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Unbeaten Tracks in Japan |
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| $14.95 | ||
| By
Isabellla L. Bird October 2000 ISBN 1-885211-57-0 408 pages |
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Description
From the foremother of today's women travelers--a classic tale from 1878 by the first woman to explore and write about the interior of Japan. Written during a time when women did not travel alone and Japan was still mysterious to most, this is a groundbreaking book-illuminating a side of Japan little known today.
Introduction
Table of Contents
Introduction to the New Edition Evelyn Kaye
Preface
Letter I.
First View of JapanA Vision of FujisanJapanese Sampans"Pullman Cars"Undignified LocomotionPaper MoneyThe Drawbacks of Japanese Travelling
Letter II.
Sir Harry ParkesAn "Ambassador's Carriage"Cart Coolies
Letter III.
Yedo and TôkiyôThe Yokohama RailroadThe Effect of MisfitsThe Plain of YedoPersonal PeculiaritiesFirst Impressions of TôkiyôH. B. M.'s LegationAn English Home
Letter IV.
"John Chinaman"Engaging a ServantFirst Impressions of ItoA Solemn ContractThe Food Question
Letter V.
Kwannon TempleUniformity of Temple ArchitectureA Kuruma ExpeditionA Perpetual FestivalThe Ni-ôThe Limbo of VanityHeathen PrayersBinzuruA Group of DevilsArchery GalleriesNew JapanAn Élégante
Letter VI.
FearsTravelling EquipmentsPassportsCoolie CostumeA Yedo DioramaRice-FieldsTea-HousesA Traveller's ReceptionThe Inn at KasukabéLack of PrivacyA Concourse of NoisesA Nocturnal AlarmA Vision of PolicemenA Budget from Yedo
Letter VI.(Continued.)
A Coolie Falls IllPeasant CostumeVarieties in ThreshingThe Tochigi YadoyaFarming VillagesA Beautiful RegionAn In Memoriam AvenueA Doll's StreetNikkôThe Journey's EndCoolie Kindliness
Letter VII.
A Japanese IdyllMusical StillnessMy RoomsFloral DecorationsKanaya and His HouseholdTable Equipments
Letter VIII.
The Beauties of NikkôThe Burial of IyéyasuThe Approach to the Great ShrinesThe Yomei GateGorgeous DecorationsSimplicity of the MausoleumThe Shrine of IyémitsuReligious Art of Japan and IndiaAn EarthquakeBeauties of Wood-carving
Letter IX.
A Japanese Pack-Horse and Pack-SaddleYadoya and AttendantA Native Watering-PlaceThe Sulphur BathsA "Squeeze"
Letter X.
Peaceful MonotonyA Japanese SchoolA Dismal DittyPunishmentA Children's PartyA Juvenile BelleFemale NamesA Juvenile DramaNeedleworkCaligraphyArranging FlowersKanayaDaily RoutineAn Evening's EntertainmentPlanning RoutesThe God-Shelf
Letter X.(Continued.)
Darkness Visible Nikkô ShopsGirls and MatronsNight and SleepParental LoveChildish DocilityHair-DressingSkin Diseases
Letter X.(Completed.)
Shops and ShoppingThe Barber's ShopA Paper WaterproofIto's VanityPreparations for the JourneyTransport and PricesMoney and Measurements
Letter Xi.
Comfort DisappearsFine SceneryAn AlarmA Farm-HouseAn Unusual CostumeBridling a HorseFemale Dress and UglinessBabiesMy MagoBeauties of the KinugawaFujiharaMy ServantHorse-ShoesAn Absurd Mistake
Letter XII.
A Fantastic JumbleThe "Quiver" of PovertyThe Water-ShedFrom Bad to WorseThe Rice Planter's HolidayA Diseased CrowdAmateur DoctoringWant of CleanlinessRapid EatingPremature Old Age
Letter XII.(Concluded.)
A Japanese FerryA Corrugated RoadThe Pass of SannoVarious VegetationAn Unattractive UndergrowthPreponderance of Men
Letter XIII.
The Plain of WakamatsuLight CostumeThe Takata CrowdA Congress of SchoolmastersTimidity of a CrowdBad RoadsVicious HorsesMountain SceneryA Picturesque InnSwallowing a Fish-BonePoverty and SuicideAn Inn-KitchenEngland Unknown!My Breakfast Disappears
Letter XIV.
An Infamous RoadMonotonous GreeneryAbysmal DirtLow LivesThe Tsugawa YadoyaPolitenessA Shipping PortA "Barbarian Devil"
Letter XV.
A HurryThe Tsugawa PacketBoatRunning the RapidsFantastic SceneryThe RiverLifeVineyardsDrying BarleySummer SilenceThe Outskirts of NiigataThe Church Mission House
Letter XVI.
Abominable WeatherInsect PestsAbsence of Foreign TradeA Refractory RiverProgressThe Japanese CityWater HighwaysNiigata GardensRuth FysonThe Winter ClimateA Population in Wadding
Letter XVII.
The CanalSide at NiigataAwful LonelinessCourtesyDr. Palm's TandemA Noisy MatsuriA Jolting JourneyThe Mountain VillagesWinter DismalnessAn Out-of-the-World HamletCrowded DwellingsRiding a Cow"Drunk and Disorderly"An Enforced RestLocal DiscouragementsHeavy LoadsAbsence of BeggarySlow Travelling
Letter XVIII.
Comely KineJapanese Criticism on a Foreign UsageA Pleasant HaltRenewed CourtesiesThe Plain of YonezawaA Curious MistakeThe Mother's MemorialArrival at KomatsuStately AccommodationA Vicious HorseAn Asiatic ArcadiaA Fashionable Watering-PlaceA Belle"Godowns"
Letter XIX.
ProsperityConvict LabourA New Bridge—YamagataIntoxicating ForgeriesThe Government BuildingsBad MannersSnow MountainsA Wretched Town
Letter XX.
The Effect of a ChickenPoor FareSlow TravellingObjects of InterestKak'kéThe Fatal CloseA Great FireSecurity of the Kuras
Letter XX.(Continued.)
Lunch in PublicA Grotesque AccidentPolice InquiriesMan or Woman?A Melancholy StareA Vicious HorseAn Ill-Favoured TownA DisappointmentA Torii
Letter XX.(Concluded.)
A Casual InvitationA Ludicrous IncidentPoliteness of a PolicemanA Comfortless SundayAn Outrageous IrruptionA Privileged Stare
Letter XXI.
The Necessity of FirmnessPerplexing MisrepresentationsGliding with the StreamSuburban ResidencesThe Kubota HospitalA Formal ReceptionThe Normal School
Letter XXII.
A Silk FactoryEmployment for WomenA Police EscortThe Japanese Police Force
Letter XXIII.
"A Plague of Immoderate Rain"A Confidential ServantIto's DiaryIto's ExcellencesIto's FaultsA Prophecy of the Future of JapanCurious QueriesSuperfine EnglishEconomical TravellingThe Japanese Pack-Horse Again
Letter XXIV.
The Symbolism of SeaweedAfternoon VisitorsAn Infant ProdigyA Feat in CaligraphyChild WorshipA Borrowed DressA TrousseauHouse FurnitureThe Marriage Ceremony
Letter XXV.
A Holiday SceneA MatsuriAttractions of the RevelMatsuri CarsGods and DemonsA Possible HarbourA Village ForgeProsperity of Saké BrewersA "Great Sight"
Letter XXVI.
The Fatigues of TravellingTorrents and MudIto's SurlinessThe Blind ShampooersA Supposed Monkey TheatreA Suspended FerryA Difficult TransitPerils on the YonetsurugawaA Boatman DrownedNocturnal DisturbancesA Noisy YadoyaStorm-Bound TravellersHai! Hai!More Nocturnal Disturbances
Letter XXVII.
Good-Tempered IntoxicationThe Effect of SunshineA Tedious AltercationEvening OccupationsNoisy TalkSocial GatheringsUnfair Comparisons
Letter XXVIII.
Torrents of RainAn Unpleasant DetentionDevastations Produced by FloodsThe Yadate PassThe Force of WaterDifficulties ThickenA Primitive YadoyaThe Water Rises
Letter XXVIII.(Continued.)
Scanty ResourcesJapanese ChildrenChildren's GamesA Sagacious ExampleA Kite CompetitionPersonal Privations
Letter XXIX.
Hope DeferredEffects of the FloodActivity of the PoliceA Ramble in DisguiseThe Tanabata FestivalMr. Satow's Reputation
Letter XXX.
A Lady's ToiletHair-DressingPaint and CosmeticsAfternoon VisitorsChristian Converts
Letter XXXI.
A Travelling CuriosityRude DwellingsPrimitive SimplicityThe Public Bath-House
Letter XXXII.
A Hard Day's JourneyAn OverturnNearing
the OceanJoyful ExcitementUniversal GreynessInopportune PolicemenA Stormy VoyageA Wild WelcomeA Windy LandingThe Journey's End
Letter XXXIII.
Form and ColourA Windy CapitalEccentricities in House Roofs
Letter XXXIV.
Ito's Delinquency"Missionary Manners"A Predicted Failure
Letter XXXV.
A Lovely SunsetAn Official LetterA "Front Horse"Japanese CourtesyThe Steam FerryCoolies AbscondA Team of SavagesA Drove of HorsesFloral BeautiesAn Unbeaten TrackA Ghostly DwellingSolitude and Eeriness
Letter XXXV.(Continued.)
The Harmonies of NatureA Good HorseA Single DiscordA ForestAino Ferrymen"Les Puces! Les Puces!"Baffled ExplorersIto's Contempt for AinosAn Aino Introduction
Letter XXXVI.
Savage LifeA Forest TrackCleanly VillagesA Hospitable ReceptionThe Chief's MotherThe Evening MealA Savage SéanceLibations to the GodsNocturnal SilenceAino CourtesyThe Chief's Wife
Letter XXXVI.(Continued.)
A Supposed Act of WorshipParental TendernessMorning VisitsWretched CultivationHonesty and GenerosityA "Dug-Out"Female OccupationsThe Ancient FateA New ArrivalA Perilous PrescriptionThe Shrine of YoshitsunéThe Chief's Return
Letter XXXVII.
Barrenness of Savage LifeIrreclaimable SavagesThe Aino PhysiqueFemale ComelinessTorture and OrnamentChild LifeDocility and Obedience
Letter XXXVII.(Continued.)
Aino ClothingHoliday DressDomestic ArchitectureHousehold GodsJapanese CuriosThe Necessaries of LifeClay SoupArrow PoisonArrow TrapsFemale OccupationsBark ClothThe Art of Weaving
Letter XXXVII.(Continued.)
A Simple NatureWorshipAino GodsA Festival SongReligious IntoxicationBearWorshipThe Annual SaturnaliaThe Future StateMarriage and DivorceMusical InstrumentsEtiquetteThe ChieftainshipDeath and BurialOld AgeMoral Qualities
Letter XXXVIII.
A Parting GiftA DelicacyGenerosityA Seaside VillagePipichari's AdviceA Drunken RevelIto's PropheciesThe Kôchô's IllnessPatent Medicines
Letter XXXIX.
A Welcome GiftRecent ChangesVolcanic PhenomenaInteresting Tufa ConesSemi-StrangulationA Fall into a Bear-TrapThe Shiraôi AinosHorsebreaking and Cruelty
Letter XXXIX.(Continued.)
The Universal LanguageThe Yezo CorralsA "Typhoon Rain"Difficult TracksAn Unenviable RideDrying ClothesA Woman's Remorse
Letter XL.
"More than Peace"Geographical DifficultiesUsu-takiSwimming the OsharuA Dream of BeautyA Sunset EffectA Nocturnal AlarmThe Coast Ainos
Letter XL.(Continued.)
The Sea-ShoreA "Hairy Aino"A Horse FightThe Horses of Yezo"Bad Mountains"A Slight AccidentMagnificent SceneryA Bleached Halting-PlaceA Musty RoomAino "Good-Breeding"
Letter XLI.
A Group of FathersThe Lebungé AinosThe Salisburia AdiantifoliaA Family GroupThe Missing LinkOshamambéDisorderly HorsesThe River YurapuThe SeasideAino CanoesThe Last MorningDodging Europeans
Letter XLII.
Pleasant Last ImpressionsThe Japanese JunkIto DisappearsMy Letter of Thanks
Letter XLIII.
Pleasant ProspectsA Miserable DisappointmentCaught in a TyphoonA Dense FogAlarmist RumoursA Welcome at TôkiyôThe Last of the Mutineers
Letter XLIV.
Fine WeatherCremation in JapanThe Governor of Tôkiyô An Awkward QuestionAn Insignificant BuildingEconomy in Funeral ExpensesSimplicity of the Cremation ProcessThe Last of Japan
Sample chapter
Sample Chapter
Introduction
By Evelyn Kaye It is an incredible feeling to discover a voice from the past that speaks to you in the present. I encountered Isabella Bird for the first time at a garage sale when I found an old copy of A Lady in the Rocky Mountains, a book she wrote in 1873 about her journey to Colorado. Here was a woman after my own heart. She traveled, enjoyed the outdoors, welcomed the unusual and unexpected, and detailed it all in remarkable books she crafted from letters sent home to her family and friends. Bird was one of the outstanding explorer-writers of her day, and in her various tales of travel and discovery women today are granted a true role model. Bird's life of adventure and literature is an inspiration to women everywhere.Bird was a feisty Victorian voyager who traveled around the world years before it was considered appropriate or acceptable for a lady. Born in England in 1831, her ill health and bad back led her to doctors, who prescribed "a change of air." Usually ailing Victorian women went off to spend a week at the seashore or in the country, but Bird used her doctor's advice as an excuse to take off for distant lands, including America, Japan, Tibet, Hong Kong, Hawaii, Egypt, and more.
But what drove Bird to travel? In the 1850s, a bright, intelligent woman in Britain had only one path available to her: marry and depend on her husband. There were few opportunities for careers--only poor women were allowed to earn money doing menial labor. But when Bird's parents died, she continued to live with her sister and earned enough money to support them both, through her writing--no small feat for anyone of any era. It took a great deal of courage for Bird to break away from traditional conventions and follow her own path. She realized, though, that her ability to travel and write provided her with the only escape from the stifling regulations of polite Victorian society. Indeed, as Bird's credo claimed: "Travelers are privileged to do the most improper things with perfect propriety." Indeed, Bird thrived on the freedom and possibility that she discovered on the road.
Bird sailed to Japan in 1878, just a few years after the country opened up to foreigners following more than 200 years of isolation. She arrived at the port of Yokohama and then traveled north, a challenging journey on unpaved roads. Much of rural Japan was suffering from tremendous poverty, and because no foreigners had visited for more than 200 years, there were few facilities for travelers. Bird stayed in run-down inns, faced torrential rains that washed out roads and bridges, rode on a wooden saddle on dozens of Japanese horses, and endured fleas, mosquitoes, and innumerable other biting insects. She marched over mountains and through villages and farmlands to the island of Hokkaido to find the primitive tribes of Ainu, who were being persecuted by the Japanese. She described every detail of her journey, and, realizing that many of the images would upset her readers' romantic view of Japan, she wrote: "The scenes are strictly representative. I offer them in the interests of truth. Accuracy has been my first aim." And that's what you'll find in Bird's daring and descriptive account.
Unlike other English travelers of her time, she did not believe that the world would be a better place if everyone behaved like the British, nor did she believe that Britain had a natural right to take over other countries as colonies. She was a devout Christian--her father had been a minister--but she still respected other religions and traditions, describing Buddhist temples and Hindu ceremonies in remarkable detail. And Bird did not hesitate to criticize when she felt it was justified. She was shocked by Japanese farmers working naked in the fields, disapproved of the harems she visited in Iran, and was outraged by Chinese officials who refused to let her travel farther into a region. On a pilgrimage to climb Mount Sinai, the monks at St. Catherine's Monastery pestered her to buy souvenirs and it horrified her. She refused to stay at the monastery and instead erected her tent in the desert in an effort to restore her peaceful mood of religious contemplation. She was a determined traveler with pluck.
Inspired by her travel books, I wrote her biography, Amazing Traveler Isabella Bird. I researched her travels and her astonishing achievements, and discovered that she was the author of ten books including Unbeaten Tracks in Japan, the first woman Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, and a Fellow of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society. In addition, long before British women could vote, she was invited to address British members of Parliament about her journey in Persia, and was honored by being presented to Queen Victoria.
Isabella Bird is an inspiration to women of all ages and a continual reminder that age is never to be a barrier to living life fully. She took her first trip to Colorado in her forties, went to Japan in her fifties, and was in her sixties when she traveled throughout Asia. At seventy, Bird rode through Morocco's Atlas Mountains on the Sultan's exquisite black horse. Three years after this journey she died peacefully at home in Scotland.
Why have Isabella Bird and her travel books endured for more than a century? Certainly, there were other travel writers of her time--she mentions them in her letters to friends--yet Bird's writing has withstood the years like few others'. Perhaps Bird's endurance comes from her unique combination of passion, wit, honesty, and clarity, as well as her slight touch of decoration. She never took a boring journey, and no matter where she went, some disaster was sure to befall her. If Bird boarded a boat, it was sure to be tossed in a wild storm. If she went out in the winter, she would struggle through chest- high snowdrifts. If she traveled in the summer, she would wilt in sweltering heat. No matter-Bird always marveled at her experiences. Bird's longevity stems from her triumphant spirit, and the part of ourselves to which it speaks. Ultimately, Bird's immense passion for travel awakens our own.
I recently published an account of my journey following in Bird's tracks through Japan called Adventures in Japan. I followed her footsteps--off the beaten track--using her book as my guide, and discovered a unique introduction to an unconventional view of Japan. What I never expected to find was that her name is alive and well, 120 years after her visit. There are monuments to Bird, and her books have been translated into Japanese and are sold in museum gift shops throughout the country. In the old Kanaya Hotel in Nikko, framed photographs line the corridors of famous people who had stayed there-- politicians, kings, queens, movie stars, sports figures, religious leaders and one of Bird. With white hair atop her head, she wears a dark, flowing dress, and stares from her place on the wall with her hallmark determined stance. Indeed, Isabella Bird is still very much alive.
Unbeaten Tracks in Japan has most earned its place as a Travelers' Tales Classic, and I am so pleased Travelers' Tales has decided to grant it this new life. I hope Isabella Bird inspires you as much as she has me.
About the Author
Isabella Lucy Bird was born in Yorkshire, England in 1831 and died in Scotland in 1904. Within her lifetime she gained a reputation as one of the most adventurous women travelers of the 19th century. At a time when ladies were expected to stay quietly at home she went off on unconventional journeys through Tibet, Canada, Korea, Turkey, Hawaii, and Japan.


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