“Getting
out of bed and rolling up the blind on the north window, I look down outside
and see everything is hazy. From the bottom of the lawn below to the tops of
the brick walls over six feet high that surround it on three sides, nothing is
visible. Only a total emptiness clogs the air. And that is silently frozen.”
-
“Fog” (1909), by Natsume Soseki
Soseki, the pen name of Natsume
Kinnosuke, was born 150 years ago today. Here he is describing the smog swathed
view from his lodgings at Number 81, The Chase, London SW4. The house still
stands and is today adorned with a blue plaque, commemorating its famous former
resident.
I first encountered Soseki as the
face on the 1000 Yen banknote on my first trip to Japan in 2003. Asking a Japanese
friend who he was I was told he was Japan’s foremost novelist. He’d lived in
the Meiji era and his works are imbued with a sense of fusion between the east
and west, written at the time which saw Japan transform itself from a closed
and isolated feudal society into globally ambitious Imperial Power. A very
dignified portrait of a grand old man of Japanese letters perhaps, yet it
seemed to me as if there was something warm and perhaps even rather friendly
about his eyes; his impressive moustache and stiffly starched white collar
reminded me of his contemporary and fellow novelist, Joseph Conrad. I think the
first novel of Soseki’s I read was Kusamakura – or, the ‘Grass Pillow’ (1906), followed by other works, such as Botchan and Kokoro. Along with the writer Yasunari Kawabata (whom I’ve written
about before on Waymarks, see here), he
soon became one of my favourite writers.
Soseki's last London residence, 81 The Chase, SW4 |
The Soseki Museum, London |
Early on in my acquaintance with
Soseki I’d read that there was a little museum dedicated to him tucked away in
residential London somewhere, but it was only when I read sometime last summer
that this small and eclectic little museum was due to close that I found the
imperative to visit – which was odd, as being a fan of Japanese literature, I’d
made many visits to places connected to famous Japanese writers in Japan itself,
somehow the one on my doorstep had always been neglected. Hence on the last
Sunday it was due to be open we boarded a bus at Waterloo and followed the road
beside the Thames, heading upriver to visit The Chase.
In “Fog” Soseki describes the same
bus journey but in reverse. Starting from The Chase he rides a horse drawn
omnibus through the foggy streets all the way to Victoria.
“As
I cross Westminster Bridge, a white object flaps fleetingly once or twice past
my eyes. Straining my eyes and carefully looking out in that direction I dimly
see in the middle of the stifling air a gull dreamily flying by. At that moment
Big Ben starts solemnly striking ten o’clock. When I look up there is only
sound in the emptiness.”
Later, he attempts to return home
to The Chase on foot via Tate Gallery and Battersea Bridge, but all the way he
is dogged by the all-enveloping thick fog.
“When
one proceeds four yards, another four yards ahead becomes visible. I walk along
wondering whether the world has shrunk to four yards square, and the more I
walk the more a new four yards square appears. In its place, the world I have
walked through passes into the past and continuously disappears.”
In stark contrast it’s a bright
sunny early autumnal day with a clear blue sky when we step off the bus at the
foot of The Chase. Making our way up the steep paved incline of the street
which is lined with tall and imposingly solid-looking Victorian houses I spot a
middle aged Japanese couple taking pictures of themselves outside a house on
the opposite side of the street, looking up – as I’d guessed – the house they
are posing in front of has a small blue circle imprinted into its yellow brickwork.
Sadly the house itself is covered in scaffolding and so it is somewhat
obscured. As we draw nearer we begin to look for the house opposite which we’ve
read is where we’ll find the Soseki Museum, but the place is decidedly hard to
spot. A young Japanese girl (a student of English literature, like Soseki
himself, we later found out) sees us peering at the various front doors and
asks if we too are looking for Number 80b? We are!
A small plaque about the size of a
business card is all that indicates we’ve found the right place. Pushing the
door bell a voice greets us through a crackling intercom in Japanese – the door
buzzes off the latch and we push it open. Inside the hallway is lined with
propped up bicycles, which seems rather appropriate given that Soseki took up
bicycling whilst staying here in London. As we climb the stairs I wonder what
the residents of the other flats which this old building has been separated
into make of the visitors, predominantly from far overseas, who make this
pilgrimage of sorts through their communal hallway.
On this its last open day, the
place is brimming with visitors and chatter as a photographer, appropriately
enough from the Asahi Shimbun, snaps
away with his camera (see here). It’s the end of an era. Crammed with photos
and documents from the period, along with a library of books by and about the
great writer, the Soseki Museum was first opened in 1984 by Ikuo Tsunematsu,
who is now a professor at Sojo University in Kumamoto, Japan. Since then he and
his wife, Yoshiko, together have kept the museum open to callers three days a
week, but now the scarcity of visitors and the £4 entry fee is no longer
sufficient to maintain the museum’s upkeep; and so, just a few months after the centenary of Natsume Soseki’s death on December 9th 1916, they
have decided to close the museum and sell the two small rooms and the landing
which it has occupied for more than thirty years. No doubt it will revert back
to residential use, but I wonder in time how many of its future residents will
know that because of the man who’s name adorns the blue plaque across the
street these rooms were once visited by the Crown Prince, Naruhito, and two
former Prime Ministers, Kaifu and Obuchi, of Japan? … Maybe all of this will
simply recede like a hazy memory, lost to the mists of the past with the slow
passing of time.
Before leaving, we take a stroll
further up the road to see the old cast iron Victorian ‘Pillar Box’, leaning at
a slight yet venerable angle – its embossed decorations smoothed by the layers
of bright red paint accreted over more than a century of service, in which
Soseki once posted his letters home to Japan. Pausing a moment, we wondered how
many postcards to Japan had been posted here today? … Then, following in his
footsteps – we headed back down the hill to catch a bus back towards
Westminster Bridge.
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