion never consider that personal experience or observation are essential to correct opinions about the practical features of republicanism. They convey the impression that an editor who has never visited the United States is specially endowed with oracular powers for expounding democratic doc- OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS. 371 trines, exploding democratic theories, and for pre- dicting the speedy collapse of all institutions not based upon "blood " and prerogative. Here be- longs the coarse, the pedantic, the pig-headed Cockney, who is always on the qui vive to hurl his guffaws at anything American, and whose ignorance about things American is only equaled by his assurance in discussing them. Such are the people who inquire with languid sympatfiy why Americans always eat molasses on their pork ! It will be use- less for you to intimate to them that such is no more a general custom in America than it is for Englishmen to drink coffee and treacle together, for they will insist that Americans themselves say so. And when you endeavor to enlighten their minds by informing them theft the American sailors, from whom they or their ancestors derived that morsel of information, were only talking about ma- rine customs, that were by no means an exponent of general national usage, they will the more vigor- ously insist upon the correctness of their statement and plunge into the subject with renewed anima- tion. They inform you with great satisfaction that they are able to distinguish an American before he has spoken three words, — reposing in sublime igno- rance of the fact that their own brogue and appear- ance render them equally conspicuous to Americans. They express intense merriment at Americans tak- ing only three months to "do" Europe, without considering that their own countrymen take much less time for " doing " America, and then seem to 372 LE TTERS FROM JAPAN. consider themselves capable of discussing any feat- ure of the country. They take it for granted that every American is disposed to be boastful, and therefore organize themselves into a reform com- mittee to eradicate this idiosyncrasy ; and, while deeming themselves entitled to assume the perfec- tion of everything English, and considering it appro- priate for John Bull to consider himself ne plusultrUy they manifest unfeigned uneasiness at having other nations assume the same premises respecting them- selves, and feel highly scandalized at Brother Jona- than's most excellent opinion respecting himself. Being aware that no aristocracy on the Prussian Blue system exists in America, they infer that society must be " orridly " common, and that polite and elegant language is not much used, and, upon the principle of not casting pearls before swine, they take no pains to express themselves in the deferential phrases with which they would address educated people of their own country, but adopt a brusque phraseology that borders on the coarse and impertinent. I have frequently listened in silence to terms and forms of speech insulting to my coun- try, because, by taking notice thereof, a noisy alter- cation would have inevitably ensued. Should the unkind decrees of mysterious fate ordain that you should sit opposite to one of these people at a dinner party, you will find your hands full for the balance of the meal. You will find him to be as ignorant of the principles of Lord Chesterfield's immortal work as a horse is of rhetoric. He is not OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS, 373 aware of the fact that, in a promiscuous company, national peculiarities should not be offensively dwelt upon. Those of our imperial cousins who have been endowed with thoughtful minds have collected, from history, and from a study of the social and of the political institutions of Japan, a very subtle and highly scientific series of arguments in favor of monarchical forms of governments. General- izing from history, they argue that, before and since the days of the Jewish theocracy when the people clamored for a king to reign over them, mankind has always manifested a natural prefer- ence for monarchical forms of government. These forms of government, say they, have always been the most prevalent and the most popular in all ages and in all countries. Greece and Rome began as monarchies and ended as monarchies. All the republics that have ever existed, were eventually merged into monarchies. Society, in all countries, has always shown a natural disposition to differen- tiate itself. You are bound to have your high classes and your low classes at the social extremes. Ignorance, poverty, and vice will inevitably form a substratum, in any community, that will be unfit to govern itself for any length of time ; and those classes wherein concentrate wealth, refinement, and intelligence, will eventually devise methods where- by to control the masses. Such evolutions of so- cial differentiations will only be a question of time in any country, they say. 374 LETTERS FROAf JAPAN. And, applying their generalizations to Japan, they fortify their theories with practical illustra- tions. The Ainos, the aborigines of the country, were mild tribes of pastoral people living in huts and caves, and subsisting on the spoils of the chase. In their primitive state of society, social equality prevailed. The head man of the hamlet, or of the village, was on a level with his constituents. Then came the Malays and the Mongolians with their superior bravery and intelligence. In the course of centuries, amalgamation and differentiation evolved the present triple system of Japanese society, viz.: the samurai, the tradesmen, and the peasantry. The descendants of each class naturally inherited the traits peculiar to that class, until each breed became so fixed in its characteristics that the feat- ures and bearing of each class could be readily dis- tinguished. And even though feudal caste has been abolished, and all the people are merely sub- jects before the emperor, yet the samurai class still is the governing Class, the tradesmen still keep on in their old avocations, and the peasants wade in the mud as of yore, hardly being aware of the vast changes around them, and being just as un- fitted for governing the empire as if the laws for- bade them entering the civil service. Thus will it eventually be in the United States, they predict. In the course of centuries, the high, the middle, and the low classes will differentiate themselves into well defined types of the commu- nity. The ranks of trade will be filled with the OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS. 375 descendants of those who manifested peculiar fit- ness for mercantile pursuits in by-gone years, and who have transmitted to their progeny their own peculiar mercantile aptitude and proclivities. The laboring classes will naturally be composed of the descendants of laborers. And those families that have held money and land for many generations, will develop into keen, intelligent, diplomatic classes of people who will be naturally fitted for the pro- fessions and for politics, having the inclination, the training, and the leisure to devote thereto. And, in the course of centuries, we will have three dis- tinct classes of society transmitting to their de- scendants their own peculiar tastfts, inclinations, characteristics and features, until we have, like the Japanese, almost three distinct races. When that time comes, then will the higher classes naturally absorb power and prerogative. Citing our immi- gration, they predict that in a few years there will be vast masses of Chinese in the United States, who, in connection with the millions of negroes already in the country, will form a substratum of society having but little aptitude or inclination for self-government, and expecting to be governed by the more enterprising and imperious Caucasians. This Caucasian clement will be like the Malay ele- ment in Japan — fiery, intelligent, capable of gov- erning. It will naturally form an aristocratic class. And then, as aristocrats must have a court and a monarchy, we will have, in the course of time, these institutions established in the United States. While 376 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. a country is young and growing, a republican form of government is all well enough, they say; but when it has become well settled, it naturally be- comes conservative and monarchical in all its ten- dencies. In short, the ideas of our imperial cous- ins, when reduced to a definite proposition, is, that^ in political matters^ a cultured mifiority must govern the vulgar majority; which principle, they claim, will eventually prevail in the United States. *' Behold ! how intensely monarchical in all their tendencies are all your Southern States. Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Louisiana, were all christened in honor of European monarchs ; they were settled by an aris- tocratic element, by the sons of impecunious gen- try, by the shoddy patrician classes, if you so please to express it, who emigrated, under the auspices and under the leadership of noblemen, to seek in the rich fields and favorable climate of the relaxing latitudes of the South the necessaries and the luxuries of life without being subjected to the severe toil and to the bitter climatic vicissitudes endured by the settlers of bleak New England. The salubrity and the fertility of the South having thus attracted the Bohemian clement of British aristocracy, there naturally sprang up in those re- gions the customs and manners of patricians. A powerful slave aristocracy was rapidly developed, which perpetually collided with the republican ten- dencies of the plebeian North, and which would eventually have terminated in monarchy had it not OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS, 377 been crushed at frightful cost." Such, I ween, would be the ideas of our thoughtful imperial cousins, when captured and expressed in intell- igible English. The shrewd and crafty aristocracy of England had long known how matters were drifting in the South, and, from the commencement of the conflict, gave their unqualified and hearty support to the mediaeval confederacy of Calhoun; and, like an evil spirit, stood ever ready to sow dis- sension, and to widen the gap between the North and the South — between republicanism and mo- narchical tendencies, between a higher and nobler development of democratic institutions and the evolution of a patrician condition of society with all its selfish and conservative theories. From afar, they saw that this mediaeval aristocracy and con- federacy must either develop into feudalism or into monarchy; in either case, republicanism, with all its hated tendencies, would be destroyed ; the white man would forever be the imperious samurai^ the black man would forever be the laboring heimin ; and the republic of the North would be perpet- ually menaced by the foothold thus gained by monarchy on the North American Continent. The establishment of a European monarchy by force of arms in the republic of Mexico, during the prog- ress of our Civil War, was thoroughly in harmony with the spirit of the British aristocracy. But it is needless to state that untoward events demolished the schemes of the diplomatic patri- cians of the old world, yet, while we have crushed 378 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. the armies of the Rebellion, we must admit that it will take a long time for the old tendencies to fade away. We must be ever vigilant to check the advances of the old slave aristocracy. It will be cheaper for us to keep the South in the Union than to allow a vast and hostile monarchy to be established beside our Northern republic; to be compelled to fortify thousands of miles of frontier ; and to be compelled to keep a standing army equal in size to the vast legions that the Southern empire would probably keep under arms at all times. These, however, are problems for the fu- ture to solve. I, for my part, do not think we will fulfill the predictions or conform to the ingenious deductions of our imperial cousins. Undoubtedly there is considerable truth in the foregoing enunciation. There can be no question that monarchical forms of government have cer- tainly been the most common in the world. Equally evident is it that society will differentiate itself to a certain extent in every country. We have, and always have had, in the United States, laboring classes, mercantile classes, and moneyed classes decidedly aristocratic in their tendencies. I do not think that these three general classes can ever be done away with. There always must be social inequality in this world until the spirit of Christ has permeated all classes and has imbued every- body with neighborly feelings of kindness and con- sideration for mankind in general. We can never make laws to compel select circles of beatified OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS. 379 snobs to admit the public in general to their social communings. Just fancy the utter absurdity in- volved in attempting to say through our legis- latures to the old Knickerbocker families of New- York, or to the haughty aristocracy of the South- ern States, "Admit the public at large to all your social gatherings ; to wit : to your balls, to your dinner parties, to your house-warmings ; be per- fectly impartial to every one ; show no social preferences of any description whatsoever ; call upon everybody, and receive calls from every- body." Social sets and cliques, based upon likes and dislikes, similarity of tastes, and upon worldly prosperity, will invariably be organized wherever men congregate in communities, whether in mon- archies or republics. And these social inequalities are perfectly consistent with our theories of politi- cal equality. But we and our descendants must be vigilant and prevent selfish and ambitious families from using their social advantages as a basis upon which to found political prerogative and privilege. Here lies the danger of the future. There can be no disgrace in candidly admitting this. Let us clearly understand it, and let us be perpetually on guard; then will our democratic institutions be safe. I think that, as we develop the principles of the Gospels in our social and political affairs, we will find the true solution of this complicated question. Some will treat this confession of faith with con- 380 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. temptuous derision. But let us look into facts a little, and see if they do not support our view. Although the Constitution of the United States does not recognize any creed or religion, yet the principles upon which it is founded are eminently Christian in spirit. Equality, justice, and good- will toward all nations, breathe all through it. And, in obedience to the directions contained therein, the whole policy of our government has been to elevate and benefit the poor and weak members of the community ; and it extends these privileges to any nation whose people show any disposition to become part of the commonwealth. Has there ever been such liberality as this in the history of nations ? Is it not thoroughly Christian ? It has introduced into the world a description of political equality that will permit the development of such characters as Abraham Lincoln from a raw- boned peasant into a President. Who can deny that these doctrines and principles, when consist- ently practiced by every one, will develop a spirit of mutual consideration and confidence? When the poor cease to envy the fortuitous condition of the wealthy, and when those favored by fortune cease to be supercilious and selfish, then will be consummated a condition of society dimly forecast by the prophets. It is safe to say that in propor- tion as the principles of the Gospels have been faithfully and honestly applied to politics and to society, in that same proportion have they become elevated and liberalized. OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS. 38 1 In my very humble opinion, Christ's kingdom will be nothing more nor less than a universal republic wherein social and political equality will be secured by mutual consideration and kindness among all classes and nations. This state of affairs will prevail just as soon as mankind will allow it to do so. Christianity is the only equalizer in the world. The poorest may practice its precepts and secure that refinement of sentiment and action which mere rank and riches fail to bestow. It alone teaches that the chief end of life is the sub- jection of the appetites and passions to the purer and nobler impulses of the soul. Its principles, when applied to the details of every-day life, become a profound and wonderful science ; a com- plicated problem whose terms are ever varying, whose objective point is always self-conquest, whose arena is the human heart and brain, and whose factors are the soul and the evil tendencies of the flesh. All must fight the same battle. The rich perhaps may fight under more favorable cir- cumstances ; but, on the other hand, more is ex- pected of them. The samurai acquires a polished bearing and diction from his favorable surround- ings ; but it is only a social veneer ; he carries beneath it a cruel and lustful heart ; he is admon- ished to combat these vile tendencies of his nature and to subdue them ere he can enter the kingdom of Christ. The heimin, on the other hand, born into life with gross passions and ambitionless emo- tions, is directed to eliminate his coarse appetites 382 LETTERS FROM JAPAN, and to develop the obtuse and dwarfed faculties of his mind. The precepts of Christianity demand of one that he should crush his foul and treacherous instincts ; of the other, his splenetic idiosyn- crasies. Each must battle with those failings peculiar to himself ; succeeding in this, their souls harmonize and are brought into congenial fellow- ship ; herein they become equal. I care not what may be a man's nationality ; provided his soul is sincerely struggling with the base elements of his nature, he is my friend. If I see an Englishman leading a life of shame in these regions, I feel mortified and grieved. Dr. Johnson may not have had the manners of a horse, accord- ing to the standard of the patrician Chesterfield, but, beneath his boorish exterior, there dwelt the instincts of a Christian gentleman ; while beneath the social veneer of the noble lord, there lurked the heart of a crafty and salacious scoundrel, who would not have hesitated to corrupt the purity of any household in Christendom, who instilled his infernal creed into the youthful mind of his son, and whose wretched precepts and example form but a miserable excuse for his fast young countrymen in the East. When all classes and all nations practice the principles enunciated in the Gospels in all the de- tails of their lives, I apprehend that there will be but little collision between the peoples and the nations of the earth. This peaceful condition is the one toward which mankind seems to be rapidly OUR IMPERIAL COUSINS, 383 drifting, — a universal republic, Christ's kingdom, the millennium, whatever you choose to call it. But whatever the future may bring forth, let our imperial cousins be mindful of the fact that, during the past century, Europe and England have de- veloped strong democratic tendencies. Let them not be oblivious of the fact that Great Britain is far more liberal and democratic now than she was a hundred years ago ; that she has been steadily coming up to the level of the American standard of politics for many years ; that this progress on her part is rapidly lessening the difference between our two systems of government ; and that if she goes on in the same ratio of improvement, she will soon be a republic. We do not believe the doc- trine that a cultivated minority can best govern the majority of the people in an intelligent and Chris- tian community. We believe that in such com- munities the sentiment of the majority, upon all political questions, is apt to be safer and sounder than the sentiment of the minority ; and that the sentiment of that majority, fairly, candidly, and conscientiously expressed, should always be sover- eign. Cultured minorities may reach shrewd con- clusions, but they are frequently exceedingly selfish in their doctrines and policies. No, my imperial cousins, we will not discuss this matter any further. We will let the future demonstrate which is the safer and sounder theory. But I am inclined to think that the logic of facts will speedily demon- strate to the satisfaction of mankind that suffrage, 384 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. based upon man as the unit of political power, is the best, the safest, and the most satisfactory of all sovereigns. And now, Julius Marcellus, I shall probably not write any more letters from Kioto. I am not en- joying the best of health here, and it is time to be returning to my own country to resume my inter- rupted studies. I am seriously thinking of resign- ing my position and returning home by way of India and Europe. My route has been long laid out, and I have been steadily growing impatient to start off. My next letter will be definite upon this matter, and, till then, farewell ! TiiEOPHiLUS Pratt. LETTER XXI. FAREWELL TO JAPAN. Yokohama, January 8, 1878. Dear Julius Marcellus: The time has now come for me to bid farewell to Japan. I resigned my position in Kioto last month, and have been supremely busy ever since in making preparations for my departure from these very pleasant shores. There are many strong rea- sons that have combined to urge me to decide to leave this country. In the first place, I have contracted a stubborn intermittent fever, derived, I presume, from sleep- ing on the floor in the temple at Kioto. My con- tract being only for one year, I did not feel dis- posed to waste money on a bedstead, and therefore adopted the Japanese method of repose, which I am now prepared to characterize as not only un- comfortable, but decidedly unhealthy, as the foul air from beneath the house thus finds ready access to your lungs. I presume that I have also aggra- vated my malady by a series of colds which I have taken in the school-room and in my Kioto man- 25 386 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. sion. In the high rooms of the temple it was almost impossible to keep myself warm, even with a red-hot stove. In vain did I paper up all the crevices of my study, hoping thus to keep in the heat, for I discovered that the shojees allowed the warm air to filter through them as if they had been sieves. In the second place, I found myself rapidly be- coming a confirmed dyspeptic from the bad habit of hastily swallowing my food. Eating my meals all alone, without any enlivening conversation, was also very injurious to my digestion. My breakfast was usually disposed of in silence ; my lunch was always a minus quantity, as the school was three miles from home ; and my dinner was devoured with a ravenous appetite, whetted to the keenest of edges by the long walks of the day. The soli- tude and the silence were becoming unendurable. I had enough of that experience in Hirosaki. Life in Kioto, of course, was not nearly so lonely as that up north, but, taken in connection with the feverish condition of my system, it seemed to make it prudent for me to terminate my engage- ment. In the third place, if I wish to settle down in my own country, it is high time to be returning. Nearly a quarter of a century has passed over my head, and, with my professional studies in view, time is becoming exceedingly valuable. Although Japan has a lovely climate and the most beautiful scenery, yet so different arc the people from our- FAREWELL TO JAPAN. 387 selves in thought, sentiment, and aspiration, that it would be impossible for me to affiliate and to grow up with them. But it is not without much regret that I take leave of this charming land. I have spent four exceedingly happy years here, and I shall always look back to this period of my life with feelings of profound pleasure. My trips over lake, mountain, and river will forever be bright spots in my memory, that the flight of years may render dim, but can never erase. I take this occasion to thank you for the many kind letters with which you have favored me dur- ing my exile. It is a matter of regret to me that I shall now be deprived of the pleasure of hearing the postman at my gate announcing the arrival of letters from home. You, who get your mails every day, can have but faint conception of the thrill of joyful expectancy experienced by us who receive ours but once a fortnight. I shall be amply satis- fied if my own rambling correspondence shall have afforded you one-half of the pleasure that yours has afforded me. I do not expect ever to return to Japan. Pos- sibly in the dim future I may revisit the scenes of my youthful sojourn in these regions. But it will never be the same country to me again. It will have undergone vast changes, — all for the better, no doubt, — but it will but shadow forth the quaint reminiscences of the past. There is a lovely strain in the Deserted Village that floats through my 388 LETTERS FROM JAPAN. memory as I write these closing lines. Let me conclude by quoting it : ** Sweet Auburn ! Parent of the blissful hour ! Thy glades forlorn confess the tyrant's power. Here, as I take my solitary rounds, Amidst thy tangling walks and mined grounds. And, many a year elapsed, return to view Where once the cottage stood, the hawthorn grew, — Remembrance wakes with all her busy train, Swells at my breast, and turns the past to pain." Sincerely yours, Theophilus Pratt. INDEX. PACK Ainos 55 Assassinations — causes of . . . ioq Avenues 86 Awomori— description of . . . . 40 ** journey to 41 ** meeting scholars at 41 " night scene in. . . 41 hotel in 42 Ban-Cho 147 Bell of Chioin Monastery. . . .246 British Legation in Tokio — 146 Browbeating the Japanese — sample of 122 Buddhist Monasteries in Ja- pan 315 Buddhism compared with Christianity 318 Capital and Labor in Japan. .356 Cascades at Nikko 186 Chapel of lyiyas at Nikko. . . 183 Chiusenji Lake 175 Christianity discussed by Jap- anese Scholars 165 Civilization and Beefsteak . . . 224 Civilization and Religion — correlative terms 214 Complexion of Japanese. ... 338 Compositions — samples of . . . 168 Conjugal Relations of the Jap- anese 346 Court Scene in Hakodate. . . 105 Dai-Butz at Nara 262 Daimios -description of 65 life of 66 *' poetry of 68 PAGB Death of Buddha— note 258 Death of Saigo 301 Defender of the Faith 213 Desima 143 Dogs — idiosyncrasies describ- ed 178 Dutch — annual visit to Yeddo. 137 Ejinsan — treatment of native house 153 Ejinsan— what 131 Empress Jingo 22a Endless Mountain 238 English Press in Yokohama. 366 Execution of the Assassin. . . 107 Family Jars 348 Farewell to Hirosaki 127 Farewell Address from Direc- tors 128 Feudal Customs — decadence. 71 Feudal Government describ- ed 76 Foreign Teachers in Japan . . 84 Fujiyama 272 * ' appearance from summit 281 climbing 277 cone 279 descent 285 general features of landscape 275 huts on summit ... 282 routes to 273 view at base 275 view at summit. . . .282 Kakku-Gi — temple. Gin Godown — definition of. 247 139 390 INDEX. PACE Hakodate — description of . . . 38 " foreign popula- tion of 39 " battle in 39 journey to 38 Hara-Kiri 139; no Hebachi 151 Hirosaki — my house 49 ; 82 " meeting scholars. 49 *' horseback ride to. 44 *' description of . . . . 36 " " school. 82 *' my Boy 90 " his eccentricities. . 91 " musical dogs 96 Hotel Bill — sami)le of. 221 House-keeping in Tokio . . . .153 Inland Sea 191 Ise Temples 230 Iwaki-san 351 53 lyemitsu — shrines of 184 lyeyas . 68 Japanese Singing 88 love of novelty in religious matters. .203 " village scener)' 45 " kou'tiKL'ing 46 " soldiers 57 " Castles — origin... 58 " " general features. 59 " " one at Hi- j rosaki. . 59 " " audience chamber. . 63 " " present con- dition .... 64 •' red tape — sample of. 120 Jesuit Priest in Hirosaki 113 Jinriksha 132 Kago 132 Kai-Sei-Gakko 148 Kamakura Image 267 Kayaki Wood 306 Kii Province 232 Kioto — routes to 244 *' general characteris- tics 248 PACK Kioto — my house 251 '* neighbors 252 '* Boy 256 population 244 temples 245 " Chioin temple 246 " religious features. .. .248 ' ' character of people . . 248 holiday of courtesans. 249 '* picnics 250 Kin-Kakku-Gi 246 Kobe 190 Kobu-Daishi 239 Kumamolo Castle 295 " siege 297 Lake Biwa 304 Laws of lyiyas 68 ; 71 Lifeof Priests in Monasteries.317 Mikado 7i ; 73 -Mining Department 145 Missions in 1 okio 198 *' ** Yokohama 199 Mitsu-Bishi Company 189 Mitsui Bank 216 Mission Work in Yokohama. 199 " " hostility to. . . .205 Monastery of Coyasan 239 Monastery of Hiyeisan 306 " priest^;. 308 " slaugh- ter of priests. 309 " " " view from 311 Mukojima — cherry groves. . . 158 Nagasaki 191 Nara--temple 261 ** dimensions of image. 263 " bell.. .266 New- Year's calling in Japan . 137 Nihon-Bashi 136 Nikko Village 1 79 Nikko Temples 179 Nir\'ana 313 Norimon 86 Ono Village 225 Owari Castle 63 : 228 Pacific Railway 2 INDEX. 391 fac;k Pacitic Steamers — embarking. 7 •* •' starting... 8 *• " class of passengers. 6 *' " voyage. ... 10 ♦' *' table scene. 11 Pappenbeig 193 Pilgrimages of Natives 174 Politeness of Japanese 139 Promiscuous Bathing 187 Province of Omi — produc- tions. 221 ** Mino " 228 •• " Owari " 229 " " Iga " ...230 " Kii 233 " " Akitah— assas- sin lOI Reception near Hirosaki ... 46 Rice Diet 237 Roman Catholics in Japan . . 1 1 1 Samurai — descriptio.i 73, 76 Satsuma Rebellion— causes. .291 " Samurai 291 Rebellion— Saigo . . 288 ** " outbreak. 292 Sak^ — use of, by Japanese. . .335 School-boys in Tokio 155 School-teachers' occupation. . 157 Schools in Tokio 162 School Contract— sample 37 Sci-O-Ken— hotel 144 Shaka 312 .Shimonos^ki affair 367 Shintoism 231 Sho^n's Position — defined . . 72 Shojees 62 Shodo Shionin— legend con- cerning 180 Sir Harry Parke's Visit to Emperor 299 Summer Recreations in Japan 173 Takada — Prince of Iga 224 Takashima Coal Mines 194 Tatamis — descriptive note. . . 42 Teaching — how conducted. . . 163 Theatres 159 PAGE Tobacco — use of 333 Tomb of Tokugawa lyeyas. . 183 Tokio — geological features. . 132 " '* doing" of 134 Tokio Climate 149 ** Asakusa Temple 135 " Conflagrations 150 " Uy^no Park 135 *' Society 151 Toogu — Gakko 36 Tokugawa House 68 Traveling by Jinrikisha. . . . 176 Truancy of Scholars 167 Tsukidji 143 Tsuruga 223 Tycoon 71 Tsuruga Dai 148 Tsugaru Straits 35 Umoto Sulphur Springs 187 Wine in Japan 337 Woman Suffrage in Japan. . .350 Various Classes of English- men 368 Yakunin — defined 77 Vamato-Vashiki 144 Vashiki 132 Veddo— features 137 fires 138 '* earthquakes 139 " merchants 140 Yesso 55 Yokohama — arrival 17 " description 2i " Curio Street ... 22 Bluffs 21 " Mississippi Bay.. 23 U. S. Naval Hospital 24 " social features.. 24 " rifle range 23 '* recreations 25 Dramatic Associ- ation 27 " public gardens. . 27 " newspapers .... 28 " trade 31 Yoshiwara System 342 RETURN -QANPERIOD CIRCUlATlOMMPARTrAENT^.^^^ 202 Mai rTRRXRY~UST FORAA :^...^^--^^^r- .SlU I 'I /l"'!'^ ■ Berkeley YB 29050 4753-18 UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA LIBRARY