Unbeaten Tracks in
Japan
Letter
Four
"John
Chinaman." Engaging a Servant. First Impressions of Ito. A
Solemn Contract. The Food Question.
H.B.M.'s LEGATION, YEDO, June 7
I went to Yokohama for a week to visit Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn
on the Bluff. Bishop and Mrs. Burdon of Hong Kong were also
guests, and it was very pleasant.
One cannot be a day in Yokohama without seeing quite a
different class of orientals from the small,
thinly-dressed, and usually poor-looking Japanese. Of the
2500 Chinamen who reside in Japan, over 1100 are in
Yokohama, and if they were suddenly removed, business would
come to an abrupt halt. Here, as everywhere, the Chinese
immigrant is making himself indispensable. He walks through
the streets with his swinging gait and air of complete
self-complacency, as though he belonged to the ruling race.
He is tall and big, and his many garments, with a handsome
brocaded robe over all, his satin pantaloons, of which not
much is seen, tight at the ankles, and his high shoes,
whose black satin tops are slightly turned up at the toes,
make him look even taller and bigger than he is. His head
is mostly shaven, but the hair at the back is plaited with
a quantity of black purse twist into a queue which reaches
to his knees, above which, set well back, he wears a stiff,
black satin skull-cap, without which he is never seen. His
face is very yellow, his long dark eyes and eyebrows slope
upwards towards his temples, he has not the vestige of a
beard, and his skin is shiny. He looks thoroughly
"well-to-do." He is not unpleasing-looking, but you feel
that as a Celestial he looks down upon you. If you ask a
question in a merchant's office, or change your gold into
satsu, or take your railroad or steamer ticket, or get
change in a shop, the inevitable Chinaman appears. In the
street he swings past you with a purpose in his face; as he
flies past you in a kuruma he is bent on business; he is
sober and reliable, and is content to "squeeze" his
employer rather than to rob him -- his one aim in life is
money. For this he is industrious, faithful, self-denying;
and he has his reward.
Several
of my kind new acquaintances interested themselves about
the (to me) vital matter of a servant interpreter, and many
Japanese came to "see after the place." The speaking of
intelligible English is a sine quanon, and it was wonderful
to find the few words badly pronounced and worse put
together, which were regarded by the candidates as a
sufficient qualification. Can you speak English? "Yes."
What wages do you ask? "Twelve dollars a month." This was
always said glibly, and in each case sounded hopeful. Whom
have you lived with? A foreign name distorted out of all
recognition, as was natural, was then given. Where have you
travelled? This question usually had to be translated into
Japanese, and the usual answer was, "The Tokaido, the
Nakasendo, to Kiyoto, to Nikko," naming the beaten tracks
of countless tourists. Do you know anything of Northern
Japan and the Hokkaido? "No," with a blank wondering look.
At this stage in every case Dr. Hepburn compassionately
stepped in as interpreter, for their stock of English was
exhausted. Three were regarded as promising. One was a
sprightly youth who came in a well-made European suit of
light-coloured tweed, a laid-down collar, a tie with a
diamond (?) pin, and a white shirt, so stiffly starched,
that he could hardly bend low enough for a bow even of
European profundity. He wore a gilt watch-chain with a
locket, the corner of a very white cambric
pocket-handkerchief dangled from his breast pocket, and he
held a cane and a felt hat in his hand. He was a Japanese
dandy of the first water. I looked at him ruefully. To me
starched collars are to be an unknown luxury for the next
three months. His fine foreign clothes would enhance prices
everywhere in the interior, and besides that, I should feel
a perpetual difficulty in asking menial services from an
exquisite. I was therefore quite relieved when his English
broke down at the second question.
The second was a most respectable-looking man of
thirty-five in a good Japanese dress. He was highly
recommended, and his first English words were promising,
but he had been cook in the service of a wealthy English
official who travelled with a large retinue, and sent
servants on ahead to prepare the way. He knew really only a
few words of English, and his horror at finding that there
was "no master," and that there would be no woman-servant,
was so great, that I hardly know whether he rejected me or
I him.
The third, sent by Mr. Wilkinson, wore a plain Japanese
dress, and had a frank, intelligent face. Though Dr.
Hepburn spoke with him in Japanese, he thought that he knew
more English than the others, and that what he knew would
come out when he was less agitated. He evidently understood
what I said, and, though I had a suspicion that he would
turn out to be the "master," I thought him so prepossessing
that I nearly engaged him on the spot. None of the others
merit any remark.
However, when I had nearly made up my mind in his favour, a
creature appeared without any recommendation at all, except
that one of Dr. Hepburn's servants was acquainted with him.
He is only eighteen, but this is equivalent to twenty-three
or twenty-four with us, and only 4 feet 10 inches in
height, but, though bandy-legged, is well proportioned and
strong-looking. He has a round and singularly plain face,
good teeth, much elongated eyes, and the heavy droop of his
eyelids almost caricatures the usual Japanese peculiarity.
He is the most stupid-looking Japanese that I have seen,
but, from a rapid, furtive glance in his eyes now and then,
I think that the stolidity is partly assumed. He said that
he had lived at the American Legation, that he had been a
clerk on the Osaka railroad, that he had travelled through
northern Japan by the eastern route, and in Yezo with Mr.
Maries, a botanical collector, that he understood drying
plants, that he could cook a little, that he could write
English, that he could walk twenty-five miles a day, and
that he thoroughly understood getting through the interior!
This would-be paragon had no recommendations, and accounted
for this by saying that they had been burned in a recent
fire in his father's house. Mr. Maries was not forthcoming,
and more than this, I suspected and disliked the boy.
However, he understood my English and I his, and, being
very anxious to begin my travels, I engaged him for twelve
dollars a month, and soon afterwards he came back with a
contract, in which he declares by all that he holds most
sacred that he will serve me faithfully for the wages
agreed upon, and to this document he affixed his seal and I
my name. The next day he asked me for a month's wages in
advance, which I gave him, but Dr. H. consolingly suggested
that I should never see him again!
Ever since the solemn night when the contract was signed I
have felt under an incubus, and since he appeared here
yesterday, punctual to the appointed hour, I have felt as
if I had a veritable "old man of the sea" upon my
shoulders. He flies up stairs and along the corridors as
noiselessly as a cat, and already knows where I keep all my
things. Nothing surprises or abashes him, he bows
profoundly to Sir Harry and Lady Parkes when he encounters
them, but is obviously "quite at home" in a Legation, and
only allowed one of the orderlies to show him how to put on
a Mexican saddle and English bridle out of condescension to
my wishes. He seems as sharp or "smart" as can be, and has
already arranged for the first three days of my journey.
His name is Ito, and you will doubtless hear much more of
him, as he will be my good or evil genius for the next
three months.
As no English lady has yet travelled alone through the
interior, my project excites a very friendly interest among
my friends, and I receive much warning and dissuasion, and
a little encouragement. The strongest, because the most
intelligent, dissuasion comes from Dr. Hepburn, who thinks
that I ought not to undertake the journey, and that I shall
never get through to the Tsugaru Strait. If I accepted much
of the advice given to me, as to taking tinned meats and
soups, claret, and a Japanese maid, I should need a train
of at least six pack-horses! As to fleas, there is a
lamentable concensus of opinion that they are the curse of
Japanese travelling during the summer, and some people
recommend me to sleep in a bag drawn tightly round the
throat, others to sprinkle my bedding freely with insect
powder, others to smear the skin all over with carbolic
oil, and some to make a plentiful use of dried and powdered
flea-bane. All admit, however, that these are but feeble
palliatives. Hammocks unfortunately cannot be used in
Japanese houses.
The "Food Question" is said to be the most important one
for all travellers, and it is discussed continually with
startling earnestness, not alone as regards my tour.
However apathetic people are on other subjects, the mere
mention of this one rouses them into interest. All have
suffered or may suffer, and every one wishes to impart his
own experience or to learn from that of others. Foreign
ministers, professors, missionaries, merchants -- all
discuss it with becoming gravity as a question of life and
death, which by many it is supposed to be. The fact is
that, except at a few hotels in popular resorts which are
got up for foreigners, bread, butter, milk, meat, poultry,
coffee, wine, and beer, are unattainable, that fresh fish
is rare, and that unless one can live on rice, tea, and
eggs, with the addition now and then of some tasteless
fresh vegetables, food must be taken, as the fishy and
vegetable abominations known as "Japanese food" can only be
swallowed and digested by a few, and that after long
practice.[1]
Another, but far inferior, difficulty on which much stress
is laid is the practice common among native servants of
getting a "squeeze" out of every money transaction on the
road, so that the cost of travelling is often doubled, and
sometimes trebled, according to the skill and capacity of
the servant. Three gentlemen who have travelled extensively
have given me lists of the prices which I ought to pay,
varying in different districts, and largely increased on
the beaten track of tourists, and Mr. Wilkinson has read
these to Ito, who offered an occasional remonstrance. Mr.
W. remarked after the conversation, which was in Japanese,
that he thought I should have to "look sharp after money
matters" -- a painful prospect, as I have never been able
to manage anybody in my life, and shall surely have no
control over this clever, cunning Japanese youth, who on
most points will be able to deceive me as he pleases.
On returning here I found that Lady Parkes had made most of
the necessary preparations for me, and that they include
two light baskets with covers of oiled paper, a travelling
bed or stretcher, a folding-chair, and an india-rubber
bath, all which she considers as necessaries for a person
in feeble health on a journey of such long duration. This
week has been spent in making acquaintances in Tokiyo,
seeing some characteristic sights, and in trying to get
light on my tour; but little seems known by foreigners of
northern Japan, and a Government department, on being
applied to, returned an itinerary, leaving out 140 miles of
the route that I dream of taking, on the ground of
"insufficient information," on which Sir Harry cheerily
remarked, "You will have to get your information as you go
along, and that will be all the more interesting." Ah! but
how?
[1] After several months of travelling in some of the
roughest parts of the interior, I should advise a person in
average health -- and none other should travel in Japan --
not to encumber himself with tinned meats, soups, claret,
or any eatables or drinkables, except Liebig's extract of
meat.
I. L. B.