<h2><SPAN name="page187"></SPAN>LETTER XXVIII.</h2>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Ikarigaseki</span>, <span class="smcap">Aomori
Ken</span>, <i>August</i> 2.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> prophecies concerning
difficulties are fulfilled. For six days and five nights
the rain has never ceased, except for a few hours at a time, and
for the last thirteen hours, as during the eclipse at Shirasawa,
it has been falling in such sheets as I have only seen for a few
minutes at a time on the equator. I have been here
storm-staid for two days, with damp bed, damp clothes, damp
everything, and boots, bag, books, are all green with
mildew. And still the rain falls, and roads, bridges,
rice-fields, trees, and hillsides are being swept in a common
ruin towards the Tsugaru Strait, so tantalisingly near; and the
simple people are calling on the forgotten gods of the rivers and
the hills, on the sun and moon, and all the host of heaven, to
save them from this “plague of immoderate rain and
waters.” For myself, to be able to lie down all day
is something, and as “the mind, when in a healthy state,
reposes as quietly before an insurmountable difficulty as before
an ascertained truth,” so, as I cannot get on, I have
ceased to chafe, and am rather inclined to magnify the advantages
of the detention, a necessary process, as you would think if you
saw my surroundings!</p>
<p>The day before yesterday, in spite of severe pain, was one of
the most interesting of my journey. As I learned something
of the force of fire in Hawaii, I am learning not a little of the
force of water in Japan. We left Shirasawa at noon, as it
looked likely to clear, taking two horses and three men. It
is beautiful scenery—a wild valley, upon which a number of
lateral ridges descend, rendered strikingly picturesque by <SPAN name="page188"></SPAN>the dark
pyramidal cryptomeria, which are truly the glory of Japan.
Five of the fords were deep and rapid, and the entrance on them
difficult, as the sloping descents were all carried away, leaving
steep banks, which had to be levelled by the mattocks of the
<i>mago</i>. Then the fords themselves were gone; there
were shallows where there had been depths, and depths where there
had been shallows; new channels were carved, and great beds of
shingle had been thrown up. Much wreckage lay about.
The road and its small bridges were all gone, trees torn up by
the roots or snapped short off by being struck by heavy logs were
heaped together like barricades, leaves and even bark being in
many cases stripped completely off; great logs floated down the
river in such numbers and with such force that we had to wait
half an hour in one place to secure a safe crossing; hollows were
filled with liquid mud, boulders of great size were piled into
embankments, causing perilous alterations in the course of the
river; a fertile valley had been utterly destroyed, and the men
said they could hardly find their way.</p>
<p>At the end of five miles it became impassable for horses, and,
with two of the <i>mago</i> carrying the baggage, we set off,
wading through water and climbing along the side of a hill, up to
our knees in soft wet soil. The hillside and the road were
both gone, and there were heavy landslips along the whole
valley. Happily there was not much of this exhausting work,
for, just as higher and darker ranges, densely wooded with
cryptomeria, began to close us in, we emerged upon a fine new
road, broad enough for a carriage, which, after crossing two
ravines on fine bridges, plunges into the depths of a magnificent
forest, and then by a long series of fine zigzags of easy
gradients ascends the pass of Yadate, on the top of which, in a
deep sandstone cutting, is a handsome obelisk marking the
boundary between Akita and Aomori <i>ken</i>. This is a
marvellous road for Japan, it is so well graded and built up, and
logs for travellers’ rests are placed at convenient
distances. Some very heavy work in grading and blasting has
been done upon it, but there are only four miles of it, with
wretched bridle tracks at each end. I left the others
behind, and strolled on alone over the top of the pass and down
the other side, where the road is blasted out of rock of a vivid
<SPAN name="page189"></SPAN>pink and
green colour, looking brilliant under the trickle of water.
I admire this pass more than anything I have seen in Japan; I
even long to see it again, but under a bright blue sky. It
reminds me much of the finest part of the Brunig Pass, and
something of some of the passes in the Rocky Mountains, but the
trees are far finer than in either. It was lonely, stately,
dark, solemn; its huge cryptomeria, straight as masts, sent their
tall spires far aloft in search of light; the ferns, which love
damp and shady places, were the only undergrowth; the trees flung
their balsamy, aromatic scent liberally upon the air, and, in the
unlighted depths of many a ravine and hollow, clear bright
torrents leapt and tumbled, drowning with their thundering bass
the musical treble of the lighter streams. Not a traveller
disturbed the solitude with his sandalled footfall; there was
neither song of bird nor hum of insect.</p>
<p>In the midst of this sublime scenery, and at the very top of
the pass, the rain, which had been light but steady during the
whole day, began to come down in streams and then in
sheets. I have been so rained upon for weeks that at first
I took little notice of it, but very soon changes occurred before
my eyes which concentrated my attention upon it. The rush
of waters was heard everywhere, trees of great size slid down,
breaking others in their fall; rocks were rent and carried away
trees in their descent, the waters rose before our eyes; with a
boom and roar as of an earthquake a hillside burst, and half the
hill, with a noble forest of cryptomeria, was projected outwards,
and the trees, with the land on which they grew, went down heads
foremost, diverting a river from its course, and where the
forest-covered hillside had been there was a great scar, out of
which a torrent burst at high pressure, which in half an hour
carved for itself a deep ravine, and carried into the valley
below an avalanche of stones and sand. Another hillside
descended less abruptly, and its noble groves found themselves at
the bottom in a perpendicular position, and will doubtless
survive their transplantation. Actually, before my eyes,
this fine new road was torn away by hastily improvised torrents,
or blocked by landslips in several places, and a little lower, in
one moment, a hundred yards of it disappeared, and with them a
fine bridge, which was deposited aslant across the torrent lower
down.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page190"></SPAN>On
the descent, when things began to look very bad, and the
mountain-sides had become cascades bringing trees, logs, and
rocks down with them, we were fortunate enough to meet with two
pack-horses whose leaders were ignorant of the impassability of
the road to Odaté, and they and my coolies exchanged
loads. These were strong horses, and the <i>mago</i> were
skilful and courageous. They said if we hurried we could
just get to the hamlet they had left, they thought; but while
they spoke the road and the bridge below were carried away.
They insisted on lashing me to the pack-saddle. The great
stream, whose beauty I had formerly admired, was now a thing of
dread, and had to be forded four times without fords. It
crashed and thundered, drowning the feeble sound of human voices,
the torrents from the heavens hissed through the forest, trees
and logs came crashing down the hillsides, a thousand cascades
added to the din, and in the bewilderment produced by such an
unusual concatenation of sights and sounds we stumbled through
the river, the men up to their shoulders, the horses up to their
backs. Again and again we crossed. The banks being
carried away, it was very hard to get either into or out of the
water; the horses had to scramble or jump up places as high as
their shoulders, all slippery and crumbling, and twice the men
cut steps for them with axes. The rush of the torrent at
the last crossing taxed the strength of both men and horses, and,
as I was helpless from being tied on, I confess that I shut my
eyes! After getting through, we came upon the lands
belonging to this village—rice-fields with the dykes burst,
and all the beautiful ridge and furrow cultivation of the other
crops carried away. The waters were rising fast, the men
said we must hurry; they unbound me, so that I might ride more
comfortably, spoke to the horses, and went on at a run. My
horse, which had nearly worn out his shoes in the fords, stumbled
at every step, the <i>mago</i> gave me a noose of rope to clutch,
the rain fell in such torrents that I speculated on the chance of
being washed off my saddle, when suddenly I saw a shower of
sparks; I felt unutterable things; I was choked, bruised,
stifled, and presently found myself being hauled out of a ditch
by three men, and realised that the horse had tumbled down in
going down a steepish hill, and that I had gone over his
head. To climb <SPAN name="page191"></SPAN>again on the soaked <i>futon</i> was
the work of a moment, and, with men running and horses stumbling
and splashing, we crossed the Hirakawa by one fine bridge, and
half a mile farther re-crossed it on another, wishing as we did
so that all Japanese bridges were as substantial, for they were
both 100 feet long, and had central piers.</p>
<p>We entered Ikarigaseki from the last bridge, a village of 800
people, on a narrow ledge between an abrupt hill and the
Hirakawa, a most forlorn and tumble-down place, given up to
felling timber and making shingles; and timber in all its
forms—logs, planks, faggots, and shingles—is heaped
and stalked about. It looks more like a lumberer’s
encampment than a permanent village, but it is beautifully
situated, and unlike any of the innumerable villages that I have
ever seen.</p>
<p>The street is long and narrow, with streams in stone channels
on either side; but these had overflowed, and men, women, and
children were constructing square dams to keep the water, which
had already reached the <i>doma</i>, from rising over the
<i>tatami</i>. Hardly any house has paper windows, and in
the few which have, they are so black with smoke as to look worse
than none. The roofs are nearly flat, and are covered with
shingles held on by laths and weighted with large stones.
Nearly all the houses look like temporary sheds, and most are as
black inside as a Barra hut. The walls of many are nothing
but rough boards tied to the uprights by straw ropes.</p>
<p>In the drowning torrent, sitting in puddles of water, and
drenched to the skin hours before, we reached this very primitive
<i>yadoya</i>, the lower part of which is occupied by the
<i>daidokoro</i>, a party of storm-bound students, horses, fowls,
and dogs. My room is a wretched loft, reached by a ladder,
with such a quagmire at its foot that I have to descend into it
in Wellington boots. It was dismally grotesque at
first. The torrent on the unceiled roof prevented Ito from
hearing what I said, the bed was soaked, and the water, having
got into my box, had dissolved the remains of the condensed milk,
and had reduced clothes, books, and paper into a condition of
universal stickiness. My kimono was less wet than anything
else, and, borrowing a sheet of oiled paper, I lay down in it,
till roused up in half an hour by Ito shrieking above the din on
the roof <SPAN name="page192"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
192</span>that the people thought that the bridge by which we had
just entered would give way; and, running to the river bank, we
joined a large crowd, far too intensely occupied by the coming
disaster to take any notice of the first foreign lady they had
ever seen.</p>
<p>The Hirakawa, which an hour before was merely a clear, rapid
mountain stream, about four feet deep, was then ten feet deep,
they said, and tearing along, thick and muddy, and with a fearful
roar,</p>
<blockquote><p>“And each wave was crested with tawny
foam,<br/>
Like the mane of a chestnut
steed.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Immense logs of hewn timber, trees, roots, branches, and
faggots, were coming down in numbers. The abutment on this
side was much undermined, but, except that the central pier
trembled whenever a log struck it, the bridge itself stood
firm—so firm, indeed, that two men, anxious to save some
property on the other side, crossed it after I arrived.
Then logs of planed timber of large size, and joints, and much
wreckage, came down—fully forty fine timbers, thirty feet
long, for the fine bridge above had given way. Most of the
harvest of logs cut on the Yadate Pass must have been lost, for
over 300 were carried down in the short time in which I watched
the river. This is a very heavy loss to this village, which
lives by the timber trade. Efforts were made at a bank
higher up to catch them as they drifted by, but they only saved
about one in twenty. It was most exciting to see the grand
way in which these timbers came down; and the moment in which
they were to strike or not to strike the pier was one of intense
suspense. After an hour of this two superb logs, fully
thirty feet long, came down close together, and, striking the
central pier nearly simultaneously, it shuddered horribly, the
great bridge parted in the middle, gave an awful groan like a
living thing, plunged into the torrent, and re-appeared in the
foam below only as disjointed timbers hurrying to the sea.
Not a vestige remained. The bridge below was carried away
in the morning, so, till the river becomes fordable, this little
place is completely isolated. On thirty miles of road, out
of nineteen bridges only two remain, and the road itself is
almost wholly carried away!</p>
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