<h2><SPAN name="page296"></SPAN>LETTER XXXIX.—(<i>Continued</i>.)</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> morning I left early in the
<i>kuruma</i> with two kind and delightful savages. The
road being much broken by the rains I had to get out frequently,
and every time I got in again they put my air-pillow behind me,
and covered me up in a blanket; and when we got to a rough river,
one made a step of his back by which I mounted their horse, and
gave me nooses of rope to hold on by, and the other held my arm
to keep me steady, and they would not let me walk up or down any
of the hills. What a blessing it is that, amidst the
confusion of tongues, the language of kindness and courtesy is
universally understood, and that a kindly smile on a savage face
is as intelligible as on that of one’s own
countryman! They had never drawn a <i>kuruma</i>, and were
as pleased as children when I showed them how to balance the
shafts. They were not without the capacity to originate
ideas, for, when they were tired of the frolic of pulling, they
attached the <i>kuruma</i> by ropes to the horse, which one of
them rode at a “scramble,” while the other merely ran
in the shafts to keep them level. This is an excellent
plan.</p>
<p>Horobets is a fishing station of antique and decayed aspect,
with eighteen Japanese and forty-seven Aino houses. The
latter are much larger than at Shiraôi, and their very
steep roofs are beautifully constructed. It was a miserable
day, with fog concealing the mountains and lying heavily on the
sea, but as no one expected rain I sent the <i>kuruma</i> back to
Mororan and secured horses. On principle I always go to the
<i>corral</i> myself to choose animals, if possible, without sore
backs, but the choice is often between one with a mere raw <SPAN name="page297"></SPAN>and others
which have holes in their backs into which I could put my hand,
or altogether uncovered spines. The practice does no
immediate good, but by showing the Japanese that foreign opinion
condemns these cruelties an amendment may eventually be brought
about. At Horobets, among twenty horses, there was not one
that I would take,—I should like to have had them all
shot. They are cheap and abundant, and are of no
account. They drove a number more down from the hills, and
I chose the largest and finest horse I have seen in Japan, with
some spirit and action, but I soon found that he had tender
feet. We shortly left the high-road, and in torrents of
rain turned off on “unbeaten tracks,” which led us
through a very bad swamp and some much swollen and very rough
rivers into the mountains, where we followed a worn-out track for
eight miles. It was literally “<i>foul</i>
weather,” dark and still, with a brown mist, and rain
falling in sheets. I threw my paper waterproof away as
useless, my clothes were of course soaked, and it was with much
difficulty that I kept my <i>shomon</i> and paper money from
being reduced to pulp. Typhoons are not known so far north
as Yezo, but it was what they call a “typhoon rain”
without the typhoon, and in no time it turned the streams into
torrents barely fordable, and tore up such of a road as there is,
which at its best is a mere water-channel. Torrents,
bringing tolerable-sized stones, tore down the track, and when
the horses had been struck two or three times by these, it was
with difficulty that they could be induced to face the rushing
water. Constantly in a pass, the water had gradually cut a
track several feet deep between steep banks, and the only
possible walking place was a stony gash not wide enough for the
two feet of a horse alongside of each other, down which water and
stones were rushing from behind, with all manner of trailers
matted overhead, and between avoiding being strangled and
attempting to keep a tender-footed horse on his legs, the ride
was a very severe one. The poor animal fell five times from
stepping on stones, and in one of his falls twisted my left wrist
badly. I thought of the many people who envied me my tour
in Japan, and wondered whether they would envy me that ride!</p>
<p>After this had gone on for four hours, the track, with a
sudden dip over a hillside, came down on Old Mororan, a <SPAN name="page298"></SPAN>village of
thirty Aino and nine Japanese houses, very unpromising-looking,
although exquisitely situated on the rim of a lovely cove.
The Aino huts were small and poor, with an unusual number of bear
skulls on poles, and the village consisted mainly of two long
dilapidated buildings, in which a number of men were mending
nets. It looked a decaying place, of low, mean lives.
But at a “merchant’s” there was one delightful
room with two translucent sides—one opening on the village,
the other looking to the sea down a short, steep slope, on which
is a quaint little garden, with dwarfed fir-trees in pots, a few
balsams, and a red cabbage grown with much pride as a
“foliage plant.”</p>
<p>It is nearly midnight, but my bed and bedding are so wet that
I am still sitting up and drying them, patch by patch, with
tedious slowness, on a wooden frame placed over a charcoal
brazier, which has given my room the dryness and warmth which are
needed when a person has been for many hours in soaked clothing,
and has nothing really dry to put on. Ito bought a chicken
for my supper, but when he was going to kill it an hour later its
owner in much grief returned the money, saying she had brought it
up and could not bear to see it killed. This is a wild,
outlandish place, but an intuition tells me that it is
beautiful. The ocean at present is thundering up the beach
with the sullen force of a heavy ground-swell, and the rain is
still falling in torrents.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">I. L. B.</p>
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