31 October 2024

Remembering Ralph Jackson


Dr Ralph Jackson (1950-2024)

 

Very sadly my friend and former colleague at the British Museum, Ralph Jackson, passed away on 16 September 2024. 

I first met Ralph in February 1991, when I began volunteering in the Department of Prehistoric and Romano-British Antiquities at the BM. I was still at school at that time, studying for my GCSEs, and Ralph was one of the most welcoming members of the Department. I still remember him looking up and giving me a warm, friendly smile when I inadvertently ventured into his small corner of the Students Room. I was nosily looking around the place, exploring the labyrinthine byways of this large, communal room which was overly-stuffed with furniture, typewriters, microscopes, light-boxes, desk-mounted magnifying glasses, photo-stands, card indexes, padded baskets and trays for safely handling and examining artefacts. It was crammed with all manner of bookishly curious and intriguing things. There seemed to be tall cupboards, filing cabinets and plans chests everywhere, behind which were hidden desks and tables, all heaped with books, maps, papers and pot plants, and, squirreled away amongst it all were quietly studious people, all busily working away. The walls surrounding the room were lined with floor-to-ceiling shelves chockful of books behind sliding glass doors. It was a deeply scholarly space, perched high upon the roof, hidden behind the Museum’s pediment, overlooking the green dome of the Round Reading Room. I apologised for disturbing him, but Ralph sat back in his chair, having first reached for his cup of coffee (which I noted stood next to a small cafetiere on his desk – this seemed to me to be the height of scholarly sophistication!). He told me I wasn’t intruding at all and asked me how I was getting on. Pleased to find him so open and affable, I remember I asked him: “So what do you do?”

 

Ralph was primarily an archaeologist of Roman Britain, but he was also a curator who specialised in the study of Greco-Roman medicine, becoming an expert in bronze medical instruments and also cosmetic grinders, the latter in particular was an area of small finds analysis (or material culture studies, as it’s called nowadays) which he largely pioneered. Many of the ancient surgical implements he studied are surprisingly similar to those used in hospitals today. He used to speak with fluid ease and eloquence about the writings of Galen and other Roman writers with a familiarity which made it seem like he’d actually known these ancient writers personally. Similarly, he could talk in forensic detail (with a quietly-knowing, showman-like glint in his eye) about some of the unanaesthetised medical practices and surgical procedures used by ancient doctors with a steady and unflinching sense of immediacy which was decidedly not for the squeamish or faint of heart!


Doctors and Diseases in the Roman Empire (1988)


During his long and distinguished career at the BM, Ralph co-directed a number of archaeological excavations, most notably at Stonea in Cambridgeshire and at Ashwell in Hertfordshire. Unfortunately, I never got a chance to dig with Ralph, although I did help with some of the final post-excavation work on Stonea after I joined the Department as a full-time member of staff having graduated from university with my first degree. Most of my work with Ralph during that time centred on creating museum displays at the BM. I first worked closely with him (and a huge cross-departmental team of people) on a totally new suite of permanent exhibition galleries dedicated to telling the history of Roman Britain which opened in 1997. These displays, which remain largely unchanged to this day, are hugely popular – especially with visiting parties of school children. 


Soon after the Roman Britain gallery opened, Ralph and I worked together on a special temporary display of the recently excavated grave of a Romano-British doctor found near Colchester, at Stanway in Essex. The complete assemblage of objects from this grave, comprised a bronze skillet and a number of ceramic vessels, including an amphora, along with a set of surgical implements and a number of glass gaming pieces which had clearly been set out – in positions ready to commence playing – upon a wooden gaming board, which had long since decomposed and disappeared in the soil. Ralph described the significance of this ‘healer’s’ grave (dated circa AD 50-60) in his most recent book, noting the find as: ‘The earliest surviving firm evidence of instrumentation for surgical practice in Britain – and, indeed, one of the earliest dated kits from the Roman Empire.’ (Jackson, Greek and Roman Medicine at the British Museum (2023), p. 20; see also Figure 22a-d, p. 22). At the time I’d read about the discovery of this grave in a local newspaper article which had been saved for me by a relative who lived nearby, so it was quite a treat to get to work with these objects and put them on show for the visiting public in the new Roman Britain gallery. It also meant I got a chance to explore Colchester Museum with Ralph when we later returned the grave goods at the end of the loan; the foundations of the building – which is a Norman Castle – are actually the vaults of a Roman temple to the deified Emperor Claudius that date from the period when Colchester was the capital of the Roman province of Britannia.


Installing the Stanway Doctor's Grave display with Ralph, c.1997 (photo by Catherine Johns).

 

A few years later, I worked with Ralph on an exhibition, entitled Gladiators and Caesars: The Power of Spectacle in Ancient Rome, which had previously been on show at two museums in Germany. It was the first large special exhibition which I had properly worked on and it happened to coincide with the release of Ridley Scott’s famous film, Gladiator (2000). We had a clip from the film which showed the fighting in the Colosseum, along with another clip of the chariot race from Ben-Hur (1959), both of which played on a loop at the centre of the exhibition. There was even talk of inviting Russell Crowe to open the exhibition. It was opened though by another Hollywood luminary also with Roman-acting credentials, Mark Rylance; who was then most famous for his work at The Globe Theatre in London, particularly in staging and acting in Shakespeare’s play, Julius Caesar. I was lucky enough to meet Mark Rylance at the exhibition opening, although oddly enough Rylance never actually saw my face because I had been persuaded (by Ralph, among others) to dress up in a full-scale replica set of gladiatorial armour! – I’m not sure I’d have been so readily persuaded to do this for anyone else on the staff other than Ralph, who was always such a genial and supportive soul that it was impossible to say no.


Gladiators and Caesars (2000)


Ralph was a genuinely warm and supportive colleague. He instantly picked up the phone and called the Personnel Department to see if the Museum was still part of a Civil Service accommodation assistance scheme that he knew about when I was having trouble finding somewhere to live. Unfortunately, the Museum wasn’t part of the scheme any longer, but the gesture spoke volumes about Ralph’s capacity for empathy and his desire to help. It was nice to be able to re-pay kind favours such as these, especially when during the course of the Gladiators and Caesars exhibition I was contacted by Roy Friendship-Taylor, the director of a dig on a Roman Villa site in Northamptonshire which I’d been a member of for many years, where a bronze and iron folding knife depicting a gladiator had just been unearthed. I went up to Northampton and took a look at it, identifying it as showing a type of gladiator known as a Secutor – the ‘chaser,’ who was usually pitted against the Retiarius, or ‘net fighter.’ Returning to London, Ralph and I were then absolutely thrilled that we managed to get the knife conserved and included in the exhibition. It is now on long-term loan to the BM and can be seen on display in the Roman Britain gallery (Room 49).


Greek and Roman Medicine at the British Museum (2023)


After I left the Prehistory and Roman Britain Department, Ralph and I remained in touch. He used to tell me about the projects he was working on and often invited me to the launch of his publications, such that it felt like that question I’d first asked him in February 1991 had continued to echo and be answered down the years. The last time I bumped into him, after he had retired – not all that long ago, we had a long chat, and he briefly mentioned that he’d been ill, but he didn’t go into details as he usually did concerning medical matters when they related to ancient Romans. It was a shock later on to find out just how unwell he was. But I’m glad – having known Ralph for such a long time – that I was able, in company with a number of my former colleagues, to pass on a message of love and support to Ralph shortly before he died. And it’s a curious thing, because, just at the time that he passed away, I had a very vivid memory of Ralph, which popped into my mind unprompted while I slept, in which Ralph appeared and asked me in his characteristic way: “How are you getting on? – Everything OK?”

Warm, witty, kind, inquisitive, and reassuring – Ralph was a true gentleman with a generous heart and a great soul. He will be greatly missed by all those who were fortunate enough to have known him.


Ralph Jackson talking about Roman surgical instruments, c.2001.


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Ralph Jackson - Obituary, by Richard Hobbs (The Guardian)


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Postscript: Curiously enough, another gladiator knife with a Secutor-type handle has recently been found in the UK just as Ridley Scott's sequel to Gladiator is about to open in cinemas. "What we do in life echoes in eternity," indeed. – I'm sure this parallel would have made Ralph smile.


18 October 2024

Nebuta in Tokyo's Nakano


 

Aomori, at the northernmost end of Japan’s island of Honshu, is renowned for its annual ‘Nebuta Matsuri’ or Nebuta Festival. ‘Nebuta’ are large, illuminated floats, originally made of wood, bamboo and coloured or painted paper, and were lit from within by candles. Nowadays they are made with wire and electric lamps, but they still conform to the same designs and motifs, often representing historical persons or famous kabuki actors, as well as gods and mythical beasts.



The key elements of the festival are thought to date back to the Nara Period (710-794), and there are a number of theories concerning its origins, some of which are quite gruesome, relating to historical episodes of regional military conflict and feudal oppression. Although other theories root the festival in Shinto religious practices. As such, it has very likely evolved down the centuries having first arisen in connection to the annual Tanabata festival (7 July) and O-Bon rituals, in which lanterns are floated on rivers in memory of the dead.




Nebuta scene from 1928

Originally carried by one man with a number of supporters, over time the Nebuta lantern floats have grown in size and nowadays they are usually mounted on wheels, requiring large numbers of people to move and operate them during the festival processions. These processions are characteristically made up of large numbers of people dressed in traditional Japanese attire, playing flutes, shaking bells and beating taiko drums, chanting ‘Rasserā’ (ラッセラー), encouraging others to join in.



The main and largest Nebuta Festival takes place in Aomori City, but smaller Nebuta Festivals also take place in different towns and villages across Aomori Prefecture. Other Nebuta Matsuri, or the inclusion of Nebuta in similar festivals, can also be found in different parts of Japan too. Curiously enough, I first saw a Nebuta lantern float in London at the British Museum in November 2001, when one was especially commissioned and built by Japanese crafts people who came to the UK from Aomori as part of "Japan 2001", a year-long series of events celebrating Japanese culture. It was huge and filled the entire space of the large room which used to be the old North Library of the British Library, now the Wellcome Gallery of Living and Dying, just off the Great Court. But my first experience of an actual Nebuta Festival was the one held in Tokyo’s Nakano-ku in October last year (2023). These are some of the pictures I took of the lantern floats.



There was a great atmosphere which grew all the more spectacular after dusk as night fell. The sound of the taiko drums was visceral and could be felt distinctly and almost overwhelmingly in the pit of one’s stomach, resonating with even greater intensity than it was heard, even though the volume itself was ear-splittingly loud. But one of the most impressive sights was watching one person balancing a sail-like rig of lanterns hoisted high on a single bamboo pole – to which extensions were added that progressively raised the sail high above the heads of the people in the procession and those watching from the sidelines, all while deftly balancing them on the palm of one hand, or their forehead, or hip (scroll down to see the pictures posted below). They did accidentally drop one of them on the crowd though, so the sense of drama was quite real!



Nakano Nebuta Festival – properly called the Nakano Tohoku Kizuna Matsuri (なかの東北絆まつり) held in support of the reconstruction of the Tohoku region following on from the earthquake of 2011 – this year will take place on 26-27 October 2024. Further information on the history of Nebuta can be found here.



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Also on 'Waymarks'









All photographs by Tim Chamberlain, October 2023.



15 October 2024

A Visit to the Iwaya Caves of Enoshima

Or, A Conradian Reflection Upon the Phenomena of Modern Travel.

 

A View of Enoshima, by Yuichi Takahashi (c.1876-1877)


In his ‘Preface’ to Richard Curle’s Into the East (1923), an account of Curle’s travels in Burma and British Malaya, Joseph Conrad lamented the transition of travel writing from an era of intrepid voyaging, adventuring curiosity, and philanthropical reportage to a new and stupefying age of mass tourism: ‘… those things, which stand as if imperishable in the pages of old books of travel, are all blown away, have vanished utterly as the smoke of the travellers’ camp fires in the icy night air of the Gobi Desert, as the smell of incense burned in the temples of strange gods, as the voices of Asiatic statesmen speculating with the cruel wisdom of past ages on matters of peace and war.

Nothing obviously strange remains for our eyes now.’ (p. 90)


Enoshima, by Ogata Gekko (c.1895-1905)


Conrad wrote these orientalising, elegiac words late in his life. This particular ‘Preface,’ along with another essay which was published the following year in the National Geographic Magazine, show Conrad looking back on the events of his own life and career, prompting him to reflect upon his place in this changing tradition. A tradition which he believed was characterised by a clear sense of cultural evolution in terms of human exploration from ancient to modern times. In this essay, entitled ‘Geography and Some Explorers,’ he famously distilled this peculiarly inquisitive, globetrotting endeavour into three developmental phases: first, Geography fabulous; second, Geography militant; third, and finally, Geography triumphant.


 

Joseph Conrad (1923)


Geography fabulous was graphically represented by medieval maps crowded ‘with pictures of strange pageants, strange trees, strange beasts, drawn with amazing precision in the midst of theoretically conceived continents. […] regions infested by lions or haunted by unicorns, inhabited by men with reversed feet, or eyes in the middle of their breasts.’ (p. 2) A Mappa Mundi-like world of awful mystery and extravagant speculation, but, nevertheless, a world of gradually expanding horizons, best characterised by the early wanderings of Prince Henry the Navigator’s Portuguese caravels skirting along newly-seen African coastlines, venturing into these ‘blank’ (or hitherto unknown) spaces, progressively advancing the boundaries of portolan charts dotted with compass roses from which radiated the rhumb lines upon which mariners set their courses. The Old World’s ‘discovery’ of the New precipitated an epochal shift that permanently altered both European and non-European planetary consciousness in different ways. Conrad’s view of Christopher Columbus is interesting when read in the context of recent and somewhat controversial claims concerning Columbus’s ancestry (Genoese Christian, or secretly Jewish Spaniard?), as well as on-going de-colonial debates about how Columbus’s legacy should or shouldn’t be remembered in our own times. Conrad opines that: ‘Columbus remains a pathetic figure, not a sufferer in the cause of geography, but a victim of the imperfections of jealous human hearts, accepting his fate with resignation. Among explorers he appears lofty in his troubles and like a man of a kingly nature. His contribution to the knowledge of the earth was certainly royal. And if the discovery of America was the occasion of the greatest outburst of reckless cruelty and greed known to history we may say this at least for it, that the gold of Mexico and Peru, unlike the gold of alchemists, was really there, palpable, yet, as ever, the most elusive of the Fata Morgana that lure men away from their homes, as a moment of reflection will convince any one. For nothing is more certain than that there will never be enough gold to go round, as the Conquistadores found out by experience.’ (p. 3)




European-led exploration opened up routes for exploitation and the succeeding phase of Geography militant became a defining aspect of the early modern period (previously referred to as ‘the Enlightenment’) of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. From the personal point of view of individual explorers, it was characterised by an arduous seeking for the confirmation of certain theories proffered and stubbornly maintained by learned armchair geographers, as Conrad characterised them, who ‘did not seem able to accept the idea that there was much more water than land on this globe.’ (p. 6) Thus the most renowned navigators of this era, men such as Amerigo Vespucci, Ferdinand Magellan, and Abel Tasman, roamed the oceans, circumnavigating the globe, searching its southernmost latitudes in pursuit of an elusive ‘Terra Australis Incognita’; until the more refined scientific exploits of this long tradition of great men, running through the efforts of Captain James Cook and Sir John Franklin at sea, and, on land, the endeavours of Messrs Burton and Speke, and Dr David Livingstone, who collectively rounded off this heroic era, successfully transitioned us into the modern age of Geography triumphant. Another distinctly masculine and assertively imperialist age in which, as Conrad saw it, ‘there will be no backyard left in the heart of Central Africa that has not been peeped into by some person more or less commissioned for the purpose.’ (p. 89) Citing, as a kind of self-conscious footnote to this era, the example of his own career as a merchant sailor in the romantic last days of sailing ships, wherein it was his ‘duty to correct and bring up to date the charts of more than one ship according to the Admiralty notices.’ (p. 14)




As needs must, however, Conrad observed that travel writing in his day had changed because travel and the modern-day traveller had changed. These three phases of questing geographical endeavour had clearly succeeded in shrinking the globe, and so the game was almost up. Hence a writer like Richard Curle, according to Conrad’s estimation, represented ‘a traveller of our day, condemned to make his discoveries on beaten tracks, he looks on, sensitive, meditative, with delicate perceptions and a gift for expression, alive to the saving grace of human and historical associations; and while pursuing amongst the men busy with ascertained facts the riddles presented by a world in transition, he seems to have captured for us the spirit of modern travel itself.’ (p. 92)

 

Now, exactly one hundred years after these words were freshly penned by Conrad, oddly enough they still seem indelibly apposite; has anything really changed in terms of travel and tourism in our increasingly globalised world? – Some might argue that the fortunes of travel writing and the popularity of travel writers has ebbed and flowed significantly during this century of accelerated development. But some might say that on the whole it has always been in a steady decline, like an echo of diminishing returns, travel writing in a sense has simply become a prolonged, self-repeating parody of itself – so much so, in fact, that it has essentially become redundant.



 

Conrad certainly thought so: ‘That category of travellers with their parrot-like remarks, their strange attempts at being funny, and their lamentable essays in seriousness has apparently passed away. Or perhaps they only print their books for circulation amongst friends. I suspect, however, they have ceased to write simply because there are too many of them. They do not appear as travellers even to the most naïve minds and perhaps even to their own minds. They are simply an enormous company of people who go round the world for a change and rest, either suffering from overwork (whatever that may mean) or from neurasthenia. And I am sure my best wishes go with them for an easy and radical recovery. Steamship companies love them.’ (p. 86)

 

Indeed, modern mass tourism and the increasing prevalence of social media has redefined the world and people’s perceptions of their place and how they interact within it. Perhaps, as Conrad seems to suggest, travel writing had a greater sense of authenticity in an era when fewer people travelled. Traveller’s tales may well have served a different and more vital social function in such times, whether those tales were first imbibed by simply listening to their retelling in the quayside inns of port towns or avidly devoured in the pages of popularly published travelogues. For those who did not go to sea and so were not able to savour the wider world firsthand, such texts were the only means to push back the bounds of their horizons and get a taste of the furthest reaches of the globe.



 

But not all travelogues have stood the test of time, many have long since fallen by the way. According to Conrad: ‘The outstanding figure amongst those men who dedicated their books of travel to popes and emperors is Marco Polo, with his meticulous descriptive gift, his cautious credulity, his eye for splendour and his historian’s rather than a traveller’s temperament. He gave his readers what the readers of that day wanted, historical facts in a foreign and gorgeous atmosphere. But the time for such books of travel is past on this earth girt about with cables, with an atmosphere made restless by the waves of ether, lighted by that sun of the twentieth century under which there is nothing new left now, and but very little of what may still be called obscure.’ (p. 88)



 

Nowadays everyone is a travel writer of sorts. But today images appear to be more important than words. Self-presentation has become a means of projection as much as reflection. Without really knowing it, perhaps, it strikes me that people have now become their own versions of Alan Whicker or Michael Palin. Social media is not so much a window on the world, but rather a window into our own worlds – shaped, defined and presented as we ourselves would wish others to see it, thereby fanning our own solipsistic vanity! – The world is now girded with fibre optic cables and the ether buzzes a relay back and forth between encircling satellites, transmitting millions of ‘selfies’ from tourist hotspots around the globe. Pixelating the present for posterity; each of us harnessing the here and now of the twenty-first century via our camera-phones. The present moment has in effect become a single unending photographic image, capturing and arresting the falling domino-like effect of time. Freeze-framing our lives and the world which we have ostensibly ventured out into, in order to explore for ourselves, in search of rest or a change – a panacea for that universal yearning for self-fulfilment and the need for self-expression; a universal Instagram account viewable by all in lieu of an album of holiday snaps, or perhaps in lieu of a travel diary, or a ship’s captain’s log.



 

Crafting itineraries from Rough Guides, Lonely Planets, and Time Out’s seemingly inexhaustible supply of lists advising on the ‘Ten Best Places to …’, etc., these are the means by which we now measure and triangulate our own personal journeys of discovery. Bookish gurus such as Bill Bryson, Peter Mayle, Cheryl Strayed, Elizabeth Gilbert, et al., still provide traditional vade mecums of sorts to help us ‘Eat, Pray, Love’ our way around the globe with a hope of ameliorating our own modern-day neurasthenia. Hence the tradition of travel writing is far from defunct, rather it continues to do what it has always done; it’s perhaps the mode and the medium through which we engage with and respond to it which has reconfigured itself – as needs must.


A View of Enoshima, by Hokusai, Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (c.1830)

 

All of these thoughts passed through my mind only a few weekends ago when I took the train from Shinjuku to Fujisawa in order to visit Enoshima, just along the coast from Kamakura here in Japan, where I am currently living. Enoshima is an island of Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples which has long been a place of pilgrimage, particularly during the Edo Period (1600-1868); but, since the early twentieth century, tourism has been the predominant religion of most ‘pilgrims’ visiting this special place in modern times. Like so many religious ‘tourist hotspots’ in Japan, Enoshima exudes a kind of otherworldly spiritual enchantment. ‘There is a charm indefinable about the place—that sort of charm which comes with a little ghostly thrill never to be forgotten,’ as the writer, Lafcadio Hearn described it in 1894. ‘Not of strange sights alone is this charm made, but of numberless subtle sensations and ideas interwoven and inter-blended: the sweet sharp scents of grove and sea; the blood-brightening, vivifying touch of the free wind; the dumb appeal of ancient mystic mossy things; vague reverence evoked by knowledge of treading soil called holy for a thousand years; and a sense of sympathy, as a human duty, compelled by the vision of steps of rock worn down into shapelessness by the pilgrim feet of vanished generations.’ (pp. 94-95)



 

The island’s main shrine complex is dedicated to the Goddess Benzaiten or Benten, and mythology also credits the island as being watched over by a once wrathful dragon who was tamed by the goddess and later became her spouse. Benten, as manifested in the Shinto and Buddhist traditions of Japan, is related to the Hindu Goddess, Saraswati. She is a Dharmapala, or Dharma protector. And, like Saraswati, strumming her lute-like biwa in many of her effigies, she is the patron of music, the arts, eloquence, and knowledge. But, unlike Saraswati, in Japan she also has other associations too, thought to have derived from early associations with local gods or kami in different regions. Through one of these associations, she came to be viewed as a water deity, hence her association with dragons and snakes, as well as with wealth, fortune, protection from disease and danger, and the protection of the state. The association with water means that many of the shrines dedicated to Benten can often be found situated on islands; one such example, which has a personal connection for me, is the Benten-dō which stands on a small island at the centre of Shinobazu Pond in Tokyo’s Ueno, close to where I stayed on many of my earliest trips to Japan over twenty years ago. Given this personal affinity and the fact that I was born in the year of the Dragon, Enoshima seemed to be a place which should have a unique resonance for me, and in many ways, I found it did – perhaps all the more unexpectedly in the form of certain ‘ghostly’ echoes of home.


Benzaiten Seated on a White Dragon, by Aoigaoka Keisei (1832)

 

Seeing Enoshima for the first time from the shoreline, rising up in the form of a high, tree-covered mound with the rooftops of buildings peeping out from the green foliage, I couldn’t help thinking how much it reminded me of my hometown, Harrow-on-the-Hill, near London; which, similarly, is cloaked by tall trees and topped by a church with a tall spire, built and consecrated by Saint Anselm on a spot which is thought to have long been a religious site, since pre-Christian times even. In the twilight of the Edo Period, the famous artist, Hokusai, depicted Enoshima in one of his series of woodblock prints, entitled ‘Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji.’ In this view a pagoda can be seen piercing the greenery, but today those trees are now more prominently parted by a tall lighthouse and observation tower known as the ‘Enoshima Sea Candle.’ Like other sacred islands throughout the world, such as Saint Michael’s Mount in Cornwall, or the Holy Island of Lindisfarne, situated just off the coast of Northumbria back home in England, Enoshima is a tidal island, which is connected to the mainland by a sand bar or tombolo at low tide. This has since been built over by a twin set of parallel bridges, one for the convenience of those travelling on foot and the other for those travelling by car or coach, making it accessible at all times and tides for pilgrims and day-trippers alike.



 

Ambling across this bridge, there are still echoes of Lafcadio Hearn’s visit to be found as you arrive on Enoshima: ‘We pass the sand-flats; and the ever-open Portal of the Sea-city, the City of the Dragon-goddess, is before us, a beautiful torii. All of bronze it is, with shimenawa of bronze above it, and a brazen tablet inscribed with characters declaring: 'This is the Palace of the Goddess of Enoshima.' About the bases of the ponderous pillars are strange designs in relievo, eddyings of waves with tortoises struggling in the flow. […] High before us slopes the single street, a street of broad steps, a street shadowy, full of multi-coloured flags and dank blue drapery dashed with white fantasticalities, which are words, fluttered by the sea wind. It is lined with taverns and miniature shops. At every one I must pause to look; and to dare to look at anything in Japan is to want to buy it. […] This curious street ends at another torii, a wooden torii, with a steeper flight of stone steps ascending to it. At the foot of the steps are votive stone lamps and a little well, and a stone tank at which all pilgrims wash their hands and rinse their mouths before approaching the temples of the gods.’ (pp. 86-88)



 

But different to Hearn’s day, there is now a set of three escalators which can comfortably whisk the weary pilgrim to the highest heights of the shrine, which is actually composed of a number of shrine buildings situated on several different levels. Three of these, the Hetsumiya, Nakatsumiya, and Okutsumiya, are dedicated to the three sister goddesses of the sea, of happiness and fortune, and of musical skills. The Yasaka Shrine is dedicated to Gozu Tenno, the guardian deity of Yasaka Shrine in Kyoto, and the Hoanden is an octagonal hall which houses two important Japanese ‘cultural assets’: two revered statues of Benzaiten – the Hadaka (or naked) Benzaiten, and the Happi (or eight-armed) Benzaiten.


Pilgrimage to the Iwaya Cave Shrine of Benzaiten, by Hiroshige (c.1850)

 

Another important site on the island, also with historical associations to Benzaiten, is the Iwaya Sea Caves, located low down on the island’s western shoreline. Eroded by the inexorable crash of ocean waves over unfathomable aeons of geological time, the first cave is a gallery 152 metres long which splits into two at its farthest end, and the second cave is formed of two interlinked galleries, each of around 56 metres in length. My Rough Guide is very dismissive of these caves, saying: ‘Though it’s an attractive walk, you might want to give these very artificial grottoes, with their piped music and roaring dragons, a miss.’ (p. 260) – Personally, I’d advise giving the jaded Rough Guide author a miss on this occasion, and listen instead to Lafcadio Hearn’s far more evocative description: ‘… the Dragon cavern, not so called, Akira [Hearn’s local guide] says, because the Dragon of Benten ever dwelt therein, but because the shape of the cavern is the shape of a dragon. The path descends toward the opposite side of the island, and suddenly breaks into a flight of steps cut out of the pale hard rock—exceedingly steep, and worn, and slippery, and perilous—overlooking the sea. A vision of low pale rocks, and surf bursting among them, and a toro or votive stone lamp in the centre of them—all seen as in a bird's-eye view, over the verge of an awful precipice. I see also deep, round holes in one of the rocks. There used to be a tea-house below; and the wooden pillars supporting it were fitted into those holes. I descend with caution; the Japanese seldom slip in their straw sandals, but I can only proceed with the aid of the guide. At almost every step I slip. Surely these steps could never have been thus worn away by the straw sandals of pilgrims who came to see only stones and serpents!

At last we reach a plank gallery carried along the face of the cliff above the rocks and pools, and following it round a projection of the cliff enter the sacred cave. The light dims as we advance; and the sea-waves, running after us into the gloom, make a stupefying roar, multiplied by the extraordinary echo. Looking back, I see the mouth of the cavern like a prodigious sharply angled rent in blackness, showing a fragment of azure sky.




We reach a shrine with no deity in it, pay a fee; and lamps being lighted and given to each of us, we proceed to explore a series of underground passages. So black they are that even with the light of three lamps, I can at first see nothing. In a while, however, I can distinguish stone figures in relief—chiselled on slabs like those I saw in the Buddhist graveyard. These are placed at regular intervals along the rock walls. The guide approaches his light to the face of each one, and utters a name, 'Daikoku-Sama,' 'Fudo-Sama,' 'Kwannon-Sama.' Sometimes in lieu of a statue there is an empty shrine only, with a money-box before it; and these void shrines have names of Shintō gods, 'Daijingu,' 'Hachiman,' 'Inari-Sama.' All the statues are black, or seem black in the yellow lamplight, and sparkle as if frosted. I feel as if I were in some mortuary pit, some subterranean burial-place of dead gods. Interminable the corridor appears; yet there is at last an end—an end with a shrine in it—where the rocky ceiling descends so low that to reach the shrine one must go down on hands and knees. And there is nothing in the shrine. This is the Tail of the Dragon.

We do not return to the light at once, but enter into other lateral black corridors—the Wings of the Dragon. More sable effigies of dispossessed gods; more empty shrines; more stone faces covered with saltpetre; and more money-boxes, possible only to reach by stooping, where more offerings should be made. And there is no Benten, either of wood or stone.’ (pp. 92-94)


Lafcadio Hearn (1891)

 

Though this was once the hallowed place where the first of the Kamakura Shoguns, Minamoto no Yoritomo (1147-1199), came to pray to Benten for victory in battle, and though the Benten statues have long since been removed for their safe-keeping higher up the island, the cave is still lined with votive statues and a small shrine can still be found by pious pilgrims and tourists alike at the end of its furthest reach. If you feel a cool breeze emanating from the inaccessible depths of the shorter branch this is because it is said to connect (whether spiritually or physically is not specified) to Mount Fuji, a mountain deity itself, on the far shore of Sagami Bay.



 

As in Hearn’s day, there is still a steep climb down (and then even moreso going back up again once you are done), but the stone steps are more evenly set and less polished today, and instead of a ‘plank gallery’ there is now a long wide concrete stilted walkway which comfortably skirts the cliffside, from which you can watch the sea surging over the rock shelf where local fishermen stand stoically while casting their rods, sending their fishing lines out into the surf, or you can descend there yourself to search among the rock pools for a natural rock formation which looks like a turtle swimming out to sea. The entrance to the caves is filled with information panels detailing the history of Enoshima and the caves, as well as the local flora and fauna, and the artworks this place has inspired. Such as a poem by one of Japan’s most well-known poets, Akiko Yosano, which is inscribed upon a rock set in a mirror-like pool near the mouth of the first cave. With an admirable economy of words characteristic of Japanese haikai, this short verse manages to evoke the magical atmosphere of the island’s inward and outward facing vistas.


 


沖つ風 吹けばまたゝく 蝋の灯に

志づく散るなり 江の島の洞

 

Wind from the sea,

The shimmering candle light,

A drop spread, the cave of Enoshima.

 

Akiko Yosano (1912).



 

Further down the passage, the same as when Hearn came here, visitors are still given lighted candles to carry. Clutching these we ventured into the wet, dripping darkness, following in Hearn’s literal footsteps, silently trepidatious and inwardly praying to Benten that the earth might hold off on initiating any tremors or full-scale earthquakes until we were safely outside once more. As the tall ceiling of the cave gradually lowers at its furthest reach, it does feel as though you are peeping into another realm of subterranean enchantment, like Rupert Bear humming a few familiar bars of the Frog Song. The long, dark and dank passage presents a challenge to the senses, especially those that usually manage to hold our fears of nocturnal claustrophobia at bay. There is, however, a leavening sense of light-relief to be found in the adjacent cave, where a Disney-esque dragon statue lurks and can be made to give a (concealed, tannoy-induced) roar if you clap your hands at its far end – a delight for young Rupert Bear-like kids and light-hearted, less fussy folk, rather than for our somewhat grumpy grown-up friend who penned the Rough Guide.



 

Continuing this whimsical quest for Enoshima’s dragon lore associations, at the top of the hill, far above the caves and tastefully set apart from the shrines, there is a so-called ‘Dragon’s Love Bell’ which visitors can ring. It’s a modern ship’s bell made of bronze, clearly installed in very recent times in a metal framework with a sturdy rope attached to its clapper so that it can be rung by couples (predominantly young, but also old alike) as a means of proclaiming their eternal and undying love to all within earshot. An adjacent set of metal railings have been very conveniently erected here to accommodate a new and now seemingly universal copycat-trend of modern-day Romeos and Juliets, who wish to set an immovable padlock to slowly rust at scenic spots (discarding the key) as a sign of their eternal troths having been duly pledged. However, setting up a fully-committed site for this purpose seems a very shrewd move on the part of tourist management strategies for the island, largely so that Enoshima isn’t plagued by the appearance of such padlocks in other parts of the island where they might cause damage to the island’s heritage or become unwanted eyesores. Oddly enough though, for a site of such dedicated personal absorption, this is also the one place on the island where complete strangers are most likely to interact, because despite there being a ‘selfie’ stand provided, more often than not couples seem inclined to offer to take photos for one another, in a kind of cupid-inspired relay of mutual assistance.



 

Everywhere I looked while wandering the paths and precincts of the island’s sacred shrines there seemed to be people taking photographs of their companions or group selfies rather than photos of the buildings and monuments, or more occasionally of the stunning views. It’s been widely reported in the news – this year especially – that, since Japan has re-opened its borders to tourists with the end of the Covid pandemic, the country has begun to suffer the ill effects of ‘over-tourism,’ with traveller’s disregarding ordinary decency as much as an awareness and sensitivity to local customs, or the rights of local people to go about their daily lives undisturbed. Some tourist hotspots here, such as the five lakes district around Mount Fuji, have attempted to discourage the internet-fuelled fever-trend for seeking out famously-framed views from particular locations specifically for the purpose of creating social media posts and ‘influencer content’ (the modern-day digital equivalent of “Kilroy woz ‘ere”) due to the disruption and damage it has increasingly spawned. The herd-like nature of mass tourism is nothing new, but the increasingly locust-like phenomenon of today’s traveller seems to be a new and deeply self-centred trait. Along with the usual flows of Europeans and Americans there certainly seem to be far more Asian tourists here now, particularly from India and China, compared to when I first began visiting Japan – but it’s definitely not a trend restricted to certain demographics or nationalities alone, it’s a symptom of our ever-increasing global mobility. All tourists regardless of culture or creed are equally culpable, and all tourists need to be more culturally aware. A good guest should be grateful, not greedy; discreet rather than rudely disruptive.


海街 diary (Umimachi Diary), also titled Our Little Sister (2015)

 

After all this arduous climbing in a dedicated pilgrim-like adherence to the three main tenets of modern travel (‘Eat, Pray, Love’), those footsore visitors to Enoshima who have prayed devoutly at the shrines and caves, and duly rung the dragon bell and set a padlock declaring their undying love should certainly reward themselves with some well-earned refreshments eaten and relished in one of the many tea shops or restaurants set along the tree-fringed verge of the high clifftops overlooking the sea. ‘Perched upon this verge,’ just as they were in Hearn’s day, with large windows and verandas ‘all widely open to the sea wind, so that, looking through them, over their [tatami] matted floors and lacquered balconies one sees the ocean as in a picture-frame, and the pale clear horizon specked with snowy sails ...’ (p. 90)

 


The foremost regional specialty in these restaurants is undoubtedly shirasu, or white bait. These are the tiny young fry of fish harvested in two limited seasonal periods during the spring and autumn, which are most commonly eaten atop rice bowls (donburi) garnished with various types of seaweed and Japanese basil (shiso), and they are either served raw or boiled, or a combination of the two. Boiled shirasu can also be eaten on toast, as I first encountered them in one of my favourite films, 海街 diary (Umimachi Diary), also titled Our Little Sister (2015), which was filmed only a short distance further along the coast between Enoshima and Kamakura. The name shirasu is said by local fishermen to be echoed in the shape they take when boiled, which uncannily conforms to the hiragana character for shi = .



 

Naturally, the best and most memorably romantic way to round off a day’s exploration of Enoshima is to watch the magnificent, resplendent orange-blaze of the sun as it sets into the mist shrouded horizon of the sea from the high viewpoint of the island’s cliffs. But finding a spot which isn’t crowded out by the human throng of fellow day-trippers, all straining to take the perfect selfies on their camera-phones, is a challenge. It was here, at this very moment in our own wanderings around the island, that I first began to think about the shifting characteristics of travel in its current, modern-day manifestations. I found myself thinking about the words of Lafcadio Hearn and Joseph Conrad, and of all the information panels we’d encountered and read, as well as the half page of my inch-thick Rough Guide describing Enoshima. I found myself pondering how the experience of travel is both uniquely individual and inescapably generic. There is no one true form of travel writing. What Conrad and others lament the loss of isn’t so much the novelty of discovery, but rather the lost sense of exclusivity.



 

Mass tourism may well have overcrowded the places which we have collectively deemed to be the most interesting or picturesque locations to visit. It is only natural to mourn the fact that at many of these tourist hotspots it’s nigh impossible to savour them in silence and solitude. But we often curate our own experiences, waiting for that gap in the swarming crowd to snap an unpeopled view which in time will end up posted on our social media accounts, rendering a memory which may well with the passage of time mellow into a projection of the place which we have sought to create, that unique idea of a place such as Enoshima, sacred and beautiful, and the charmed experience which perhaps we went there in search of. It’s all a matter of perspective – ‘Twas ever thus! – Travellers have always embellished and distorted the truths found in the places they encountered and the tales they told upon their return. It’s disingenuous to think or claim otherwise, after all, the world is essentially whatever we make of it.



 

In writing this essay, Enoshima has already begun to transform itself in my memory, converting ‘historical facts in a foreign and gorgeous atmosphere’ through the lyrical and picturesque words of other travel writers, poets and the woodblock prints of Ukiyo-e artists to add character and flavour to my own carefully curated photographs and the paragraphs of self-reflective prose which I’ve spent time very carefully crafting above. But who am I? And why should anyone be interested in my meandering tales? – I’m just another travel writer, as Conrad might observe, for whatever it is worth, attempting to distil ‘the spirit of modern travel itself.’ – Another personal perspective on times and places far away, already fading and all too soon to be forgotten.



 

References

Andrei Codrescu, ‘The Many Lives of Lafcadio Hearn,’ The Paris Review (2 July 2019)

Joseph Conrad, Tales of Hearsay and Last Essays (Dent’s Collected Edition, 1955)

Robert D. Foulke, ‘Life in the Dying World of Sail, 1870-1910,’ Journal of British Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1 (November, 1963), pp. 105-136

Lafcadio Hearn, Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan, Vol. 1 (Houghton Mifflin, 1895)

Henry Johnson, ‘Enoshima: Signifying Island Heritage Across Space and Place,’ Okinawan Journal of Island Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1 (2022), pp. 3–20

Iwaya Benzaiten, Enoshima, History in Postcards (27 July 2024)

Zoria Petkoska, ‘Island-Inspired Poetry From Around Japan,’ Tokyo Weekender (2 November 2022)

The Rough Guide to Japan (2008)

Shirasu – Trails to Oishii Tokyo (NHK World, Japan: first broadcast 4 May 2022)

海街 diary (Umimachi Diary), also titled Our Little Sister (written & directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, 2015; based on the manga by Akimi Yoshida, serialised in Shōgakukan’s Monthly Flowers magazine, 2006-2018)




Also on 'Waymarks'


The Buddha at Kamakura - Japan

A Poetic Pilgrimage to Matsushima

Lost Japan - Tradition & Transience

The Dancing Girl of Izu

"My Asakusa" - Sadako Sawamura & Me

The "Isle of Bow" - A Journey of Discovery

Razumov & The Ile Rousseau

Visiting Conrad's Grave - Canterbury





All photographs of Enoshima by Tim Chamberlain, October 2024.