<h2><SPAN name="page306"></SPAN>LETTER XL.—(<i>Continued</i>.)</h2>
<p>A <span class="smcap">charge</span> of 3 <i>sen</i> per
<i>ri</i> more for the horses for the next stage, because there
were such “bad mountains to cross,” prepared me for
what followed—many miles of the worst road for horses I
ever saw. I should not have complained if they had charged
double the price. As an almost certain consequence, it was
one of the most picturesque routes I have ever travelled.
For some distance, however, it runs placidly along by the
sea-shore, on which big, blue, foam-crested rollers were
disporting themselves noisily, and passes through several Aino
hamlets, and the Aino village of Abuta, with sixty houses, rather
a prosperous-looking place, where the cultivation was
considerably more careful, and the people possessed a number of
horses. Several of the houses were surrounded by
bears’ skulls grinning from between the forked tops of high
poles, and there was a well-grown bear ready for his doom and
apotheosis. In nearly all the houses a woman was weaving
bark-cloth, with the hook which holds the web fixed into the
ground several feet outside the house. At a deep river
called the Nopkobets, which emerges from the mountains close to
the sea, we were ferried by an Aino completely covered with hair,
which on his shoulders was wavy like that of a retriever, and
rendered clothing quite needless either for covering or
warmth. A wavy, black beard rippled nearly to his waist
over his furry chest, and, with his black locks hanging in masses
over his shoulders, he would have looked a thorough savage had it
not been for the exceeding sweetness of his smile and eyes.
The Volcano Bay Ainos are far more hairy than the mountain <SPAN name="page307"></SPAN>Ainos, but
even among them it is quite common to see men not more so than
vigorous Europeans, and I think that the hairiness of the race as
a distinctive feature has been much exaggerated, partly by the
smooth-skinned Japanese.</p>
<p>The ferry scow was nearly upset by our four horses beginning
to fight. At first one bit the shoulders of another; then
the one attacked uttered short, sharp squeals, and returned the
attack by striking with his fore feet, and then there was a
general mêlée of striking and biting, till some ugly
wounds were inflicted. I have watched fights of this kind
on a large scale every day in the <i>corral</i>. The
miseries of the Yezo horses are the great drawback of Yezo
travelling. They are brutally used, and are covered with
awful wounds from being driven at a fast “scramble”
with the rude, ungirthed pack-saddle and its heavy load rolling
about on their backs, and they are beaten unmercifully over their
eyes and ears with heavy sticks. Ito has been barbarous to
these gentle, little-prized animals ever since we came to Yezo;
he has vexed me more by this than by anything else, especially as
he never dared even to carry a switch on the main island, either
from fear of the horses or their owners. To-day he was
beating the baggage horse unmercifully, when I rode back and
interfered with some very strong language, saying, “You are
a bully, and, like all bullies, a coward.” Imagine my
aggravation when, at our first halt, he brought out his
note-book, as usual, and quietly asked me the meaning of the
words “bully” and “coward.” It was
perfectly impossible to explain them, so I said a bully was the
worst name I could call him, and that a coward was the meanest
thing a man could be. Then the provoking boy said,
“Is bully a worse name than devil?” “Yes,
far worse,” I said, on which he seemed rather crestfallen,
and he has not beaten his horse since, in my sight at least.</p>
<p>The breaking-in process is simply breaking the spirit by an
hour or two of such atrocious cruelty as I saw at Shiraôi,
at the end of which the horse, covered with foam and blood, and
bleeding from mouth and nose, falls down exhausted. Being
so ill used they have all kinds of tricks, such as lying down in
fords, throwing themselves down head foremost and rolling over
pack and rider, bucking, and resisting attempts to make them go
otherwise than in single file. Instead of bits they <SPAN name="page308"></SPAN>have bars
of wood on each side of the mouth, secured by a rope round the
nose and chin. When horses which have been broken with bits
gallop they put up their heads till the nose is level with the
ears, and it is useless to try either to guide or check
them. They are always wanting to join the great herds on
the hillside or sea-shore, from which they are only driven down
as they are needed. In every Yezo village the first sound
that one hears at break of day is the gallop of forty or fifty
horses, pursued by an Aino, who has hunted them from the
hills. A horse is worth from twenty-eight shillings
upwards. They are very sure-footed when their feet are not
sore, and cross a stream or chasm on a single rickety plank, or
walk on a narrow ledge above a river or gulch without fear.
They are barefooted, their hoofs are very hard, and I am glad to
be rid of the perpetual tying and untying and replacing of the
straw shoes of the well-cared-for horses of the main
island. A man rides with them, and for a man and three
horses the charge is only sixpence for each 2½
miles. I am now making Ito ride in front of me, to make
sure that he does not beat or otherwise misuse his beast.</p>
<p>After crossing the Nopkobets, from which the fighting horses
have led me to make so long a digression, we went right up into
the “bad mountains,” and crossed the three tremendous
passes of Lebungétogé. Except by saying that
this disused bridle-track is impassable, people have scarcely
exaggerated its difficulties. One horse broke down on the
first pass, and we were long delayed by sending the Aino back for
another. Possibly these extraordinary passes do not exceed
1500 feet in height, but the track ascends them through a dense
forest with most extraordinary abruptness, to descend as
abruptly, to rise again sometimes by a series of nearly
washed-away zigzags, at others by a straight, ladder-like ascent
deeply channelled, the bottom of the trough being filled with
rough stones, large and small, or with ledges of rock with an
entangled mass of branches and trailers overhead, which render it
necessary to stoop over the horse’s head while he is either
fumbling, stumbling, or tumbling among the stones in a gash a
foot wide, or else is awkwardly leaping up broken rock steps
nearly the height of his chest, the whole performance consisting
of a series of scrambling jerks at the rate of a mile an
hour.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page309"></SPAN>In
one of the worst places the Aino’s horse, which was just in
front of mine, in trying to scramble up a nearly breast-high and
much-worn ledge, fell backwards, nearly overturning my horse, the
stretcher poles, which formed part of his pack, striking me so
hard above my ankle that for some minutes afterwards I thought
the bone was broken. The ankle was severely cut and
bruised, and bled a good deal, and I was knocked out of the
saddle. Ito’s horse fell three times, and eventually
the four were roped together. Such are some of the
<i>divertissements</i> of Yezo travel.</p>
<p>Ah, but it was glorious! The views are most
magnificent. This is really Paradise. Everything is
here—huge headlands magnificently timbered, small, deep
bays into which the great green waves roll majestically, great,
grey cliffs, too perpendicular for even the most adventurous
trailer to find root-hold, bold bluffs and outlying stacks
cedar-crested, glimpses of bright, blue ocean dimpling in the
sunshine or tossing up wreaths of foam among ferns and trailers,
and inland ranges of mountains forest-covered, with tremendous
gorges between, forest filled, where wolf, bear, and deer make
their nearly inaccessible lairs, and outlying battlements, and
ridges of grey rock with hardly six feet of level on their
sinuous tops, and cedars in masses giving deep shadow, and sprays
of scarlet maple or festoons of a crimson vine lighting the
gloom. The inland view suggested infinity. There
seemed no limit to the forest-covered mountains and the unlighted
ravines. The wealth of vegetation was equal in luxuriance
and entanglement to that of the tropics, primeval vegetation, on
which the lumberer’s axe has never rung. Trees of
immense height and girth, specially the beautiful <i>Salisburia
adiantifolia</i>, with its small fan-shaped leaves, all matted
together by riotous lianas, rise out of an impenetrable
undergrowth of the dwarf, dark-leaved bamboo, which, dwarf as it
is, attains a height of seven feet, and all is dark, solemn,
soundless, the haunt of wild beasts, and of butterflies and
dragonflies of the most brilliant colours. There was light
without heat, leaves and streams sparkled, and there was nothing
of the half-smothered sensation which is often produced by the
choking greenery of the main island, for frequently, far below,
the Pacific flashed in all its sunlit beauty, and occasionally we
came down unexpectedly <SPAN name="page310"></SPAN>on a little cove with abrupt
cedar-crested headlands and stacks, and a heavy surf rolling in
with the deep thunder music which alone breaks the stillness of
this silent land.</p>
<p>There was one tremendous declivity where I got off to walk,
but found it too steep to descend on foot with comfort. You
can imagine how steep it was, when I tell you that the deep
groove being too narrow for me to get to the side of my horse, I
dropped down upon him from behind, between his tail and the
saddle, and so scrambled on!</p>
<p>The sun had set and the dew was falling heavily when the track
dipped over the brow of a headland, becoming a waterway so steep
and rough that I could not get down it on foot without the
assistance of my hands, and terminating on a lonely little bay of
great beauty, walled in by impracticable-looking headlands, which
was the entrance to an equally impracticable-looking,
densely-wooded valley running up among densely-wooded
mountains. There was a margin of grey sand above the sea,
and on this the skeleton of an enormous whale was
bleaching. Two or three large “dug-outs,” with
planks laced with stout fibre on their gunwales, and some
bleached drift-wood lay on the beach, the foreground of a
solitary, rambling, dilapidated grey house, bleached like all
else, where three Japanese men with an old Aino servant live to
look after “Government interests,” whatever these may
be, and keep rooms and horses for Government officials—a
great boon to travellers who, like me, are belated here.
Only one person has passed Lebungé this year, except two
officials and a policeman.</p>
<p>There was still a red glow on the water, and one horn of a
young moon appeared above the wooded headland; but the loneliness
and isolation are overpowering, and it is enough to produce
madness to be shut in for ever with the thunder of the
everlasting surf, which compels one to raise one’s voice in
order to be heard. In the wood, half a mile from the sea,
there is an Aino village of thirty houses, and the appearance of
a few of the savages gliding noiselessly over the beach in the
twilight added to the ghastliness and loneliness of the
scene. The horses were unloaded by the time I arrived, and
several courteous Ainos showed me to my room, opening on a small
courtyard with a heavy gate. The room was musty, and, <SPAN name="page311"></SPAN>being
rarely used, swarmed with spiders. A saucer of fish-oil and
a wick rendered darkness visible, and showed faintly the dark,
pathetic faces of a row of Ainos in the verandah, who retired
noiselessly with their graceful salutation when I bade them
good-night. Food was hardly to be expected, yet they gave
me rice, potatoes, and black beans boiled in equal parts of brine
and syrup, which are very palatable. The cuts and bruises
of yesterday became so very painful with the cold of the early
morning that I have been obliged to remain here.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">I. L. B.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p311b.jpg"><ANTIMG alt="Temple Gateway at Isshinden" title= "Temple Gateway at Isshinden" src="images/p311s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
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