|
|||
Kellscraft
Studio Home Page |
Wallpaper
Images for your Computer |
Nekrassoff Informational Pages |
Web
Text-ures© Free Books on-line |
by Richard Gordon Smith TO
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR ERNEST MASON SATOW, K.C.M.G. IN REMEMBRANCE OF HIS KINDNESS IN JAPAN Preface
THE
stories in this volume are transcribed from voluminous illustrated
diaries
which have been kept by me for some twenty years spent in travel and in
sport
in many lands — the last nine of them almost entirely in Japan, while
collecting subjects of natural history for the British Museum; trawling
and
dredging in the Inland Sea, sometimes with success, sometimes without,
but in
the end contributing to the treasury some fifty things new to Science,
and,
according to Sir Edwin Ray Lankester, 'adding greatly to the knowledge
of
Japanese Ethnology.' As may be supposed, such a life has brought me
into close
contact with the people — the fisher, the farmer, the priest, the
doctor, the
children, and all others from whom there is a possibility of extracting
information. Many and weird are the tales I have been told. In this
volume the
Publishers prefer to have a mixture — stories of Mountains, of Trees,
of
Flowers, of Places in History, and Legends. For the general results
obtained in
my diaries I have to thank our late Minister in Tokio, Sir Ernest
Satow; the
Ministers and Vice-Ministers of Foreign Affairs and of Agriculture, who
gave me
many letters of introduction; my dear friend Mr. Hattori, Governor of
Hiogo
Prefecture; the translators of the original notes and manuscripts
(often
roughly written in Japanese), among whom are Mr. Ando, Mr. Matsuzaki,
and Mr.
Watanabe; and Mr. Mo-No-Yuki, who drew and painted the illustrations
from
sketches of my own, which must often have grated on his artistic ideas,
keeping
him awake in reflection on the crudeness of the European sense of art. To my faithful interpreter Yuki Egawa also are due my thanks for continual efforts to find what I wanted; and to many Japanese peasants and fishermen, whose good-nature, kindness, and hospitality have endeared them to me for ever. Well is it that they, so worthy a people, have so worthy a Sovereign. R.
GORDON SMITH.
June 1908. Contents
|