<h2><SPAN name="page193"></SPAN>LETTER XXVIII.—(<i>Continued</i>.)</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Scanty Resources—Japanese
Children—Children’s Games—A Sagacious
Example—A Kite Competition—Personal Privations.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Ikarigaseki</span>.</p>
<p>I <span class="smcap">have</span> well-nigh exhausted the
resources of this place. They are to go out three times a
day to see how much the river has fallen; to talk with the
house-master and <i>Kôchô</i>; to watch the
children’s games and the making of shingles; to buy toys
and sweetmeats and give them away; to apply zinc lotion to a
number of sore eyes three times daily, under which treatment,
during three days, there has been a wonderful amendment; to watch
the cooking, spinning, and other domestic processes in the
<i>daidokoro</i>; to see the horses, which are also actually in
it, making meals of green leaves of trees instead of hay; to see
the lepers, who are here for some waters which are supposed to
arrest, if not to cure, their terrible malady; to lie on my
stretcher and sew, and read the papers of the Asiatic Society,
and to go over all possible routes to Aomori. The people
have become very friendly in consequence of the eye lotion, and
bring many diseases for my inspection, most of which would never
have arisen had cleanliness of clothing and person been attended
to. The absence of soap, the infrequency with which
clothing is washed, and the absence of linen next the skin, cause
various cutaneous diseases, which are aggravated by the bites and
stings of insects. Scald-head affects nearly half the
children here.</p>
<p>I am very fond of Japanese children. I have never yet
heard a baby cry, and I have never seen a child troublesome or
disobedient. Filial piety is the leading virtue in Japan,
and unquestioning obedience is the habit of centuries. The
arts and threats by which English mothers cajole or frighten <SPAN name="page194"></SPAN>children
into unwilling obedience appear unknown. I admire the way
in which children are taught to be independent in their
amusements. Part of the home education is the learning of
the rules of the different games, which are absolute, and when
there is a doubt, instead of a quarrelsome suspension of the
game, the fiat of a senior child decides the matter. They
play by themselves, and don’t bother adults at every
turn. I usually carry sweeties with me, and give them to
the children, but not one has ever received them without first
obtaining permission from the father or mother. When that
is gained they smile and bow profoundly, and hand the sweeties to
those present before eating any themselves. They are gentle
creatures, but too formal and precocious.</p>
<p>They have no special dress. This is so queer that I
cannot repeat it too often. At three they put on the
<i>kimono</i> and girdle, which are as inconvenient to them as to
their parents, and childish play in this garb is grotesque.
I have, however, never seen what we call child’s
play—that general abandonment to miscellaneous impulses,
which consists in struggling, slapping, rolling, jumping,
kicking, shouting, laughing, and quarrelling! Two fine boys
are very clever in harnessing paper carts to the backs of beetles
with gummed traces, so that eight of them draw a load of rice up
an inclined plane. You can imagine what the fate of such a
load and team would be at home among a number of snatching
hands. Here a number of infants watch the performance with
motionless interest, and never need the adjuration,
“Don’t touch.” In most of the houses
there are bamboo cages for “the shrill-voiced
Katydid,” and the children amuse themselves with feeding
these vociferous grasshoppers. The channels of swift water
in the street turn a number of toy water-wheels, which set in
motion most ingenious mechanical toys, of which a model of the
automatic rice-husker is the commonest, and the boys spend much
time in devising and watching these, which are really very
fascinating. It is the holidays, but “holiday
tasks” are given, and in the evenings you hear the hum of
lessons all along the street for about an hour. The school
examination is at the re-opening of the school after the
holidays, instead of at the end of the session—an
arrangement which shows an honest desire to discern the permanent
gain made by the scholars.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page195"></SPAN>This
afternoon has been fine and windy, and the boys have been flying
kites, made of tough paper on a bamboo frame, all of a
rectangular shape, some of them five feet square, and nearly all
decorated with huge faces of historical heroes. Some of
them have a humming arrangement made of whale-bone. There
was a very interesting contest between two great kites, and it
brought out the whole population. The string of each kite,
for 30 feet or more below the frame, was covered with pounded
glass, made to adhere very closely by means of tenacious glue,
and for two hours the kite-fighters tried to get their kites into
a proper position for sawing the adversary’s string in
two. At last one was successful, and the severed kite
became his property, upon which victor and vanquished exchanged
three low bows. Silently as the people watched and received
the destruction of their bridge, so silently they watched this
exciting contest. The boys also flew their kites while
walking on stilts—a most dexterous performance, in which
few were able to take part—and then a larger number gave a
stilt race. The most striking out-of-door games are played
at fixed seasons of the year, and are not to be seen now.</p>
<p>There are twelve children in this <i>yadoya</i>, and after
dark they regularly play at a game which Ito says “is
played in the winter in every house in Japan.” The
children sit in a circle, and the adults look on eagerly,
child-worship being more common in Japan than in America, and, to
my thinking, the Japanese form is the best.</p>
<p>From proverbial philosophy to personal privation is rather a
descent, but owing to the many detentions on the journey my small
stock of foreign food is exhausted, and I have been living here
on rice, cucumbers, and salt salmon—so salt that, after
being boiled in two waters, it produces a most distressing
thirst. Even this has failed to-day, as communication with
the coast has been stopped for some time, and the village is
suffering under the calamity of its stock of salt-fish being
completely exhausted. There are no eggs, and rice and
cucumbers are very like the “light food” which the
Israelites “loathed.” I had an omelette one
day, but it was much like musty leather. The Italian
minister said to me in Tôkiyô, “No question in
Japan is so solemn as that of food,” and <SPAN name="page196"></SPAN>many others
echoed what I thought at the time a most unworthy
sentiment. I recognised its truth to-day when I opened my
last resort, a box of Brand’s meat lozenges, and found them
a mass of mouldiness. One can only dry clothes here by
hanging them in the wood smoke, so I prefer to let them mildew on
the walls, and have bought a straw rain-coat, which is more
reliable than the paper waterproofs. I hear the hum of the
children at their lessons for the last time, for the waters are
falling fast, and we shall leave in the morning.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">I. L. B.</p>
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