
COPYRIGHTED, 1889. - By SHIUKICHI SHIGEMI.
A JAPANESE BOY - BY - HIMSELF - NEW YORK - HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY - 1890
PREFATORY LETTER.
A JAPANESE BOY.
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
A young Japanese narrator offers an intimate glimpse into his seaside hometown of Imabari, where the tide reveals a modest harbor that doubles as a bustling market and a stage for everyday labor. He paints vivid scenes of rice‑laden junks, merchants testing grains with a bamboo probe, and sturdy coolies competing in feats of strength, all framed by the salty air and the ever‑present Mt. Myozin on the horizon.
Beyond the harbor, he describes a curious sanitarium—a stone‑walled “cave” where patients endure alternating heat and cold to purge illness—adding a touch of the region’s unique health practices. His observations are peppered with personal reflections, from the discomfort of the steaming ovens to the simple pleasures of pine‑filled breezes outside town.
Through these candid sketches, listeners are invited to hear a boy’s first‑hand account of a world that balances tradition, hard work, and the quiet yearning for a better future, all narrated in the fresh, earnest voice of someone just beginning to find his place.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (179K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Andrea Ball & Marc D'Hooghe
Release date
2011-02-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1865–1928
Best known for A Japanese Boy, he turned memories of growing up in Imabari into a warm, unusually personal portrait of everyday life in Meiji-era Japan. Writing in English while studying medicine at Yale, he helped early Western readers see Japan through the eyes of a child rather than through politics or travel stereotypes.
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