<h2><SPAN name="page289"></SPAN>LETTER XXXIX.</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">A Welcome Gift—Recent
Changes—Volcanic Phenomena—Interesting Tufa
Cones—Semi-strangulation—A Fall into a
Bear-trap—The Shiraôi Ainos—Horsebreaking and
Cruelty.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Old
Mororan</span>, <span class="smcap">Volcano Bay</span>, <span class="smcap">Yezo</span>,<br/>
<i>September</i> 2.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the storm of Sunday, Monday
was a grey, still, tender day, and the ranges of wooded hills
were bathed in the richest indigo colouring. A canter of
seventeen miles among the damask roses on a very rough horse only
took me to Yubets, whose indescribable loneliness fascinated me
into spending a night there again, and encountering a wild
clatter of wind and rain; and another canter of seven miles the
next morning took me to Tomakomai, where I rejoined my
<i>kuruma</i>, and after a long delay, three trotting Ainos took
me to Shiraôi, where the “clear shining after
rain,” and the mountains against a lemon-coloured sky, were
extremely beautiful; but the Pacific was as unrestful as a guilty
thing, and its crash and clamour and the severe cold fatigued me
so much that I did not pursue my journey the next day, and had
the pleasure of a flying visit from Mr. Von Siebold and Count
Diesbach, who bestowed a chicken upon me.</p>
<p>I like Shiraôi very much, and if I were stronger would
certainly make it a basis for exploring a part of the interior,
in which there is much to reward the explorer. Obviously
the changes in this part of Yezo have been comparatively recent,
and the energy of the force which has produced them is not yet
extinct. The land has gained from the sea along the whole
of this part of the coast to the extent of two or three miles,
the old beach with its bays and headlands being a marked feature
of the landscape. This new formation appears <SPAN name="page290"></SPAN>to be a
vast bed of pumice, covered by a thin layer of vegetable mould,
which cannot be more than fifty years old. This pumice fell
during the eruption of the volcano of Tarumai, which is very near
Shiraôi, and is also brought down in large quantities from
the interior hills and valleys by the numerous rivers, besides
being washed up by the sea. At the last eruption pumice
fell over this region of Yezo to a medium depth of 3 feet 6
inches. In nearly all the rivers good sections of the
formation may be seen in their deeply-cleft banks, broad,
light-coloured bands of pumice, with a few inches of rich, black,
vegetable soil above, and several feet of black sea-sand
below. During a freshet which occurred the first night I
was at Shiraôi, a single stream covered a piece of land
with pumice to the depth of nine inches, being the wash from the
hills of the interior, in a course of less than fifteen
miles.</p>
<p>Looking inland, the volcano of Tarumai, with a bare grey top
and a blasted forest on its sides, occupies the right of the
picture. To the left and inland are mountains within
mountains, tumbled together in most picturesque confusion,
densely covered with forest and cleft by magnificent ravines,
here and there opening out into narrow valleys. The whole
of the interior is jungle penetrable for a few miles by shallow
and rapid rivers, and by nearly smothered trails made by the
Ainos in search of game. The general lie of the country
made me very anxious to find out whether a much-broken ridge
lying among the mountains is or is not a series of tufa cones of
ancient date; and, applying for a good horse and Aino guide on
horseback, I left Ito to amuse himself, and spent much of a most
splendid day in investigations and in attempting to get round the
back of the volcano and up its inland side. There is a
great deal to see and learn there. Oh that I had
strength! After hours of most tedious and exhausting work I
reached a point where there were several great fissures emitting
smoke and steam, with occasional subterranean detonations.
These were on the side of a small, flank crack which was smoking
heavily. There was light pumice everywhere, but nothing
like recent lava or scoriæ. One fissure was
completely lined with exquisite, acicular crystals of sulphur,
which perished with a touch. Lower down there were two hot
springs with a deposit of sulphur round their margins, and
bubbles of gas, <SPAN name="page291"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
291</span>which, from its strong, garlicky smell, I suppose to be
sulphuretted hydrogen. Farther progress in that direction
was impossible without a force of pioneers. I put my arm
down several deep crevices which were at an altitude of only
about 500 feet, and had to withdraw it at once, owing to the
great heat, in which some beautiful specimens of tropical ferns
were growing. At the same height I came to a hot
spring—hot enough to burst one of my thermometers, which
was graduated above the boiling point of Fahrenheit; and tying up
an egg in a pocket-handkerchief and holding it by a stick in the
water, it was hard boiled in 8½ minutes. The water
evaporated without leaving a trace of deposit on the
handkerchief, and there was no crust round its margin. It
boiled and bubbled with great force.</p>
<p>Three hours more of exhausting toil, which almost knocked up
the horses, brought us to the apparent ridge, and I was delighted
to find that it consisted of a lateral range of tufa cones, which
I estimate as being from 200 to 350, or even 400 feet high.
They are densely covered with trees of considerable age, and a
rich deposit of mould; but their conical form is still admirably
defined. An hour of very severe work, and energetic use of
the knife on the part of the Aino, took me to the top of one of
these through a mass of entangled and gigantic vegetation, and I
was amply repaid by finding a deep, well-defined crateriform
cavity of great depth, with its sides richly clothed with
vegetation, closely resembling some of the old cones in the
island of Kauai. This cone is partially girdled by a
stream, which in one place has cut through a bank of both red and
black volcanic ash. All the usual phenomena of volcanic
regions are probably to be met with north of Shiraôi, and I
hope they will at some future time be made the object of careful
investigation.</p>
<p>In spite of the desperate and almost overwhelming fatigue, I
have enjoyed few things more than that “exploring
expedition.” If the Japanese have no one to talk to
they croon hideous discords to themselves, and it was a relief to
leave Ito behind and get away with an Aino, who was at once
silent, trustworthy, and faithful. Two bright rivers
bubbling over beds of red pebbles run down to Shiraôi out
of the back country, and my directions, which were translated to
the Aino, <SPAN name="page292"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
292</span>were to follow up one of these and go into the
mountains in the direction of one I pointed out till I said
“Shiraôi.” It was one of those exquisite
mornings which are seen sometimes in the Scotch Highlands before
rain, with intense clearness and visibility, a blue atmosphere, a
cloudless sky, blue summits, heavy dew, and glorious sunshine,
and under these circumstances scenery beautiful in itself became
entrancing.</p>
<p>The trailers are so formidable that we had to stoop over our
horses’ necks at all times, and with pushing back branches
and guarding my face from slaps and scratches, my thick dogskin
gloves were literally frayed off, and some of the skin of my
hands and face in addition, so that I returned with both bleeding
and swelled. It was on the return ride, fortunately, that
in stooping to escape one great liana the loop of another grazed
my nose, and, being unable to check my unbroken horse
instantaneously, the loop caught me by the throat, nearly
strangled me, and in less time than it takes to tell it I was
drawn over the back of the saddle, and found myself lying on the
ground, jammed between a tree and the hind leg of the horse,
which was quietly feeding. The Aino, whose face was very
badly scratched, missing me, came back, said never a word, helped
me up, brought me some water in a leaf, brought my hat, and we
rode on again. I was little the worse for the fall, but on
borrowing a looking-glass I see not only scratches and abrasions
all over my face, but a livid mark round my throat as if I had
been hung! The Aino left portions of his bushy locks on
many of the branches. You would have been amused to see me
in this forest, preceded by this hairy and formidable-looking
savage, who was dressed in a coat of skins with the fur outside,
seated on the top of a pack-saddle covered with a deer hide, and
with his hairy legs crossed over the horse’s neck—a
fashion in which the Ainos ride any horses over any ground with
the utmost serenity.</p>
<p>It was a wonderful region for beauty. I have not seen so
beautiful a view in Japan as from the river-bed from which I had
the first near view of the grand assemblage of tufa cones,
covered with an ancient vegetation, backed by high mountains of
volcanic origin, on whose ragged crests the red ash was blazing
vermilion against the blue sky, with a foreground of bright
waters flashing through a primeval forest. The <SPAN name="page293"></SPAN>banks of
these streams were deeply excavated by the heavy rains, and
sometimes we had to jump three and even four feet out of the
forest into the river, and as much up again, fording the
Shiraôi river only more than twenty times, and often making
a pathway of its treacherous bed and rushing waters, because the
forest was impassable from the great size of the prostrate
trees. The horses look at these jumps, hold back, try to
turn, and then, making up their minds, suddenly plunge down or
up. When the last vestige of a trail disappeared, I signed
to the Aino to go on, and our subsequent
“exploration” was all done at the rate of about a
mile an hour. On the openings the grass grows stiff and
strong to the height of eight feet, with its soft reddish plumes
waving in the breeze. The Aino first forced his horse
through it, but of course it closed again, so that constantly
when he was close in front I was only aware of his proximity by
the tinkling of his horse’s bells, for I saw nothing of him
or of my own horse except the horn of my saddle. We tumbled
into holes often, and as easily tumbled out of them; but once we
both went down in the most unexpected manner into what must have
been an old bear-trap, both going over our horses’ heads,
the horses and ourselves struggling together in a narrow space in
a mist of grassy plumes, and, being unable to communicate with my
guide, the sense of the ridiculous situation was so overpowering
that, even in the midst of the mishap, I was exhausted with
laughter, though not a little bruised. It was very hard to
get out of that pitfall, and I hope I shall never get into one
again. It is not the first occasion on which I have been
glad that the Yezo horses are shoeless. It was through this
long grass that we fought our way to the tufa cones, with the red
ragged crests against the blue sky.</p>
<p>The scenery was magnificent, and after getting so far I longed
to explore the sources of the rivers, but besides the many
difficulties the day was far spent. I was also too weak for
any energetic undertaking, yet I felt an intuitive perception of
the passion and fascination of exploring, and understood how
people could give up their lives to it. I turned away from
the tufa cones and the glory of the ragged crests very sadly, to
ride a tired horse through great difficulties; and the animal was
so thoroughly done up that I had to walk, or rather <SPAN name="page294"></SPAN>wade, for
the last hour, and it was nightfall when I returned, to find that
Ito had packed up all my things, had been waiting ever since noon
to start for Horobets, was very grumpy at having to unpack, and
thoroughly disgusted when I told him that I was so tired and
bruised that I should have to remain the next day to rest.
He said indignantly, “I never thought that when you’d
got the <i>Kaitakushi kuruma</i> you’d go off the road into
those woods!” We had seen some deer and many
pheasants, and a successful hunter brought in a fine stag, so
that I had venison steak for supper, and was much comforted,
though Ito seasoned the meal with well-got-up stories of the
impracticability of the Volcano Bay route.</p>
<p>Shiraôi consists of a large old <i>Honjin</i>, or
<i>yadoya</i>, where the <i>daimiyô</i> and his train used
to lodge in the old days, and about eleven Japanese houses, most
of which are <i>saké</i> shops—a fact which supplies
an explanation of the squalor of the Aino village of fifty-two
houses, which is on the shore at a respectful distance.
There is no cultivation, in which it is like all the fishing
villages on this part of the coast, but fish-oil and fish-manure
are made in immense quantities, and, though it is not the season
here, the place is pervaded by “an ancient and fish-like
smell.”</p>
<p>The Aino houses are much smaller, poorer, and dirtier than
those of Biratori. I went into a number of them, and
conversed with the people, many of whom understand
Japanese. Some of the houses looked like dens, and, as it
was raining, husband, wife, and five or six naked children, all
as dirty as they could be, with unkempt, elf-like locks, were
huddled round the fires. Still, bad as it looked and smelt,
the fire was the hearth, and the hearth was inviolate, and each
smoked and dirt-stained group was a family, and it was an advance
upon the social life of, for instance, Salt Lake City. The
roofs are much flatter than those of the mountain Ainos, and, as
there are few store-houses, quantities of fish,
“green” skins, and venison, hang from the rafters,
and the smell of these and the stinging of the smoke were most
trying. Few of the houses had any guest-seats, but in the
very poorest, when I asked shelter from the rain, they put their
best mat upon the ground, and insisted, much to my distress, on
my walking over it in muddy boots, saying, “It is Aino
custom.” Ever, <SPAN name="page295"></SPAN>in those squalid homes the broad
shelf, with its rows of Japanese curios, always has a
place. I mentioned that it is customary for a chief to
appoint a successor when he becomes infirm, and I came upon a
case in point, through a mistaken direction, which took us to the
house of the former chief, with a great empty bear cage at its
door. On addressing him as the chief, he said, “I am
old and blind, I cannot go out, I am of no more good,” and
directed us to the house of his successor. Altogether it is
obvious, from many evidences in this village, that Japanese
contiguity is hurtful, and that the Ainos have reaped abundantly
of the disadvantages without the advantages of contact with
Japanese civilisation.</p>
<p>That night I saw a specimen of Japanese horse-breaking as
practised in Yezo. A Japanese brought into the village
street a handsome, spirited young horse, equipped with a Japanese
<i>demi-pique</i> saddle, and a most cruel gag bit. The man
wore very cruel spurs, and was armed with a bit of stout board
two feet long by six inches broad. The horse had not been
mounted before, and was frightened, but not the least
vicious. He was spurred into a gallop, and ridden at full
speed up and down the street, turned by main force, thrown on his
haunches, goaded with the spurs, and cowed by being mercilessly
thrashed over the ears and eyes with the piece of board till he
was blinded with blood. Whenever he tried to stop from
exhaustion he was spurred, jerked, and flogged, till at last,
covered with sweat, foam, and blood, and with blood running from
his mouth and splashing the road, he reeled, staggered, and fell,
the rider dexterously disengaging himself. As soon as he
was able to stand, he was allowed to crawl into a shed, where he
was kept without food till morning, when a child could do
anything with him. He was “broken,” effectually
spirit-broken, useless for the rest of his life. It was a
brutal and brutalising exhibition, as triumphs of brute force
always are.</p>
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