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 5 of 5)
In the morning, along with the usual fish, greens and miso soup, we each got a fried egg in the shape of a heart.
Just off the main street we found a coffee shop, Ko Sabo Garo, which doubled as a gallery selling paintings and jewelry. When I asked what was upstairs, Yasuko—who ran the café with her husband—climbed the steps and, hidden from view, sang a haunting song about spring rain while accompanying herself on the koto, a traditional stringed instrument. “That was so Japanese,” Bill said of her unseen performance. “Everything indirect, through shades, through suggestion.”
After dinner I took a walk. (It was becoming a habit.) Like many small tourist towns, Tsumago emptied by late afternoon, and in the darkness I had the place to myself. Hanging lanterns lent a soft yellow glow to dark shuttered shops. The only sound was the trickle of water.
For our walk to magome, Bill tied a small bell to his backpack—the tourist office sells bells to hikers for warding off bears. Past a pair of waterfalls, we began our final ascent on a path free of predators but thick with the spirit of Hanzo. Of course, this last test for us would have been a stroll for him. And there would have been no restorative tea near the top, served by a man in a conical hat.
“He says we have another 15 minutes of climbing,” Bill said, tempering my joy.
And we did. But then we started down, emerging from the forest as well as the mountains; a scenic overlook appeared, from which we could see the Gifu plain far below.
Magome was more open than I had pictured it, its houses and shops tumbling down a main pedestrian street and looking out toward a snow-patched Mount Ena. Because it had been rebuilt after a disastrous fire, the town had the feel of a historical re-creation. A museum to Shimazaki, on the grounds of the old family honjin, offered a library and a film on the writer’s life, but less of a feeling of connection than our walk in the woods.
At the Eishoji Temple, on a hill at the edge of town, the priest had added a small inn. We were shown the Shimazaki family ihai, and our room, whose walls were literally rice-paper thin.
It was the coldest night yet. I woke up repeatedly, remembering two things from Before the Dawn. One was an old saying of the region: “A child is to be brought up in cold and hunger.” The other was Hanzo’s attempt, near the end of the novel, to burn down the temple in which we now shivered. (He ended his days a victim of madness.) I didn’t want to see the temple damaged, but I would have welcomed a small fire.
We set out early the next morning, walking past fields dusted with frost. In a short while we came to a stone marker. “From here north,” Bill translated, “the Kiso Road.” Added to my sense of accomplishment was a feeling of enrichment; I was emerging from 11 days in a Japan that previously I had only read about. There were no witnesses to our arrival, but in my mind I saw—as I see still—bowing innkeepers, caretakers and gas station attendants.
Thomas Swick is the author of the collection A Way to See the World. Photographer Chiara Goia is based in Mumbai.
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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