第 40 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2022-07-12 16:19      字数:9322
  there are two sizes。  Ours was a small one; flat…bottomed; 25 feet
  long by 2。5 broad; drawing 6 inches; very low in the water; and
  with sides slightly curved inwards。  The prow forms a gradual long
  curve from the body of the boat; and is very high。
  The mists rolled away as dusk came on; and revealed a lovely
  country with much picturesqueness of form; and near Kotsunagi the
  river disappears into a narrow gorge with steep; sentinel hills;
  dark with pine and cryptomeria。  To cross the river we had to go
  fully a mile above the point aimed at; and then a few minutes of
  express speed brought us to a landing in a deep; tough quagmire in
  a dark wood; through which we groped our lamentable way to the
  yadoya。  A heavy mist came on; and the rain returned in torrents;
  the doma was ankle deep in black slush。  The daidokoro was open to
  the roof; roof and rafters were black with smoke; and a great fire
  of damp wood was smoking lustily。  Round some live embers in the
  irori fifteen men; women; and children were lying; doing nothing;
  by the dim light of an andon。  It was picturesque decidedly; and I
  was well disposed to be content when the production of some
  handsome fusuma created daimiyo's rooms out of the farthest part of
  the dim and wandering space; opening upon a damp garden; into which
  the rain splashed all night。
  The solitary spoil of the day's journey was a glorious lily; which
  I presented to the house…master; and in the morning it was blooming
  on the kami…dana in a small vase of priceless old Satsuma china。  I
  was awoke out of a sound sleep by Ito coming in with a rumour;
  brought by some travellers; that the Prime Minister had been
  assassinated; and fifty policemen killed!  'This was probably a
  distorted version of the partial mutiny of the Imperial Guard;
  which I learned on landing in Yezo。'  Very wild political rumours
  are in the air in these outlandish regions; and it is not very
  wonderful that the peasantry lack confidence in the existing order
  of things after the changes of the last ten years; and the recent
  assassination of the Home Minister。  I did not believe the rumour;
  for fanaticism; even in its wildest moods; usually owes some
  allegiance to common sense; but it was disturbing; as I have
  naturally come to feel a deep interest in Japanese affairs。  A few
  hours later Ito again presented himself with a bleeding cut on his
  temple。  In lighting his pipean odious nocturnal practice of the
  Japanesehe had fallen over the edge of the fire…pot。  I always
  sleep in a Japanese kimona to be ready for emergencies; and soon
  bound up his head; and slept again; to be awoke early by another
  deluge。
  We made an early start; but got over very little ground; owing to
  bad roads and long delays。  All day the rain came down in even
  torrents; the tracks were nearly impassable; my horse fell five
  times; I suffered severely from pain and exhaustion; and almost
  fell into despair about ever reaching the sea。  In these wild
  regions there are no kago or norimons to be had; and a pack…horse
  is the only conveyance; and yesterday; having abandoned my own
  saddle; I had the bad luck to get a pack…saddle with specially
  angular and uncompromising peaks; with a soaked and extremely
  unwashed futon on the top; spars; tackle; ridges; and furrows of
  the most exasperating description; and two nooses of rope to hold
  on by as the animal slid down hill on his haunches; or let me
  almost slide over his tail as he scrambled and plunged up hill。
  It was pretty country; even in the downpour; when white mists
  parted and fir…crowned heights looked out for a moment; or we slid
  down into a deep glen with mossy boulders; lichen…covered stumps;
  ferny carpet; and damp; balsamy smell of pyramidal cryptomeria; and
  a tawny torrent dashing through it in gusts of passion。  Then there
  were low hills; much scrub; immense rice…fields; and violent
  inundations。  But it is not pleasant; even in the prettiest
  country; to cling on to a pack…saddle with a saturated quilt below
  you and the water slowly soaking down through your wet clothes into
  your boots; knowing all the time that when you halt you must sleep
  on a wet bed; and change into damp clothes; and put on the wet ones
  again the next morning。  The villages were poor; and most of the
  houses were of boards rudely nailed together for ends; and for
  sides straw rudely tied on; they had no windows; and smoke came out
  of every crack。  They were as unlike the houses which travellers
  see in southern Japan as a 〃black hut〃 in Uist is like a cottage in
  a trim village in Kent。  These peasant proprietors have much to
  learn of the art of living。  At Tsuguriko; the next stage; where
  the Transport Office was so dirty that I was obliged to sit in the
  street in the rain; they told us that we could only get on a ri
  farther; because the bridges were all carried away and the fords
  were impassable; but I engaged horses; and; by dint of British
  doggedness and the willingness of the mago; I got the horses singly
  and without their loads in small punts across the swollen waters of
  the Hayakuchi; the Yuwase; and the Mochida; and finally forded
  three branches of my old friend the Yonetsurugawa; with the foam of
  its hurrying waters whitening the men's shoulders and the horses'
  packs; and with a hundred Japanese looking on at the 〃folly〃 of the
  foreigner。
  I like to tell you of kind people everywhere; and the two mago were
  specially so; for; when they found that I was pushing on to Yezo
  for fear of being laid up in the interior wilds; they did all they
  could to help me; lifted me gently from the horse; made steps of
  their backs for me to mount; and gathered for me handfuls of red
  berries; which I ate out of politeness; though they tasted of some
  nauseous drug。  They suggested that I should stay at the
  picturesquely…situated old village of Kawaguchi; but everything
  about it was mildewed and green with damp; and the stench from the
  green and black ditches with which it abounded was so overpowering;
  even in passing through; that I was obliged to ride on to Odate; a
  crowded; forlorn; half…tumbling…to…pieces town of 8000 people; with
  bark roofs held down by stones。
  The yadoyas are crowded with storm…staid travellers; and I had a
  weary tramp from one to another; almost sinking from pain; pressed
  upon by an immense crowd; and frequently bothered by a policeman;
  who followed me from one place to the other; making wholly
  unrighteous demands for my passport at that most inopportune time。
  After a long search I could get nothing better than this room; with
  fusuma of tissue paper; in the centre of the din of the house;
  close to the doma and daidokoro。  Fifty travellers; nearly all men;
  are here; mostly speaking at the top of their voices; and in a
  provincial jargon which exasperates Ito。  Cooking; bathing; eating;
  and; worst of all; perpetual drawing water from a well with a
  creaking hoisting apparatus; are going on from 4。30 in the morning
  till 11。30 at night; and on both evenings noisy mirth; of alcoholic
  inspiration; and dissonant performances by geishas have added to
  the dim
  In all places lately Hai; 〃yes;〃 has been pronounced He; Chi; Na;
  Ne; to Ito's great contempt。  It sounds like an expletive or
  interjection rather than a response; and seems used often as a sign
  of respect or attention only。  Often it is loud and shrill; then
  guttural; at times little more than a sigh。  In these yadoyas every
  sound is audible; and I hear low rumbling of mingled voices; and
  above all the sharp Hai; Hai of the tea…house girls in full chorus
  from every quarter of the house。  The habit of saying it is so
  strong that a man roused out of sleep jumps up with Hai; Hai; and
  often; when I speak to Ito in English; a stupid Hebe sitting by
  answers Hai。
  I don't want to convey a false impression of the noise here。  It
  would be at least three times as great were I in equally close
  proximity to a large hotel kitchen in England; with fifty Britons
  only separated from me by paper partitions。  I had not been long in
  bed on Saturday night when I was awoke by Ito bringing in an old
  hen which he said he could stew till it was tender; and I fell
  asleep again with its dying squeak in my ears; to be awoke a second
  time by two policemen wanting for some occult reason to see my
  passport; and a third time by two men with lanterns scrambling and
  fumbling about the room for the strings of a mosquito net; which
  they wanted for another traveller。  These are among the ludicrous
  incidents of Japanese travelling。  About five Ito woke me by saying
  he was quite sure that the moxa would be the thing to cure my
  spine; and; as we were going to stay all day; he would go and fetch
  an operator; but I rejected this as emphatically as the services of
  the blind man!  Yesterday a man came and pasted slips of paper over
  all the 〃peep holes〃 in the shoji; and I have been very little
  annoyed; even though the yadoya is so crowded。
  The rain continues to come down in torrents; and rumours are hourly
  arriving of disasters to roads and bridges on the northern route。
  I。 L。 B。
  LETTER XXVII
  Good…tempered IntoxicationThe Effect of SunshineA tedious
  AltercationEvening OccupationsNoisy TalkSoc