A Walk Through Old Japan
An autumn trek along the Kiso Road wends through mist-covered mountains and rustic villages graced by timeless hospitality
- By Thomas Swick
- Photographs by Chiara Goia
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2010, Subscribe
“It is so quiet on the Kiso that it gives you a strange feeling,” Bill read, translating from a roadside sign in Japanese. Just then a truck roared past.
My friend Bill Wilson and I were standing at the northern end of the old Kiso Road, which here has been replaced by modern Route 19. It was a sunny fall morning, and we had taken the train from Shiojiri, passing schoolgirls wearing blue uniforms and carrying black satchels, to Hideshio, a kind of way station between plains and mountains. With backpacks buckled, we had headed off into the hills.
Now we were walking south along the highway, separated by a guardrail from the speeding traffic. For centuries, the 51-mile Kiso Road was the central part of the ancient 339-mile Nakasendo, which connected Edo (Tokyo) and Kyoto and provided an inland alternative to the coastal Tokaido road. For centuries, merchants, performers, pilgrims, imperial emissaries, feudal lords, princesses and commoners traveled it. “Murders, robberies, elopements, love suicides, rumors of corruption among the officials,” Shimazaki Toson wrote in his epic novel, Before the Dawn, “these had all become commonplace along this highway.”
Shimazaki’s 750-page work, published serially beginning in 1929, depicts the great political and social upheavals of mid-19th-century Japan: a period when foreign ships began appearing off its shores and its people made the difficult transition from a decentralized, feudal society ruled by shoguns to a modernizing state ruled by the central authority of the Meiji emperor. Shimazaki set his story in his hometown of Magome, one of the Kiso Road’s 11 post towns (precursors of rest stops). Hanzo, the novel’s protagonist, is based on Shimazaki’s father, who provided lodging for traveling officials. In capturing the everyday workings and the rich culture of the inland highway, Shimazaki exalted the Kiso in much the way that the artist Hiroshige immortalized the Tokaido in his woodcuts.
Hiroshige painted the Kiso also (though not as famously), and even from the highway we could see why. Turning our eyes from the cars, we gazed at hillsides of green and muted orange. A lone Japanese maple would flash flaming red, while russet leaves signaled a cherry tree’s last autumnal act. Other branches stripped of foliage bore yellow persimmons that hung like ornaments. After an hour and a half of walking, we came to a stand of vending machines outside a train station. The one dispensing beverages (cold and hot) came with a voice that thanked us for our business.
Bill, a translator of Japanese and Chinese literature, had been telling me about the Kiso Road for a long time. A resident of Miami, he had lived in Japan from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s and had already walked the Kiso twice. The road was officially established in 1601, but carried travelers as early as 703, according to ancient records. Bill loved the fact that, unlike the industrialized Tokaido, the Kiso Road remains very well preserved in places. Walking it, he had assured me, you could still get a feeling of long ago.
I had visited Japan once, taking trains from city to city. The idea of traveling on foot with a knowledgeable friend through a rustic landscape in a high-tech country was greatly appealing. The summer before our trip, Bill gave me the itinerary: we’d walk from Hideshio to Magome—about 55 miles—stopping in post towns along the way. We would act as if the automobile had never been invented. Then he suggested I read Before the Dawn.
“I hope there’s a professional masseuse in Narai,” Bill said, once we were walking again. “Or even an unprofessional one.”
Twenty minutes later, we got off the highway at the town of Niekawa and then dipped down into Hirasawa, passing lacquerware shops. When residents appeared, we double-teamed them with greetings of “Ohayo gozaimasu!” (“Good morning!”) Bill had taught me a few words.
A little before noon, Narai appeared in the distance as a thin town stretched along railroad tracks. We found its main street tight with dark wooden houses and day-tripping tourists. The sloping roofs, small shops, cloth banners and unmistakable air of cultural import were like a reward for having arrived on foot. But I doubted that Bill would find a masseuse.
He did find our ryokan, or inn, the Echigo-ya. Thin sliding doors open to the street gave way to an entryway with a dirt floor rimming a tatami platform. The innkeeper appeared upon it shortly, a young man in a head scarf who dropped to his knees to tell us at eye level that we were too early to check in. Leaving one’s bags never felt so good.
Bill led me to his favorite coffee shop, Matsuya Sabo, a cramped establishment in an antique style. Toy poodles, named Chopin and Piano by the shop’s music-loving owners, were in attendance, and a nocturne played softly behind the bar, which was hung with delicate paper lanterns.
The café proprietor, Mr. Imai, told us that in the old days processions would come through town bearing green tea for the emperor. If the tea container shattered, whoever caused the accident would be beheaded. So when a tea procession arrived, everyone stayed indoors without making a sound. Once it passed, they ran into the street to celebrate.
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Comments (5)
I enjoyed the article. I have just came back from Magome and Tsumago. I went there with American friend. We visited Ko Sabo Garo, and Yasuko-san showed me the article. She even played the same song for us. After listing her song, I asked American friend to read the article and told us the outline in easier English. It is interesting to know the author read "Before the dawn" and "Tokai do chu Hizakurige" (Yaji san and Kita san trip of Tokaido road". To tell you the truth, I have never read Toson's books, and this article make me feel to read "Before the dawn". I would like to know more about the forigner's point of views about the book. I took some foreigners to Magome and Tsumago before, but I thought these guests might not be interested in Japanese literature, so I did not explain so much. Reading the article, I recorginized that even foreign travelers felt same way as Japaese traveler did.
Posted by Motoko Torii on April 2,2012 | 10:47 PM
Outstanding sense for detail - I almost smelled and heard and saw what the author has seen. The road is something that has to be experienced personally, but this travelogue is actually like half being there. Thank you!
Posted by Eli on March 26,2011 | 06:25 AM
The kind of reading that makes you feel like rushing to buy a ticket just to go and see by yourself and if you can't do that your are anyway left with a feeling that you are just back from there.
Posted by charles campi on December 6,2010 | 09:13 AM
In the area where I live in Japan, I have access to the Tokaido Trail (now called the Tokai Nature Walk). I have hiked and biked many kilometers of this trail and the scenery is nothing short of spectacular.
It was great to read of someone else's experiences on one of these trails.If you are in the Nara area, I suggest you check-out the Old Yagyu Road.
Posted by Ross-Barry Barcock on November 7,2010 | 08:18 PM
I truly enjoyed this article and even contacted the author. Such wonderful writing and beautiful pictures. I look forward to seeing more writing from Thomas Swick. Thanks!
Posted by Debbie Nevills Sebastian on October 17,2010 | 05:33 AM