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
(Page 3 of 5)
Yabuhara was deserted and wet, our ryokan somber and cold. (Even in the mountains, we encountered no central heating.) We were served a delicious noodle soup in a dark, high-ceilinged restaurant, where we sat at a vast communal table. For dessert—a rare event in old Japan—the chef brought out a plum sorbet that provided each of us with precisely one and a half spoonfuls. Leaving, we found our damp shoes thoughtfully propped next to a space heater.
In the morning, I set off alone for the post town of Kiso-Fukushima. Bill had caught a cold, and the Chuo-sen (Central Line) train—fast, punctual, heated—was always temptingly close at hand. Today he would ride it and take my backpack with him.
At a little past 8 a.m. the air was crisp, the sky clear. I rejoined Route 19, where an electronic sign gave the temperature as 5 degrees Celsius (41 degrees Fahrenheit). A gas station attendant, standing with his back to the pumps, bowed to me as I walked past.
It wasn’t exactly a straight shot to Kiso-Fukushima, but it was a relatively flat one, of about nine miles. The second person I asked for directions to the inn—“Sarashina-ya doko desu ka?”—was standing right in front of it. A familiar pair of hiking boots stood in the foyer, and a man in a brown cardigan led me along a series of corridors and stairs to a bright room where Bill sat on the floor, writing postcards. The window behind him framed a swiftly flowing Kiso River.
On our way to find lunch, we passed a little plaza where a man sat on the pavement soaking his feet. (This public, underground hot spring had removable wooden covers, and it reminded me of the baths in our inns.) Farther along, a woman emerged from a café and suggested we enter, and so we did. This was a far cry from the gaggles of women who, in the old days, descended upon travelers to extol their establishments.
Kiso-Fukushima was the largest town we had seen since Shiojiri, and I remembered that in Before the Dawn, Hanzo walked here from Magome when called to the district administrative offices. Houses dating to the Tokugawa shogunate (which lasted from 1603 to 1868) lined a street that Bill said was the original Nakasendo. Across the river, the garden at the former governor’s house provided a beautiful example of shakkei, the practice of incorporating the surrounding natural scenery into a new, orchestrated landscape. The old barrier building—a kind of immigration and customs bureau—was now a museum. Shimazaki wrote that at the Fukushima barrier, officials were always on the lookout for “departing women and entering guns.” (Before 1867, women needed passports to travel the Kiso Road; moving guns over the road would have been taken as a sign of rebellion.)
The house next door to the museum was owned by a family that one of the Shimazakis had married into, and a display case held a photograph of the author’s father. He had posed respectfully on his knees, his hands resting on thick thighs, his hair pulled back from a broad face that, in shape and expression (a determined seriousness), reminded me of 19th-century photographs of Native Americans.
Back at our minshuku, Bill pointed out a wooden frame filled with script that hung in the foyer. It was a hand-carved reproduction of the first page of the Before the Dawn manuscript. “The Kiso Road,” Bill read aloud, “lies entirely in the mountains. In some places it cuts across the face of a precipice. In others it follows the banks of the Kiso River.” The sound of that river lulled us to sleep.
At breakfast Mr. Ando, the man in the brown cardigan, invited us to a goma (fire) ceremony that evening at his shrine. Bill had told me that Mr. Ando was a shaman in a religion that worships the god of Mount Ontake, which Hanzo had climbed to pray for his father’s recovery from illness. Shimazaki called it “a great mountain that would prevail amidst the endless changes of the human world.” I had assumed he had meant its physical presence, not its spiritual hold. Now I wasn’t so sure.
We ate a quick dinner—a hot-pot dish called kimchi shabu shabu and fried pond smelts—and piled into the back seat of Mr. Ando’s car. I had a strange feeling of exhilaration as I watched houses zip by (the response of the walker who is given a lift). We careered up a hill, at the top of which Bill and I were dropped off in front of a small building hung with vertical banners. Mr. Ando had temporarily ceased shaman service because he had recently become a grandfather.
Inside, we took off our shoes and were given white jackets with blue lettering on the sleeves; the calligraphy was in a style that Bill couldn’t decipher. About a dozen similarly garbed celebrants sat cross-legged on pillows before a platform with an open pit in the middle. Behind the pit stood a large wooden statue of Fudo Myo-o, the fanged Wisdom King, who holds a rope in his left hand (for tying up your emotions) and a sword in his right (for cutting through your ignorance). He appeared here as a manifestation of the god of Mount Ontake.
A priest led everyone in a long series of chants to bring the spirit of the god down from the mountain. Then an assistant placed blocks of wood in the pit and set them ablaze. The people seated around the fire continued chanting as the flames grew, raising their voices in a seemingly agitated state and cutting the air with their hands in motions that seemed mostly arbitrary to me. But Bill told me later that these mudras, as the gestures are called, actually correspond to certain mantras.
Bill joined in chanting the Heart Sutra, a short sutra, or maxim, embodying what he later said was “the central meaning of the wisdom of Emptiness.” I sat speechless, unsure if I was still in the land of bullet trains and talking vending machines.
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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